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Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study

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Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study. / Coyle, Seamus; Scott, Aileen; Nwosu, Amarachukwu et al.
In: BMJ Open, Vol. 6, No. 11, e011763, 10.11.2016.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Coyle, S, Scott, A, Nwosu, A, Latten, R, Wilson, J, Mayland, CR, Mason, S, Probert, C & Ellershaw, J 2016, 'Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study', BMJ Open, vol. 6, no. 11, e011763. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763

APA

Coyle, S., Scott, A., Nwosu, A., Latten, R., Wilson, J., Mayland, C. R., Mason, S., Probert, C., & Ellershaw, J. (2016). Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study. BMJ Open, 6(11), Article e011763. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763

Vancouver

Coyle S, Scott A, Nwosu A, Latten R, Wilson J, Mayland CR et al. Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study. BMJ Open. 2016 Nov 10;6(11):e011763. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763

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Bibtex

@article{451b5409a0a44220ad6c236fc194757d,
title = "Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life: a feasibility study",
abstract = "Objective To assess the feasibility of prospectively collecting biological samples (urine) from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life.Setting A 30-bedded specialist hospice in the North West of England.Participants Participants were adults with a diagnosis of advanced disease and able to provide written informed consent.Method Potential participants were identified by a senior clinician over a 12-week period in 2014. They were then approached by a researcher and invited to participate according to a developed recruitment protocol.Outcomes Feasibility targets included a recruitment rate of 50%, with successful collection of samples from 80% who consented.Results A total of 58 patients were approached and 33 consented (57% recruitment rate). Twenty-five patients (43%) were unable to participate or declined; 10 (17%) became unwell, too fatigued, lost capacity, died or were discharged home; and 15 (26%) refused, usually these patients had distressing pain, low mood or profound fatigue. From the 33 recruited, 20 participants provided 128 separate urine samples, 12 participants did not meet the inclusion criteria at the time of consent and 1 participant was unable to provide a sample. The criterion for a urinary catheter was removed for the latter 6 weeks. The collection rate during the first 6 weeks was 29% and 93% for the latter 6 weeks. Seven people died while the study was ongoing, and another 4 participants died in the following 4 weeks.Conclusions It is possible to recruit and collect multiple biological samples over time from palliative care patients in the last weeks and days of life even if they have lost capacity. Research into the biological changes at the end of life could develop a greater understanding of the biology of the dying process. This may lead to improved prognostication and care of patients towards the end of life.",
author = "Seamus Coyle and Aileen Scott and Amarachukwu Nwosu and Richard Latten and James Wilson and Mayland, {Catriona R.} and Stephen Mason and Chris Probert and John Ellershaw",
year = "2016",
month = nov,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "BMJ Open",
issn = "2044-6055",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group Ltd",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Collecting biological material from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life

T2 - a feasibility study

AU - Coyle, Seamus

AU - Scott, Aileen

AU - Nwosu, Amarachukwu

AU - Latten, Richard

AU - Wilson, James

AU - Mayland, Catriona R.

AU - Mason, Stephen

AU - Probert, Chris

AU - Ellershaw, John

PY - 2016/11/10

Y1 - 2016/11/10

N2 - Objective To assess the feasibility of prospectively collecting biological samples (urine) from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life.Setting A 30-bedded specialist hospice in the North West of England.Participants Participants were adults with a diagnosis of advanced disease and able to provide written informed consent.Method Potential participants were identified by a senior clinician over a 12-week period in 2014. They were then approached by a researcher and invited to participate according to a developed recruitment protocol.Outcomes Feasibility targets included a recruitment rate of 50%, with successful collection of samples from 80% who consented.Results A total of 58 patients were approached and 33 consented (57% recruitment rate). Twenty-five patients (43%) were unable to participate or declined; 10 (17%) became unwell, too fatigued, lost capacity, died or were discharged home; and 15 (26%) refused, usually these patients had distressing pain, low mood or profound fatigue. From the 33 recruited, 20 participants provided 128 separate urine samples, 12 participants did not meet the inclusion criteria at the time of consent and 1 participant was unable to provide a sample. The criterion for a urinary catheter was removed for the latter 6 weeks. The collection rate during the first 6 weeks was 29% and 93% for the latter 6 weeks. Seven people died while the study was ongoing, and another 4 participants died in the following 4 weeks.Conclusions It is possible to recruit and collect multiple biological samples over time from palliative care patients in the last weeks and days of life even if they have lost capacity. Research into the biological changes at the end of life could develop a greater understanding of the biology of the dying process. This may lead to improved prognostication and care of patients towards the end of life.

AB - Objective To assess the feasibility of prospectively collecting biological samples (urine) from palliative care patients in the last weeks of life.Setting A 30-bedded specialist hospice in the North West of England.Participants Participants were adults with a diagnosis of advanced disease and able to provide written informed consent.Method Potential participants were identified by a senior clinician over a 12-week period in 2014. They were then approached by a researcher and invited to participate according to a developed recruitment protocol.Outcomes Feasibility targets included a recruitment rate of 50%, with successful collection of samples from 80% who consented.Results A total of 58 patients were approached and 33 consented (57% recruitment rate). Twenty-five patients (43%) were unable to participate or declined; 10 (17%) became unwell, too fatigued, lost capacity, died or were discharged home; and 15 (26%) refused, usually these patients had distressing pain, low mood or profound fatigue. From the 33 recruited, 20 participants provided 128 separate urine samples, 12 participants did not meet the inclusion criteria at the time of consent and 1 participant was unable to provide a sample. The criterion for a urinary catheter was removed for the latter 6 weeks. The collection rate during the first 6 weeks was 29% and 93% for the latter 6 weeks. Seven people died while the study was ongoing, and another 4 participants died in the following 4 weeks.Conclusions It is possible to recruit and collect multiple biological samples over time from palliative care patients in the last weeks and days of life even if they have lost capacity. Research into the biological changes at the end of life could develop a greater understanding of the biology of the dying process. This may lead to improved prognostication and care of patients towards the end of life.

U2 - 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763

DO - 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-011763

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

JO - BMJ Open

JF - BMJ Open

SN - 2044-6055

IS - 11

M1 - e011763

ER -