Kentish-Barnes et al. A Three-step Strategy for Relatives of Patients Dying in the Intensive Care Unit. The COSMIC-EOL Cluster Randomized Trial. Lancet 2022
Question: Does a proactive intervention involving repeated meetings with relatives of ICU patients dying after a decision to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining therapies decrease the presence of prolonged grief disorder at 6 months?
Why ask it: Effective and empathic communication with family members is an essential component of high-quality end-of-life care in the ICU. Poor communication has been linked to increased rates of PTSD and complicated grief for family members in the months that follow a patient’s death.
Intervention: 875 patient relatives in 34 French ICUs randomized to standard end-of-life communication or a three-step, physician-driven, nurse-aided support strategy after the decision was made to withdraw or withhold life-sustaining therapies. For relatives in the intervention arm, meetings with the treating physician and nurse were scheduled at 3 distinct time points: An initial end-of-life preparatory conference to plan end-of-life care and discuss the needs of both the patient and the family, a meeting during the dying process to show non-abandonment and detect unmet needs, and finally a meeting after death to answer questions about the ICU stay and acknowledge emotions.
Results:
- Median prolonged-grief 13 questionnaire score during a telephone interview at 6 months (primary endpoint): 19 (IQR 14 – 26) in the intervention group vs 21 (15 – 29) in the control group [mean difference 2.5 (95% CI, 1.04 – 3.95)
- Proportion of relatives with a score > 30 indicating complicated grief: 15% intervention arm vs 21% control arm, p=0.035
- At 3 months, relatives in the intervention arm had statistically lower hospital anxiety and depression scale assessment scores as well as less PTSD-related symptoms.
Conclusion: A three-step proactive communication intervention involving the treating clinician and nurse reduced the burden of prolonged grief in relatives of dying patients following the decision to withhold or withdrawal life-sustaining therapies.
Comment:
- A well-done trial with a simple intervention on an important topic. 90% of relatives in the intervention arm had all 3 steps completed and 79% completed 6-month follow-up.
- The majority of relatives were either a spouse/partner or a child of the patient. Most had very strong social support
- 68% of relatives in control arm received meetings at the first 2 time points suggesting perhaps a unique impact of the scheduled meeting after a patient’s death
- The authors rightly point out that symptom scores are imperfect surrogates for the complex emotional and physical burden family members shoulder after the death of a loved one. Additionally, there is no clear minimally important difference in the PG-13 score used in the primary outcome
- I really like the emphasis on shared clinician and nurse communication. Aligned clinician + RN communication and clear shared support for families I think an important model to emulate
- This trial will make me more deliberately consider empathic clinician + RN communication at these 3 distinct phases in the care of our dying patients. I will make a more concerted effort to partner with nursing during these time points. The communication model outlined in the intervention may be worth trying to replicate in our ICU.