Authors
Paul Glare, Christian Sinclair, Michael Downing, Patrick Stone, Marco Maltoni, Antonio Vigano
Publication date
2008/5/1
Journal
European Journal of Cancer
Volume
44
Issue
8
Pages
1146-1156
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Prognostication is an important clinical skill for all clinicians, particularly those clinicians working with patients with advanced cancer. However, doctors can be hesitant about prognosticating without a fundamental understanding of how to formulate a prognosis more accurately and how to communicate the information with honesty and compassion. Irrespective of the underlying type of malignancy, most patients with advanced cancer experience a prolonged period of gradual decline (months/years) before a short phase of accelerated decline in the last month or two. The main indicators of this final phase are poor performance status, weight loss, symptoms such as anorexia, breathlessness or confusion and abnormalities on laboratory parameters (e.g. high white cell count, lymphopaenia, hyopalbuminaemia, elevated lactate dehydrogenase or C-reactive protein). The clinical estimate of survival remains a powerful …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Glare, C Sinclair, M Downing, P Stone, M Maltoni… - European Journal of Cancer, 2008