Title: Senior Adult Oncology
1Senior Adult Oncology
2Overview
- Cancer is the leading cause of death for those
60-79 years - 60 of all cancers occur in patients who are 65
years or older - Older individuals are more prone to develop
cancer due to physiological changes associated
with aging
3Older Adults
- Older patients can be classified into three
categories - Young Old 65-75 years
- Old 76-85 years
- Oldest Old over 85 years
4Age Distribution of U.S. Population, 1980, 1990,
and 2005
Year 1980
Year 1990
Year 2005
85 80-84 75-79 70-74 65-69 60-64 55-59 50-54 45-
49 40-44 35-39 30-34 25-29 20-24 15-19 10-14 5-9 0
-4
Data source The Bureau of the Census
5Frailty
- Decreased reserve and resistance to stressors
- Frail patients have an increased risk of
complications from cancer treatments - Risk for falling, disability, hospitalization,
and death
6Fraility Criteria
- Unintentional weight loss (10 lbs or more in past
year) - Self reported exhaustion
- Weakness
- Slow walking speed
- Low physical activity
7Geriatric Syndromes
- Malnutrition
- Polypharmacy
- Lack of Social Support
- Depression
- Dementia
- Fall Risk
8Falls
- One of the most common geriatric syndromes
- 30-40 of adults older than 65 years fall each
year - Risk factors muscle weakness and impairments in
gait, vision, cognition, and ADLs
9Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
- Able to bathe self
- Able to dress self
- Able to toilet self
- Control over bowel bladder
- Able to transfer self
- Able to feed self
10Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs)
- Use the telephone
- Get to places beyond walking distance
- Grocery shop
- Prepare meals
- Housework
- Laundry
- Take medications
- Manage money
11Percent of Medicare Beneficiaries Reporting
Difficulty with IADLs or ADLs by Age, 2004
Percent ()
Data Source Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey
12Percent of Persons Age 65 and Over (age-adjusted)
Reporting Selected Chronic Conditions by Sex,
2004-2005
Percent ()
Data Source National Health Interview Survey
13Years of Education Among Persons Age 65 and Over
(age-adjusted) by Sex and Race/Ethnicity, 2006
Female
Male
Percent ()
Data source Current Population Survey
14Cancer Treatment
- Benefits
- Prolonged survival
- Maintenance and improvement of quality of life
and function - Palliation of symptoms
15Cancer Treatments
- Risks
- Complications of surgery, radiation, and/or
chemotherapy - Affects on cognition, function, balance, vision,
hearing, continence, and mood
16Treatment Decisions
- Life Expectancy
- Aggressiveness of Disease
- Functional Abilities
- Comorbidities
- Patient Goals
- Social Resources
- Tolerance of Treatment
17Treatment Decisions
- Advanced age alone should not preclude the use of
effective cancer treatment - Older patients with good performance status are
able to tolerate most forms of treatments - Treatment that diminishes quality of life with no
significant survival benefit should be avoided