What could be Improved at Melanoma Patients' Welfare Death? End of Life Perception of Caregivers

Int J Cancer Med. 2024;7(1):28-34. Epub 2024 Mar 18.

Abstract

Despite enormous recent advances in stage IV melanoma treatment, it continues to have a significant mortality. Five-years survival is below 50% even when granted full access to effective therapeutic regimens. Considering the real world, mostly with low or medium-income countries like Brazil, where 75% of population depends on public health system receiving ineffective Dacarbazine chemotherapy, more than 95% of stage IV patients are dead before 5 years. Knowing the survival process of melanoma end-of-life time is imperative to help physicians to establish better symptoms control and improve the quality of death of these patients.

Methods: Relative caregiver of melanoma end of life patients were invited to participate in a specific interview answering questions for the purpose of gathering information regarding symptoms and patients' complaints at the last 30 days, 7 days and at the day of death.

Results: Although melanoma has a highest propensity for brain dissemination, seizure and focal neurological deficits were not a major complaint. Most of dying melanoma symptoms are shared among other solid terminality tumor process and get worse from 30 days to 7 days, but the majority of symptoms kept unchanged from 7 days till time to death. Wound bleeding and bad odor were the only complaints that got worse during the whole terminality process and could be improved with better commitment of assistant team.

Conclusions: although a strong effort is made to control brain metastasis, local and regional open wound metastasis represents a major remediable complaint that should receive more attention at end-of-life melanoma patients.

Keywords: Caregivers; End-of-life; Melanoma; Palliative care; Symptoms; Terminality.