We lack effective and especially curative treatments for many brain cancers and unfortunately, for most adult patients, brain cancer is a terminal diagnosis. For those with lower grade tumours, the prognosis is less certain and survival may be measured in decades. Consequently, there is a need for early discussions in Neuro-oncology around supportive and palliative care that consider advance care planning and optimising function in the face of inevitable deterioration. For some patients, the choice of an early death is preferable to the fear of suffering and loss of independence that a slightly longer life might present. Medical assistance in dying (MAiD), also known as physician-assisted suicide (PAS) or voluntary-assisted dying (VAD), may be self-administered or clinician administered, depending on legislation.Reference Mroz, Dierickx, Deliens, Cohen and Chambaere1 The practice remains controversial, and some have expressed concern that MAiD may be primarily driven by the inequity of access or failure to implement early and comprehensive palliative care as well as by potential social or financial vulnerability.Reference Snyder Sulmasy and Mueller2 Similarly, concerns exist regarding the inequity of access to MAiD itself,Reference Buchbinder3 including in many faith-based health care settings where MAiD is unavailable. This polarising topic is overlaid by the potential negative impact of a brain cancer diagnosis on cognitive function and decision-making capacity that often goes unrecognised.Reference Kerrigan, Erridge, Liaquat, Graham and Grant4
Despite insufficient guidelines for competency assessment and decision-making for MAiD in Neuro-oncology, there is consensus that understanding both patient and clinician views is required. In this issue of the journal, Climans et al. reported on an international online survey of Neuro-oncologists identifying attitudes and perspectives on MAiD, including the assessment of decision-making capacity and the moral permissibility of the practice.Reference Climans, Mason, Edelstein, Variath and Bell5 Hypothetical scenarios were used to identify physician opinions about the eligibility of MAiD for certain patients. Accepting the limitations of low response rates (125/10,000), the study confirms differing opinions of Neuro-oncologists, although all acknowledge that capacity must be assessed carefully. Because most respondents were from jurisdictions in which MAiD is not yet legal, and only 16% had participated in the process, familiarity and provider experience may influence responses. This is supported by practitioners with increased time in clinical practice reporting fewer moral objections and increasing support from physicians in countries where MAiD has been implemented longer.Reference Kouwenhoven, Raijmakers and van Delden6,Reference Smets, Cohen, Bilsen, Van Wesemael, Rurup and Deliens7 Surveys of physicians in this context are also limited by non-random sampling as well as the framing of questions with ‘yes-or-no’ options. Additional understanding from this survey will be presented after qualitative interviews of survey respondents currently under evaluation.
MAiD has been lawful in some jurisdictions since the 1940s and in Canada since 2016.Reference Downar, Fowler, Halko, Huyer, Hill and Gibson8 Since then, participation in MAiD has increased steadily each year and accounted for approximately 2.5% of all deaths in 2020,9 and internationally this ranges from 0.3% to 4.6%.Reference Emanuel, Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Urwin and Cohen10 MAiD remains controversial and a topic of intense debate. Public interest is driven by concerns about suffering and the desire for patient autonomy, often motivated by highly visible and personal stories. In contrast, the physician perspective demonstrates less support, frequently highlighting concerns about misuse of MAiD in the context of financial and social vulnerability, as well as the dangers of the ’slippery slope’, and multiple groups, including the American College of Physicians, have released position statements arguing against the support of MAiD.Reference Snyder Sulmasy and Mueller2,Reference De Lima, Woodruff and Pettus11 Despite these concerns, multiples cohorts have found MAiD recipients to be wealthier, well-educated, and more likely to be partnered,Reference Downar, Fowler, Halko, Huyer, Hill and Gibson8,Reference Steck, Junker and Maessen12–15 suggesting that requests for MAiD are unlikely to be driven by social or financial inequity.
Brain cancer is unique, as a malignancy that affects the very essence or identity of an individual, due to the impact of the tumour on personality, cognitive function, and competence. Therefore, debate on MAiD in Neuro-oncology requires attention to self-identity and maintaining the dignity of patients with brain cancer. Although pain and suffering are often considered drivers of requests for MAiD, more frequently the loss of dignity, autonomy and inability to enjoy life influences requests for MAiD.Reference Emanuel, Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Urwin and Cohen10,15 This concern raises questions about advance care planning and decision-making in the patient whose disease changes cognitive capacity such that they can no longer consent to MAiD. In this scenario, should we enact the wishes of the patient before their impairment or the ‘new’ patient before us who has been borne out of the disease? The issue of impaired decision-making capacity in patients with brain cancer may also be under-recognised, particularly in high-grade glioma (HGG).Reference Kerrigan, Erridge, Liaquat, Graham and Grant4 Assessment of this capacity is made doubly complex in brain tumour patients due to the prevalence of complicating symptoms including aphasia and intermittent impairment of consciousness.Reference Isenberg-Grzeda, Sofie, Larrivee and Graber16
The popular focus on MAiD as the ‘solution’ to end-of-life suffering absorbs substantial political attention and funding, while neglecting most dying patients who may not consider it. In the context of brain cancer, a recent report from the State of Washington examining HGG patients’ request for MAiD found only a minority of those who are prescribed elect to proceed with MAiD.Reference Chamberlain17 Amongst palliative care providers, there is concern that MAiD will be further conflated in the public mind with palliative care (due to fear that the promotion of effective opioid analgesia in palliative care is ‘euthanasia by stealth’), and this may dissuade patients who could reap substantial symptomatic benefits from accessing palliative care.Reference Waran and William18 Early, comprehensive palliative care support for brain cancer patients has been shown to result in high patient and carer satisfaction and improved quality of life, and to be highly cost-effective through reducing hospital readmission rates with uncontrolled symptoms or deterioration.Reference Pace, Villani and Di Pasquale19 It would be unfortunate if access to and funding of these goals were impacted by a disproportionate focus on MAiD.
Many arguments are advanced both in favour and against MAiD; however, the momentum internationally continues, and the intensity of debate shows no sign of abating. Detailed guidelines for decision-making in MAiD are indicated to support Neuro-oncologists in assessing competency while ensuring respect for patient autonomy and dignity. The question remains, can palliative care and MAiD co-exist and will improvements in and earlier introduction of palliative care in the brain cancer patient’s journey be impeded by the further developments of MAiD? In the context of the terminal nature of most brain cancers, this study reminds us to engage early, frankly and often with our patients about their priorities and preferences for end-of-life care, to ensure that we can be advocates for and guardians of those wishes when their competence and autonomy are inevitably diminished by their disease.
Disclosures
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
Statement of Authorship
All three authors equally contributed to design, manuscript preparation, and final approval.