CASE Presentation
An 80-year-old patient was admitted to the hospice service at the Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS) community living center (CLC) in Tacoma, Washington, from a community-based acute care hospital. His medical history included prostate cancer with metastasis to his pelvis and type 2 diabetes mellitus, which was stable with treatment with oral medication. Six weeks earlier the patient reported a severe frontal headache that was not responding to over-the-counter analgesics. After 2 days with these symptoms, including a ground-level fall without injuries, he presented to the VAPSHCS emergency department (ED) where a complete neurological examination, including magnetic resonance imaging, revealed a left frontoparietal brain lesion that was 4.2 cm × 3.4 cm × 4.2 cm.
The patient experienced a seizure during his ED evaluation and was admitted for treatment. He underwent a craniotomy where most, but not all the lesions were successfully removed. Postoperatively, the patient exhibited right-sided neglect, gait instability, emotional lability, and cognitive communication disorder. The patient completed 15 of 20 planned radiation treatments but declined further radiation or chemotherapy. The patient decided to halt radiation treatments after being informed by the oncology service that the treatments would likely only add 1 to 2 months to his overall survival, which was < 6 months. The patient elected to focus his goals of care on comfort, dignity, and respect at the end of life and accepted recommendations to be placed into end-of-life hospice care. He was then transferred to the VAPSHCS CLC in Tacoma, Washington, for hospice care.
Upon admission, the patient weighed 94 kg, his vital signs were within reference range, and he reported no pain or headaches. His initial laboratory results revealed a 13.2 g/dL hemoglobin, 3.6 g/dL serum albumin, and a 5.5% hemoglobin A1c, all of which fall into a normal reference range. He had a reported ECOG score of 3 and a KPS score of 50% by the transferring medical team. The patient’s medications included scheduled dexamethasone, metformin, senna, levetiracetam, and as-needed midazolam nasal spray for breakthrough seizures. He also had as-needed acetaminophen for pain. He was alert, oriented ×3, and fully ambulatory but continuously used a 4-wheeled walker for safety and gait instability.
After the patient’s first night, the hospice team met with him to discuss his understanding of his health issues. The patient appeared to have low health literacy but told the team, “I know I am dying.” He had completed written advance directives and a Portable Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment indicating that life-sustaining treatments, including cardiopulmonary resuscitation, supplemental mechanical feeding, or intubation, were not to be used to keep him alive.
At his first 90-day recertification, the patient had gained 8 kg and laboratory results revealed a 14.6 g/dL hemoglobin, 3.8 g/dL serum albumin, and a 6.1% hemoglobin A1c. His ECOG score remained at 3, but his KPS score had increased to 60%. The patient exhibited no new neurologic symptoms or seizures and reported no headaches but had 2 ground-level falls without injury. On both occasions the patient chose not to use his walker to go to the bathroom because it was “too far from my bed.” Per VA policy, after discussions with the hospice team, he was recertified for 90 more days of hospice care. At the end of 6 months in CLC, the patient’s weight remained stable, as did his complete blood count and comprehensive medical panel. He had 1 additional noninjurious ground-level fall and again reported no pain and no use of as-needed acetaminophen. His only medical complication was testing positive for COVID-19, but he remained asymptomatic. The patient was graduated from hospice care and referred to a nearby non-VA adult family home in the community after 180 days. At that time his ECOG score was 2 and his KPS score had increased to 70%.