Background: The balance between quality of life and aggressive treatment fuels strong debate in cancer care. Recently, more attention is focused on blending advanced care, palliative care and hospice treatments in a patient-specific, tailored manner. This case study explores quality of life, the role of psychosocial factors in treatment selection, and the role of medical bias in end-of-life decision-making.
Case report: The patient was a 55-year-old woman with advanced recurrent epithelial ovarian cancer. The disease course was essentially unremitting with only 5 months of non-progression after initial treatment. Multiple courses of chemotherapy were provided, in addition to a wide range of advanced and aggressive therapies to treat the cancer, as well as prolong life. Hospice care was an active part of treatment over 2 separate time periods, with a 1-year hiatus between admissions into hospice care.
Conclusion: This case study provides an example of blending aggressive treatment, palliative care and hospice care to allow a patient to achieve specific life milestones, while attempting to preserve quality of life.