Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT

Perspectives

Tube Feeding vs Assisted Oral Feeding for Persons With Dementia: Using Evidence to Support Decision-Making

January 2013

Abstract

Many reports in the medical literature indicate that percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube placement does not improve quality of life or provide mortality benefits to patients with late-stage dementia. Despite such findings, PEG is often performed in this population. Although assisted oral feeding may be more challenging to undertake in patients with late-stage dementia, particularly in the nursing home setting due to time and resource constraints, this method of providing sustenance is often favored by patients and their families. Clinicians should counsel families of persons with advanced dementia with regard to assisted oral feeding, helping them make an informed decision regarding the care of their loved ones.

Citation: Ann Longterm Care. 2013;21(1):36-39

Introduction

Dementia is an incurable and devastating disease that has profound health effects on affected persons and presents significant emotional and practical challenges to healthcare providers and caregivers. Affecting 36 million people worldwide, the disease typically progresses over 3 to 7 years.1 Late-stage dementia is characterized by apraxia, alterations in sensory processing, and bulbar dysfunction, often resulting in complex problems with gait, continence, feeding, and self-care.2 Feeding problems are nearly universal among patients with dementia. In CASCADE (Choices, Attitudes, and Strategies for Care of Advanced Dementia at the End-of-Life), a detailed prospective cohort study of nursing home residents with advanced dementia, 86% of patients had problems with food intake or swallowing.3 When faced with the clinical consequences of malnutrition or undernutrition, including weight loss, dehydration, and aspiration, family caregivers of patients with dementia often consider percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube feeding as an alternative to oral feeding. 

When considering feeding options, families weigh not only their loved one’s medical information, but they must also consider ethical, religious, and cultural factors.4,5 Nutrition is fundamental to survival, but from a cultural standpoint, food is sometimes considered an expression of human compassion and nurturing during illness. Family decision-makers often report feeling unprepared and unsupported when deciding on a treatment for a loved one with dementia, and decisions about feeding are the most common and the most difficult ones to make.6 Two studies examining perceptions of tube feeding found that families expect to see benefits in survival, relief from aspiration risk, relief from pain, and improved function, but these benefits were not realized later for many patients due to the progression of their underlying illnesses.7,8 Physicians may also be more optimistic about tube feeding outcomes than is supported by evidence, which can influence this choice.9,10 

Current State of Medical Evidence to Guide Tube Feeding Decisions 

Ideally, clinicians are fully informed of the evidence when making feeding decisions for any patient population or when advising family caregivers on such decisions. As persons with dementia develop difficulty eating, they receive increasing levels of assistance. Assisted oral feeding may include verbal cueing, feeding by hand, using modified-texture foods and flavor enhancers, encouraging supportive dining environments, and adding high-calorie supplements to diets. When these interventions fail or pose difficulties, PEG placement may occur.

To more comprehensively compare tube feeding with assisted oral feeding in advanced dementia care, an ideal study would be a well-designed, randomized, controlled trial with adequate power to examine patient-centered outcomes, such as survival, aspiration pneumonia, wound healing, and quality of life. Ideally, study enrollment would be based on a clearly defined stage of dementia and the severity of feeding problems. Outcomes would be assessed by individuals blinded to treatment assignment. Because such a trial has not yet been conducted, the current evidence base consists of descriptive studies in which persons with dementia who receive a feeding tube are compared with a control group. Some of the higher quality descriptive studies use statistical methods to adjust for other factors, besides tube feeding, that may account for differences in how well the two groups do over time. What follows is a review of what the literature shows regarding several key questions surrounding feeding issues faced by patients with dementia. 

Do Patients With Dementia Have Better Outcomes Than Other Patients Who Receive a Feeding Tube? 

Descriptive studies comparing persons with dementia with persons who have other diagnoses requiring tube feeding are designed to determine whether patients with dementia do better or worse than nondementia patients who receive a feeding tube. Since tube feeding is only used in seriously ill patient populations, 30-day mortality following placement of a feeding tube averages 18% to 28%, and 1-year mortality is approximately 50%, with reports ranging from 39% to 90% for persons with dementia.11-14 Most studies reporting tube feeding outcomes have found that survival following this procedure does not differ by underlying diagnosis, yet advanced age, low albumin levels, and greater comorbidity are associated with shorter survival.8,15-18 A few studies have reported higher mortality in persons with dementia than for other diagnoses.19,20 The results of these studies provide evidence that patients who have feeding problems and nutritional decline are at significant risk of death during the following year, regardless of underlying diagnosis. However, these studies do not provide the evidence needed to choose between tube feeding or assisted oral feeding for persons with advanced dementia.

Do Dementia Patients Have Better Outcomes With a Feeding Tube Than With Assisted Oral Feeding? 

There are descriptive studies comparing persons with dementia who have a PEG tube with a control population group receiving assisted oral feeding. Eleven controlled, observational studies compare persons with dementia or nursing home residents, a population within which 50% to 70% have dementia, to those who do not receive a feeding tube, and therefore continue assisted oral feeding.21-31 The burden of evidence from these studies clearly demonstrates no survival benefit from tube feeding (Table). Several of these studies provide data that specifically address this question for persons with advanced dementia.23,27,31 Additional studies addressing the outcome of wound healing have found scant evidence for wound healing with tube feeding, and persons with advanced dementia who had insertion of a feeding tube during an acute care hospitalization were at higher risk of developing a pressure ulcer.32,33 Bereaved family members report that nearly 40% of patients dying with dementia were bothered by the feeding tube, 26% were physically restrained, and 29% were restrained with pharmacological treatment.34 

ALTC_Table_Controlled Studies of Tube Feeding Outcomes in Dementia Care

How Can We Provide High-Quality Care to Dementia Patients With Feeding Problems? 

Assisted oral feeding represents a viable evidence-based option to maintain weight and caloric intake for patients with dementia.35 In the final weeks of life, feeding for comfort is an option for persons with end-stage dementia, when weight gain is no longer a goal of medical care.36 Assisted hand feeding, including assistance taking high-calorie supplements, is more labor-intensive than tube feeding in nursing homes, and must be done well to be effective.37 This can be challenging in nursing home care, as staff who face increasing demands on their time may prefer tube feeding to assisted oral feeding; additionally, Mitchell and colleagues38 suspected a higher potential fiscal incentive to tube feeding residents with advanced dementia, as tube-feeding generates a higher daily reimbursement rate from Medicaid. Families tend to prefer and accept the hand feeding option when they receive effective information and education. At one hospital, a palliative care consultation team and system-wide educational efforts promoted more systematic informed decision-making with families, which resulted in decreased use of feeding tubes for persons with dementia.39 A structured decision aid that was tested in a randomized trial in 24 nursing homes was effective to reduce families’ decisional conflict regarding feeding options, and to increase communication with healthcare providers and use of assisted feeding options.40 This decision aid is now available at no cost on the University of North Carolina Website at www.med.unc.edu/pcare/resources/feedingoptions.

Conclusion

The literature supports the view that PEG tube feeding in patients with dementia is not beneficial in terms of forestalling morality or improving quality of life; however, it appears that assisted oral feeding is better accepted both by patients and by their families during the patients’ waning months of life. After reviewing this body of evidence, it is advisable for clinicians to provide effective counseling to the families of persons with advanced dementia, helping to support the choice of assisted oral feeding in the late stage of this disease.

Affiliations, Disclosures, & Correspondence

Author: Laura C Hanson, MD, MPH

Affiliation:
Division of Geriatric Medicine and UNC Palliative Care Program, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Disclosure:
The author reports no relevant financial relationships.

Address correspondence to:
Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH
CB 7550 Division of Geriatric Medicine
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, NC 27599
laura_hanson@med.unc.edu

References

1.World Health Organization. Dementia: A Public Health Priority. United Kingdom: World Health Organization Press, 2012.

2. Reisberg B, Ferris SH, De Leon MJ, Crook T. The Global Deterioration Scale for assess- ment of primary degenerative dementia. Am J Psychiatry. 1982;139(9):1136-1139.

3. Mitchell SL, Teno JM, Kiely DK, et al. The clinical course of advanced dementia. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(16):1529-1538.

4. Ritchie CS, Wilcox CM, Kvale E. Ethical and medicolegal issues related to percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy placement. Gastrointest Endoscopy Clin N Am. 2007;17(4):805-815.

5. Casarett D, Kapo J, Caplan A. Appropriate use of artificial nutrition and hydration–fundamental principles and recommendations. N Engl J Med. 2005;353(24):2607-2612.

6. Givens JL, Kiely DK, Carey K, Mitchell SL. Healthcare proxies of nursing home residents with advanced dementia: decisions they confront and their satisfaction with decision-making. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2009;57(7):1149-1155.

7. Lewis CL, Hanson LC, Golin C, et al. Surrogates’ perceptions about feeding tube placement decisions. Patient Educ Couns. 2006;61(2):246-252.

8. Carey TS, Hanson LC, Garrett JM, et al. Expectations and outcomes of gastric feeding tubes. Am J Med. 2006;119(6):527.e11-16.

9. Shega JW, Hougham GW, Stocking CB, et al. Barriers to limiting the practice of feeding tube placement in advanced dementia. J Palliat Med. 2003;6(6):885-893.

10. Hanson LC, Garrett JM, Lewis C, Phifer N, Jackman A, Carey TS. Physicians’ expectations of benefit from tube feeding. J Palliat Med. 2008;11(8):1130-1134.

11. Finucane TE, Christmas C, Travis K. Tube feeding in patients with advanced dementia: a review of the evidence. JAMA. 1999;282(14):1365-1370.

12. Sampson EL, Candy B, Jones L. Enteral tube feeding for older people with advanced dementia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009;2:CD007209.

13. Garrow D, Pride P, Moran W, Zapka J, Amella E, Delegge M. Feeding alternatives in patients with dementia: examining the evidence. Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2007;5(12):1372-1378.

14. Kuo S, Rhodes RL, Mitchell SL, Mor V, Teno JM. Natural history of feeding-tube use in nursing home residents with advanced dementia. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2009;10(4):264-270.

15. Tokunaga T, Kubo T, Ryan S, Tomizawa M, Yoshida S, Takagi K, Furui K, Gotoh T. Long-term outcome after placement of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube. Geriatr Gerontol Int. 2008;8(1):19-23.

16. Callahan CM, Haag KM, Weinberger M, Tierney WM, Buchanan NN, Stump TE, Nisi R. Outcomes of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy among older adults in a community setting. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2000;48(9):1048-1054.

17. Higaki F, Yokota O, Ohishi M. Factors predictive of survival after percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy in the elderly:is dementia really a risk factor? Am J Gastroenterol. 2008;103(4):1011-1016.

18. Gaines DI, Durkalski V, Patel A, DeLegge MH. Dementia and cognitive impairment are not associated with earlier mortality after percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy. J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2009;33:62-66.

19. Rimon E, Kagansky N, Levy S. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy; evidence of different prognosis in various patient subgroups. Age Ageing. 2005;34(4):353-357.

20. Sanders DS, Carter MJ, D’Silva J, James G, Bolton RP, Bardhan KD. Survival analysis in percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy feeding: a worse outcome in patients with dementia. Am J Gastroenterol. 2000;95(6):1472-1475.

21. Peck A, Cohen CE, Mulvihill MN. Long-term enteral feeding of aged demented nursing home patients. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1990;38(11):1195-1198.

22. Bourdel-Marchasson I, Dumas F, Pinganaud G, Emeriau JP, Decamps A. Audit of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy in long-term enteral feeding in a nursing home. Int J Qual Health Care. 1997;9(4):297-302.

23. Mitchell SL, Kiely DK, Lipsitz LA. The risk factors and impact on survival of feeding tubes in nursing home residents with advanced dementia. Arch Intern Med. 1997;157(3):327-332.

24. Mitchell SL, Kiely DK, Lipsitz LA. Dose artificial enteral nutrition prolong the survival of institutionalized elders with chewing and swallowing problems? J Gerontol. 1998;53(3):M207-M213.

25. Rudberg MA, Egleston BL, Grant MD, Brody JA. Effectiveness of feeding tubes in nursing home residents with swallowing disorders. JPEN J Parenteral Enteral Nutr. 2000;24(2):97-102.

26. Nair S, Hertan H, Pitchumoni CS. Hypoalbuminemia is a poor predictor of survival after percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy in elderly patients with dementia. Am J Gastroenterol. 2000;95(1):133-136.

27. Meier DE, Aronheim JC, Morris J, Baskin-Lyons S, Morrison RS. High short-term mortality in hospitalized patients with advanced dementia: lack of benefit of tube feeding. Arch Intern Med. 2001;161(4):594-599.

28. Tokuda Y, Koketsu H. High mortality in hospitalized elderly patients with feeding tube placement. Intern Med. 2002;41(8):613-616.

29. Murphy LM, Lipman TO. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy does not prolong survival in patients with dementia [published correction appears in Arch Intern Med. 2003;163(19):2397.] Arch Intern Med. 2003;163(11):1351-1353.

30. Jaul E, Singer P, Calderon-Margalit R. Tube feeding in the demented elderly with severe disabilities. IMAJ. 2006;8(12):870-874.

31. Arinzon Z, Peisakh A, Berner YN. Evaluation of the benefits of enteral nutrition in long-term care elderly patients. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2008;9(9):657-662.

32. Stratton RJ, Ek AC, Engfer M, et al. Enteral nutritional support in prevention and treat- ment of pressure ulcers: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Ageing Res Rev. 2005;4(3):422-450.

33. Teno JM, Gozalo P, Mitchell SL, Kuo S, Fulton AT, Mor V. Feeding tubes and the prevention or healing of pressure ulcers. Arch Intern Med. 2012;172(9):697-701.

34. Teno JM, Mitchell SL, Kuo SK, et al. Decision-making and outcomes of feeding tube insertion: a five-state study. J Am Geriatr Soc. 59(5):881-886.

35. Hanson LC, Ersek M, Gilliam R, Carey TS. Oral feeding options for patients with dementia: a systematic review. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2011;59(3):463-472.

36. Palecek EJ, Teno JM, Casarett D, Hanson LC, Rhodes RL, Mitchell SL. Comfort feeding only: a proposal to bring clarity to decision making regarding difficulty with eating for persons with advanced dementia. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2010;58(3):580-584.

37. Kayser-Jones J, Schell ES, Porter C, Barbaccia JC, Shaw H. Factors contributing to dehydration in nursing homes: inadequate staffing and lack of professional supervision. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1999;47(10):1187-1194.

38. Mitchell SL, Buchanan J, Littlehale S, Hamel MB. Tube-feeding versus hand-feeding nursing home residents with advanced dementia: a cost comparison. J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2004;5(suppl 2):S22-S29.

39. Monteleoni C, Clark E. Using rapid-cycle quality improvement methodology to reduce feeding tubes in patients with advanced dementia: before and after study. BMJ. 2004;(7464):491-494.

40. Hanson LC, Carey TS, Caprio AJ, et al. Improving decision-making for feeding options in dementia care: a randomized, controlled trial. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2011;59(11):2009-2016. 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement