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Some thoughts on medical futility John D. Lantos M.D. Children’s Mercy Bioethics Center Kansas City, MO ©Copyright 2010 What do we mean by “futility?” • Old-fashioned futility: a treatment that won’t work • Modern definition: an intractable disagreement between doctors and patients (or surrogates) about the appropriateness of providing marginally beneficial treatment Note • When treatments are absolutely futile, they are less controversial. When they prolong life (or prolong dying), they cause moral distress. The (modern) invention of futility: The “Baby Doe” guidelines -1984 • Controversy triggered by a baby with Down Syndrome and esophogeal atresia • Parents did not consent to surgery • Federal government tried to develop criteria for deciding when parental refusals were permissible The (modern) invention of futility: The “Baby Doe” guidelines -1984 • They came up with the idea of “futility” • Treatment may be withheld only if: – A baby is chronically and irreversibly comatose – The treatment is medical futile – The treatment is virtually futile and inhumane New questions • • • • What, exactly, is “futile?” Do we know it when we see it? Is “futile” worse than “virtually futile?” When is treatment inhumane? Must we always provide CPR? • NEJM paper by LJ Blackhall, 1987 • Case presentation of a woman with metastatic ovarian cancer for whom no further chemotherapy was available • Patient wanted “everything done” • Blackhall asked, “Can we just say no?” An avalanche of scholarly writing • Thousands of articles, dozens of books • Hospital policies • Even state laws (well, just Texas) Ethics, policy, and economics 1980s – cost-containment through reduced reimbursements for hospitals - DRGs Ethics, policy, and economics • 1970s: ICUs, dialysis, TPN, LVADs • 1980s: prospective payment to hospitals • 1990s: Patient self-determination act, growth of hospice and palliative care • Growing tensions between different approaches to end-of-life care Different phases of the futility debate – Neonatal issues and Baby Doe – Futility determinations with competent adults • Goal of treatment • Chance of success – Four moral domains of futility controversies – Recent legislation Pediatricians views of futility • What do the Baby Doe regulations mean? • Koppelman et al – NEJM 1988 – Surveyed neonatologists about the interpretation of the guidelines in real cases: • Trisomy 13 and congestive heart failure • 530g 25 week preemie with large IVH • Congenital hydrocephalus, blindness, severe cognitive impairment Views of futility • Fundamental disagreement among pediatricians about what the rules required – 22-47% of neonatologists thought treatment required – 18-52% thought treatment not required – Many were uncertain Koppelman’s conclusions • Widespread practice variation • Widespread “moral” variation • Regulations did not clear up ambiguities Illusion of futility in clinical practice • Two elements to any futility determination – The goal of therapy – The probability of success • Goal of therapy - determined by patient • Probability of success - determined by MD – Lantos et al. Am J Med. 1988. Questions • Can patients choose any goal? • How accurate are physicians’ assessments of the likelihood of success or failure? • What role should cost play in the decisions? • The physician's response in such cases should be: "I am sorry, but we don't do that here." This is done not because the patient no longer has any value or because the physician lacks respect for the family's wishes. It is done because the obligation of physicians, as articulated in the Hippocratic Oath, is to act for the benefit of the patient according to their ability and judgment. Paris JJ et al. NEJM. 1993. Four elements of the futility controversy • • • • Power Money Trust Hope Power • Policies that empower patients lead to a randomness that demoralizes professionals. – Do we have to do anything that patients ask? – What about our own moral values? • Policies that empower doctors run the risk of a false generalization of expertise. – Do doctors know best about what goals are worth it? – Who decides what medical care is for? Trust • Futility controversies arise, in general, because patients/families distrust doctors. • By empowering doctors to unilaterally override patients’ demands, futility policies exacerbate, rather than relieve, that distrust. Four levels of mistrust • Patients haven’t been told • Patients haven’t understood • Patients understand what they’ve been told but don’t believe it • Patients understand, believe it, but disagree about fundamental values Futility and money • Is it about the money? – Most doctors say “No” – Most other observers say, “Of course” • One can philosophically agree that families have the “right” to demand futile treatment without addressing the question of who should pay for the treatment Futility and money • Test question: should it be forbidden for a family to take a brain dead patient home on a ventilator if the family will pay cash for private duty nurses and RTs to provide the care? What if they want to keep the patient in the hospital? – Is it morally wrong or just economically wasteful? Futility and hope • The essence of medicine is to give hope for victory in a struggle that we all lose – – – – Medicine aims for health – we all get sick Medicine preserves life – we all die Medicine relieves pain – we all suffer Medicine comforts – we all fear Futility and hope • What do we hope for when “there is no hope”? – More treatment anyway? – A good death? – Pain relief and emotional comfort? Futility, prayer, and miracles • A delicate balance between – – – – – faith hope acceptance cynicism despair Assessing the “futility movement” • A movement to legally empower doctors to override patient’s requests for treatments that the doctors think are futile – – – – medical journals - 50/50 courts - “Futility” virtually always loses legislatures - some statutory futility policies hospital policies - many policies, all different, questionably legal – clinical practice - ?? Texas futility law 1. The family must be given written information about hospital policy on the ethics consultation process. 2. The family must be given 48 hours’ notice and be invited to participate in the consultation process. 3. The ethics consultation committee must provide a written report detailing its findings to the family. Texas futility law (cont’d) 4. If the ethics consultation process fails to resolve the dispute, the hospital, working with the family, must try to arrange transfer of the patient to another physician or institution. 5. If after 10 days (measured from the ethics consultation report) no such provider can be found, the hospital and physician may unilaterally withhold or withdraw “futile” therapy. Texas futility law (cont’d) 6. The patient or surrogate may ask a judge to grant an extension of time before treatment is withdrawn. This extension is to be granted only if the judge determines that there is a reasonable likelihood of finding a willing provider if more time is granted. Texas futility law (cont’d) 7. If the family does not seek an extension or the judge fails to grant one, futile treatment may be unilaterally withdrawn by the treatment team with immunity from civil and criminal prosecution. Resolution of Futility by Due Process: Early Experience with the Texas Advance Directives Act • Six futility cases pursued through the disputeresolution process, – three families agreed to withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment within a few days of receiving the formal written report from the ethics committee. – In two cases, the patient died during the 10-day waiting period without an alternative provider having been found. – In one case, an alternative provider was located, but the patient died while awaiting transfer. Fine and Mayo. Ann Int Med. 2003. Texas futility cases • Ms. Habtegiris, a 26-year-old Eritrean immigrant, diagnoses with with metastatic angiosarcoma in August, 2005. Texas futility cases • 11/7/05 - discharged home with palliative medications designed to treat pain and shortness of breath. • 11/15/05 - increasing pain and shortness of breath, multiple bilateral lung masses, significant pleural effusions, weight loss. Texas futility cases • 11/16, 3 doctors agree that there was no effective treatment, recommended hospice. • 11/17-21, continued decline. • 11/22, team recommended discontinuation of life support. Family refused. Texas futility cases • 11/23 a family meeting Baylor offered to pay for the services of an immigration attorney to assist the family. • 11/24 to 27, the patient continued her inexorable decline. Texas futility cases • 11/28, SW gave family written 48-hour notice of a more formal review process with the hospital ethics committee. • Family also given a written statement explaining the process when such a disagreement arises, as well as a list of possible alternative providers. Texas futility cases • 11/30, family met with ethics committee for formal review of the case. Ethics committee supported recommendation of the treating physicians to remove life-sustaining treatment and focus on comfort care only. • 11/6, SW's progress notes report that the family could not accept the discontinuation of life support. Family asked about a lung transplant. Texas futility cases • 11/9-11, Twelve different health care facilities refused to accept the patient in transfer. The nurses continued to maintain the patient's comfort. • 11/12, patient extubated. According to MD and RN, patient died peacefully and rapidly within seconds. Texas futility cases • Most resolved before entire process ended • Many involved disempowered people - e.g. mentally ill, immigrants • Does the policy work? Example: Emilio Gonzalez case • • • • DOB – 12-3-05, G1P0 mother, 35 weeks, 2525g. Feeding difficulty and apnea in NICU Abnormal head and eye movements – MRI – normal – AER – auditory neuropathy – EEG – seizures • DX: Leigh’s disease Emilio Gonzalez case • 12/06 (age:1y) – viral illness PICU neurologic decompensation • 2/07 - Semi-comatose, hypotonic, no gag, vent, N-J tube, sub-acute seizure activity, pneumothraces requiring chest tubes • Doctors recommend DNR, withdrawal of lifesupport • Mom refuses Catarina and Emilio Gonzalez, PICU, Brackenridge Hospital, Austin, TX Ethics committee opinion • Treatment a constant assault on Emilio’s fundamental human dignity • Burdens clearly outweigh benefits • Medically inappropriate to continue aggressive care measures • http://www.lifeethics.org/www.lifeethics.org/2007/03/leighs-diseaselong-post-on-end-of-life.html Ethics Committee Recommendations - Comfort measures only - Code status should be DNR - Spiritual and pastoral care for family • http://www.lifeethics.org/www.lifeethics.org/2007/03/leighs-disease-longpost-on-end-of-life.html Outcome of Gonzalez case • • • • Mother did not accept recommendations Doctors sought court order Court ordered withdrawal of vent Mother appealed Catarina Gonzalez, testifying before Texas State Legislature, 2007, “"If they think a mother should give up her son, they're dumb, they're stupid." Another example: Sun Hudson • Baby with thanatophoric dysplasia • Doctors recommend discontinuation of vent mother disagreed • Mother given 10 days to find a new facility • Hospital attempted to contact 40 facilities, unable to find one willing to accept the patient in transfer Sun Hudson case • • • • • Judge ruled that extubation was legal Sun was sedated and vent discontinued He died in minutes Mother invited media Story on the front pages Wanda and Sun Hudson “I talked to him, I told him that I loved him. Inside of me, my son is still alive," Wanda Hudson told reporters afterward. "This hospital was considered a miracle hospital. When it came to my son, they gave up in six months ....They made a terrible mistake." Moral distress all around • Mothers forced to watch their children die • Caregivers forced to provide futile care • Hospital administration, judge forced into uncomfortable position • Moral absolutes clash and crash 65 hospital-years of data • 2,922 ethics consults • 974 were about medical futility • 65 had 10-day letters issued. – – – – 11 patients were transferred within 10 days, 22 patients died during the 10-day period, 27 patients had the disputed treatment withdrawn, 5 patients had treatment extended –Fine RL. Chest. 2009. (and Dallas Morning News, 2/15/07) Professional writing can do something similar – take the emotional traumas and moral conflicts that are inherent in our work, turn them into stories, and sort a process of connection, cohesion, and movement. An excellent short story about futility “A Difference of Opinion” A Difference of Opinion A 26 year old cowboy named Mr. Johnson develops severe ARDS after a rodeo injury. The first words of this story are, “I don’t think any of us here seriously expect this man to survive.” A Difference of Opinion Mr. Johnson develops pneumonia, sepsis, respiratory failure, renal failure, anemia, and every other problem to which critically ill ICU patients are heir. Huyler, an intern caring for him, describes Mr. Johnson as looking “like a swollen toad on a ventilator.” A Difference of Opinion • Huyler writes, in that world weary tone of interns everywhere, “He had unfailingly robbed me of sleep. I had come to dread him. I had hoped many times that he would just die. He was as nearly dead as a human being can be, lying at the edge but never quite crossing over. He always tormented us like this.” A Difference of Opinion One night, Huyler diagnoses a pneumothorax, inserts a chest tube, and Mr. Johnson’s blood pressure comes up. In the morning, he is reprimanded by his attending, A Difference of Opinion “I think we should seriously consider the ethics of performing such aggressive procedures in this man,” the attending says, “It’s high time that we consider withdrawing support.” There was a long silence. “He’s a young guy,” I protested. “And we’ve done it before. And it helped.” A Difference of Opinion Around this time, another attending came on service, and for the next few weeks, he alternated call nights with his colleague. He had different views, “This is a young man,” he would say, “This is exactly the sort of patient we should be most aggressive with.” A Difference of Opinion “A bizarre dynamic developed. On even days, we did almost nothing, checked no lab work, stopped antibiotics and tube feeds, and nodded solemnly as the attending shook his head and said things like “the most important thing we can do now is keep this man comfortable.” A Difference of Opinion On odd days it was the full-court press. We worked to undo the previous inactivity, checking arterial blood gases, blood cultures, X- rays, adding antibiotics and fluids, tinkering with the ventilator. We nodded solemnly as the attending said things like, “This man deserves everything we can give him.” A Difference of Opinion • Huyler knew Mr. Johnson intimately, “I had examined him dozens of times, turned him over to look at his back, put my gloved finger in his mouth, in his rectum, in the interior of his chest cavity.” • In other ways, though, he didn’t know him at all, “I had never once exchanged a single word with him.” A Difference of Opinion • Then Huyler goes off service. • Mr. Johnson – readers – and the family - are left in limbo, caught between the diametrically opposed philosophies of the two attendings. A Difference of Opinion • Was this inhumane and futile treatment? • Was it a heroic attempt to save the life of a young man with a serious but not necessarily fatal illness? • Was it good medicine? • Was it torture? A Difference of Opinion • Beautifully captures the seeming futility and the uncertainty of modern medicine. • Are we helping or hurting, rescuing or torturing? A Difference of Opinion’s ending “Six months later I was walking down the long hall back to the ER from the cafeteria. It was mid-afternoon, a slow day. The door to the pulmonary clinic was open as I passed. A surprise ending A few patients sat in plastic chairs, waiting for their appointments. In one corner, leaning casually against the wall, a man stood reading a newspaper. The paper obscured his face, but as he turned the page I saw it, and I stopped immediately. I felt a strong and sudden force. It took me a few seconds. I knew the man. I knew his face was significant, but I didn’t know why. Then I realized, disbelieving. A surprise ending “Mr. Johnson?” I asked tentatively, stepping in through the clinic door. He looked up from his newspaper. “Are you Mr. Johnson?” I asked, beginning to feel foolish. “Yes,” he said, looking at me suspiciously, “Do I know you?” And that’s how the story ends…. Two encroachments upon futility • Quality of life determinations – In PVS, mechanical ventilation “works” – The problem is that it is Not Futile! • Resource allocation decisions – If they treatment truly will not work, then the downside is the cost…and if the treatments really don’t work, the cost is minimal The central paradox of futility • Futile treatments are only deeply problematic when they work • Futile treatments that truly don’t work are not particularly troubling Key distinctions • Futility as a valuable concept in communication and shared decision making vs. • Futility as a mechanism to avoid communication and shared decision making Fine R. Chest. October 2009. Copyright © 2009 by the American College of Chest Physicians Published by American College of Chest Physicians