General management of nonagenarian patients: a review of the literature
Author(s) -
Romain Rivoirard,
Cyrus Chargari,
JC Trone,
Alexander T. Falk,
J.-B. Guy,
H Eddekaoui,
Rihab Lahmar,
Cécile Pacaut,
Mery Benoite,
A. Assouline,
Pierre Auberdiac,
Guillaume Moriceau,
Régis Gonthier,
Aline Guillot,
Yacine Merrouche,
Nicolas Magné
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
schweizerische medizinische wochenschrift
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0036-7672
DOI - 10.4414/smw.2014.14059
Subject(s) - medicine , clinical trial , alternative medicine , geriatrics , intensive care medicine , population , gerontology , family medicine , pathology , psychiatry , environmental health
The number of nonagenarian people in the world is steadily growing. This phenomenon will increase in future years: in 2050, world population prospects estimate 71.16 million people aged 90 years or older. The two main causes of death among people aged 85 years or more in Europe in 2003 were cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and cancers. However, the elderly are often excluded from clinical trials; they are underrepresented in clinical registries and especially nonagenarians. Care (medical, surgical, oncology) of these very elderly is currently insufficiently based on scientific recommendations. For the physician, the choice to treat or not to treat very elderly patients (for fear of side effects) is difficult. Oncology is particularly affected by this problem. Here we review these different fields of internal medicine management of nonagenarian patients with a special focus on oncology and on comprehensive geriatric assessment as a base for all care decision taking.
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