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Grand RoundsWeekly Evidence Brief

Palliative Care

Edition

30-Second Takeaway

  • ENABLE early palliative care implementation in community oncology is hampered by staffing, clinician buy-in, and workflow fit, requiring iterative adaptation.
  • Specialist palliative care in England appears cost-saving and QALY-improving in both home and hospital models, mainly via fewer hospital deaths and bed days.
  • Older adults’ end-of-life experiences cluster into distinct patterns linked to pain, underscoring social inequities and targets for individualized care.
  • Patients terminating pregnancies for life-limiting fetal anomalies rarely get perinatal palliative care, despite strongly palliative-aligned goals.
  • Chronic and delayed irAEs after ICIs need structured, multidisciplinary survivorship pathways that often land in palliative and symptom-focused clinics.

Week ending March 7, 2026

Scaling palliative care, supporting teams, and anticipating long trajectories: concise updates for palliative specialists

Early palliative care in community oncology: implementation hinges on staffing, clinician buy-in, and flexible procedures

JNCI CANCER SPECTRUMFeb 28, 2026

This process evaluation examined implementation of the ENABLE early palliative care program across nine NCORP practice clusters in a cluster-randomized trial. Most practices reported some palliative services, yet none routinely referred all newly diagnosed advanced cancer patients, despite guideline recommendations. Key barriers were limited staffing during and after COVID-19, low physician buy-in, perceptions of overlap with existing services, and participant burden. Investigators responded with protocol modifications to increase flexibility in both study procedures and the clinical ENABLE intervention. The authors argue implementation trials must be pragmatic and iterative, explicitly designed around real-world oncology workflows.

Specialist palliative care in England likely saves costs and improves quality of life

PALLIATIVE MEDICINEMar 5, 2026

This economic modelling study evaluated home- and hospital-based specialist palliative care versus usual care for adults with poor prognosis in England. Both home- and hospital-based specialist palliative care reduced costs and increased quality-adjusted life years compared with counterfactual care. Model estimates suggest specialist palliative care supported over 20,000 additional deaths outside hospital and saved about 1.5 million hospital bed days in 2022. System expenditures were modelled to fall by roughly £817 million, driven largely by reduced hospital utilization near end of life. Authors note that only a minority of eligible adults currently receive specialist palliative care, implying substantial unrealized benefit from expanded access.

References

Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.

Additional Reads

Optional additional studies from this edition.

Edition context

Clinical signal

  • Implementation science is now essential for delivering guideline-concordant early palliative care, particularly in under-resourced community oncology networks.
  • Robust economic modelling strengthens the business case for expanding specialist palliative care capacity and earlier referral at a system level.
  • End-of-life pain and suffering are shaped by caregiving context, companionship, and affordability, not just pathology or treatment intensity.