Unplanned Healthcare Encounters Common in Pediatric Cancer
A secondary analysis of a cluster-randomized trial examined unplanned healthcare encounters among 444 pediatric patients newly diagnosed with cancer. Participants were aged 8-18 years, English- or Spanish-speaking, and receiving any cancer treatment across 20 sites (10 randomized to symptom screening with SSPedi three times weekly, 10 to usual care). Over 8 weeks, 652 unplanned encounters were documented: 269 emergency room visits, 143 unplanned clinic visits, and 240 unplanned admissions.
Pain was the primary reason for 13.3% of emergency visits, 11.7% of unplanned clinic visits, and 4.3% of admissions. Nausea/vomiting accounted for 9.0% of emergency visits, 0.9% of clinic visits, and 3.2% of admissions. Risk factors associated with more unplanned encounters included leukemia diagnosis (P=0.0003), site randomization to symptom screening (P=0.018), and increasing physician full-time equivalents per 100 new cancer diagnoses (P=0.032).
These findings highlight the high burden of unplanned healthcare use in this population. Common symptoms like pain and nausea/vomiting are frequent drivers. Resource allocation to prevent and manage these symptoms may reduce unplanned visits. However, as a secondary analysis, associations are not causal, and further investigation is warranted.