Advance care planning in oncology: a scoping review and some recommendations

Curr Opin Oncol. 2023 Jul 1;35(4):261-275. doi: 10.1097/CCO.0000000000000951. Epub 2023 May 15.

Abstract

Purpose of review: Cancer patients' communication with their relatives and healthcare professionals (HCPs) is essential for advance care planning (ACP). The purpose of this scoping review was to synthesize recent research findings about factors enabling cancer patients', their relatives', and physicians' communication about ACP, and to propose recommendations for future ACP implementation in cancer care.

Recent findings: This review confirmed the importance of aspects of the cancer care context (i.e., culture) as ACP uptake-predisposing and -enabling factors. It highlighted the difficulty of determining who should initiate ACP discussion, with which patients and at what time-points. It also highlighted a lack of consideration for socioemotional processes in the study of ACP uptake despite evidence that cancer patients', relatives' and physicians' discomforts that arise from communication about end-of-life and the wish to safeguard each other are main obstacles to ACP implementation.

Summary: Based on these recent findings, we propose an ACP communication model, developed with the consideration of factors reported to influence ACP uptake and communication in healthcare, and integrating socioemotional processes. The testing of the model may yield suggestions for innovative interventions that can support communication about ACP and promote a better uptake in clinical practice.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Advance Care Planning*
  • Humans
  • Medical Oncology
  • Neoplasms* / therapy