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SPECIAL ARTICLE

Ten Common Questions (and Their Answers)


on Medical Futility
Keith M. Swetz, MD, MA; Christopher M. Burkle, MD, JD; Keith H. Berge, MD;
and William L. Lanier, MD

Abstract

The term medical futility is frequently used when discussing complex clinical scenarios and throughout the
medical, legal, and ethics literature. However, we propose that health care professionals and others often
use this term inaccurately and imprecisely, without fully appreciating the powerful, often visceral,
response that the term can evoke. This article introduces and answers 10 common questions regarding
medical futility in an effort to dene, clarify, and explore the implications of the term. We discuss multiple
domains related to futility, including the biological, ethical, legal, societal, and nancial considerations that
have a bearing on denitions and actions. Finally, we encourage empathetic communication among cli-
nicians, patients, and families and emphasize how dialogue that seeks an understanding of multiple points
of view is critically important in preventing or attenuating conict among the involved parties.
2014 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research n Mayo Clin Proc. 2014;nn(n):1-17

From the Department of

F
utile medical care and disagreements or intervention is directed toward a seriously ill
Medicine, Section of Palli-
(eg, among physicians, family members, patient who has a low likelihood of recovery. ative Medicine and
and others) about whether an individual Merriam-Websters Dictionary denes futile as Biomedical Ethics Program
patients health care is futile constitute the serving no useful purpose; completely ineffec- (K.M.S.), and Department
of Anesthesiology (C.M.B.,
main ethical health careerelated challenges tive, but it does not contain a separate listing K.H.B., W.L.L.), Mayo
faced by the public today.1 Despite progressive for medical futility.4 Despite the relevance and Clinic, Rochester, MN.
efforts to prevent disputes, conicts will likely importance of these terms to discussions within
continue to increase as the aged population in- contemporary medicine, ethics, and economics,
creases1,2 and if patients are offered a list of medical futility is often underaddressed, and op-
treatment optionsdand treatment and tech- portunities exist to educate those direly in need
nology imperativesdin a misdirected, inap- of information.1
propriate, and wasteful fashion.3 In these Medical writers, clinicians, and ethicists
instances, the term medical futility is often have noted that denitions of medical futility
used. The following article attempts to provide (herein referred to simply as futility) can be
health care practitioners and the public with confusing, inconsistent, and controversial5
an overview of this topic by introducing 10 because the denition is often slanted to reect
questions regarding medical futility and offer- the deners point of view. Any working de-
ing answers to those questions on the basis nition of futility should be accessible to users
of the existing literature, common values with different backgrounds and testable
gleaned from multiple relevant elds (eg, med- against existing standards and practices.
icine, ethics, economics, and the law), and the For example, Schneiderman et al6 consid-
authors own experiences. The ultimate goal of ered experience and quantity in their denition
this overview is to provide readers information of medical futility: when physicians conclude
on the common concepts, language, and con- (either through personal experience, experi-
troversies to enhance future discussions and ences shared with colleagues, or consideration
debate. of reported empiric data) that in the last 100
cases, a medical treatment has been useless,
QUESTION 1: WHAT IS THE DEFINITION OF they should regard that treatment as futile.
MEDICAL FUTILITY? Alternatively, Youngner7 dened futility via 3
The term medical futility is often invoked when an major domains: quantitative (as with Schnei-
otherwise curative or disease-arresting therapy derman et al6), qualitative, and physiologic.

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Physiologic futility examines whether a Medicare dollars are spent in the nal year of
treatment or technology is efcacious in meeting life. This reasoning is somewhat circular, how-
its intended purpose on a given patient. Clini- ever, in that sick people require health care re-
cians are typically the arbiters of physiologic fu- sources, sicker people require more expensive
tility, which is relatively easy to assess in an resources, and the sicker one is, the more likely
objective manner. Examples include whether a one is to die. Although it is impossible to be
ventricular assist device is effectively supporting certain that someone has entered the nal year
cardiac output and reversing cardiogenic shock of life, multiple prognostic scoring systems
or whether hemodialysis is adequately replacing have been developed to more precisely predict
renal function. the likelihood of patients survival when they
In contrast, the quantitative and qualitative are receiving intensive care. Although tools
aspects of futility are often challenging for clini- such as the Acute Physiology and Chronic
cians to parse out because these aspects rely on Health Evaluation (APACHE) have tried to link
value judgments on the quality of life and its physiology, resource utilization, and likelihood
role in assessing the virtue of longevity.7 What of death, they have failed to be denitively useful
a patient or surrogate denes as quality or quan- for this role, particularly when applied to
tity may differ from the clinicians perspective, outcome in a single patient.9-11
and one can argue that qualitative futility is Berge et al12 used the physiologic datae
only met if a treatment does not allow a patient based APACHE III system in an effort to iden-
to live his/her life according to his/her goals, tify futile medical care by looking at a group of
preferences, and values, which we believe can- extremely ill intensive care unit (ICU) patients
not be determined clinically or by how the last (ie, study patients had predicted single-day mor-
100 patients responded in a given situation. tality rates of 95% on 2 consecutive days). A
Clinicians are best able to accurately com- total of 248 patients (0.68%) of 38,165 ICU ad-
ment on the physiologic aspects of medical missions achieved this status. In fact, the sur-
care that are not value laden.7 With this ten- vival rates exceeded the predicted rates by a
sion, the American Medical Association Coun- signicant margin, with 23% surviving to hospi-
cil on Ethical and Judicial Affairs attempted to tal discharge. However, all but one of these pa-
be more denitive but recognized the limita- tients was ranked as severely disabled at
tions of dening futility as a value-based discharge, and most (90%) died within the sub-
concept; instead, they determined that a fully sequent year, never having left a skilled nursing
objective and concrete denition of futility is facility.12 Interestingly, Berge et al reported that
unattainable.8 Reecting on the difculty in the opinions of experienced ICU physicians (as
dening other elusive terms, such as love and recorded in narrative notes within the hospital
art, Kwiecinski8 commented that most physi- record) appeared to more accurately predict in-
cians now know it [futility] when they see it. dividual patients survival than did the most
Acknowledging these difculties, we intro- nely calibrated, then-state-of-the-art, com-
duce, as a framework for the remainder of our puter-based prognostic scoring system (ie,
discussion, the following recognizably non- APACHE III). The report of Berge et al docu-
comprehensive denition of medical futility: ments that although prognostic scoring systems
excessive (in terms of effort and nances) med- are increasingly used to attempt to predict the
ical intervention with little prospect of altering clinical course of the sickest patients, they still
a patients ultimate clinical outcome. are unable to determine when an individual
therapy is futile.12 A review of these and other
QUESTION 2: HOW DO CHALLENGES IN scoring systems, including the Simplied Acute
PROGNOSTICATION CONTRIBUTE TO Physiology Score 3 and the Mortality Probability
MEDICAL FUTILITY? Model 3, reveals that these models may predict
Just as it is difcult to precisely dene futility, it mortality reasonably well at a population level
is difcult to dene how often care is provided but tend to be less effective for individual patient
that is deemed futile, particularly when analyzed prognostication.13 Taken together, clinicians
from the perspective of observers diverse views and the prognostic tools they use are limited in
on what is and is not futile care. A crude approx- their ability to predict outcomes for individual
imation can be surmised because 25% of US patients, which can lead to uncertainty and
n n
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

the continuation of treatments with marginal sentiment of patients or surrogates, neverthe-


efcacy. less can enter into the decision making of physi-
cians, many of whom have during their careers
QUESTION 3: WHAT AND WHO ARE THE witnessed or heard about one of these rare
PRINCIPAL MOVERS ENCOURAGING events.
MEDICAL CARE THAT MAY BE CONSIDERED Sometimes physicians, nurses, and other
FUTILE? health care professionals may experience moral
Berge et al12 found that the best predictor of distress, feeling pressured to provide aggressive
prolonged and expensive ICU care in patients care as encouraged by technology imperatives,
from whom survival was unlikely (perhaps even though the outcome will not be altered
meeting a denition of futility) was medical re- by such interventions.22 These imperatives
cord documentation of unrealistic family ex- (ie, the inexorable inertia toward intensication
pectations. However, the source of these of care geared at life prolongation) are dis-
expectations can be multiple and variable. cussed further below.
Sources include cultural or spiritual values False hopes also can be created by media
and personal convictions of patients, families, and tabloid reports of the occasional miracle
or clinicians, and they also can result from emergence from prolonged comas, such as
an inaccurate interpretation of medical infor- persistent vegetative states. Wijdicks and Wij-
mation that is presented unclearly by clini- dicks23 made it clear that such cases arise
cians or alternative sources of information. from initial misdiagnosis or media mislabeling
The popular media and entertainment in- of the actual form of coma and that the diag-
dustry have an important inuence on inaccu- nosis of the exact nature of a coma is a subtle
rate expectations for outcomes. For example, matter best left to neurologists with special
one study14 researched television medical expertise in coma diagnosis.24,25 In correctly
dramas to determine how often cardiopulmo- diagnosed persistent vegetative states lasting
nary resuscitation (CPR) is depicted as success- for 6 months to 1 year, there is in fact no
ful (ie, survival to hospital discharge with no hope for the recovery of consciousness.24 Un-
neurologic decits) and compared the results fortunately, in reports of possible outliers, the
with those from medical studies. Although a media may promote sensationalism over clear,
successful outcome of CPR is no better than technically accurate reporting.
10% to 15% in most situations, the television The misuse of aggressive end-of-life treat-
dramas depicted it as successful in an unrealis- ments that, in turn, impose an undue nancial
tic 75% of immediate survival cases, with 67% burden to the health care system is a multifac-
surviving to hospital discharge.14 Regardless of eted problem. Often, these exercises result in
the penetration of the media and entertainment the deployment of multiple high-tech, and often
industries in producing erroneous views on unproven, therapies that may cause patients and
CPR efcacy, the erroneous views are widely families to miss an opportunity to spend time,
held. For example, even those with medical money, and effort on useful alternatives, such
training routinely overestimate the benets of as palliative care or hospice care. From a clini-
CPR.15,16 cian perspective, Mueller and Hook3 editorialize
The rare instances when extended resuscita- that when faced with impending mortality in a
tions yield a successful outcome are reported in patient, it is often difcult for physicians to avoid
the medical literature17-19 and often amplied in bowing to interventions encouraged by techno-
media reports.20,21 (As one might suspect, fail- logical and treatment imperatives.
ures rarely receive such attention.) That reports In this case, treatment imperative refers to
of such successes represent extreme outliers is the propensity of clinicians and patients or sur-
generally not appreciated by the lay public or rogates to feel obligated to use any intervention,
emphasized by media stories about such resusci- even if that intervention may not help the pa-
tations.20,21 For some patients and caregivers, tient (eg, offering vasopressors, antimicrobial
hopes for miraculous recoveries may persist. drugs, or surgical intervention simply because
The hope for an extremely improbable favorable they are at our disposal). Similarly, technological
outcome (sometimes perceived as a miracle imperative refers to the propensity to use tech-
outcome), although not a commonly articulated nological interventions when they exist, even

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if such interventions are not absolutely indi- and other health care professionals in the unen-
cated for the individual patient (eg, using hemo- viable position of being stewards of limited
dialysis, pacemakers, or debrillators simply funds when the wishes of patients are pitted
because they exist). When offered, it is difcult against those of society.32
for the patient or the surrogate to refuse such In the 2010 Dartmouth Atlas report entitled
options simply out of desire to do something.3 Quality of End-of-Life Cancer Care for Medicare
Thus, it can become a default decision to esca- Beneciaries, there was wide variation across
late and prolong therapy, even beyond the point the country in the extent of care provided
where it only functions to prolong suffering and within the last month or 2 weeks of a patients
delay inevitable death. life.33 The authors of the report suggested that
the primary reason for these geographical dif-
QUESTION 4: WHAT ARE THE FINANCIAL ferences stem from differing hospital reim-
ARGUMENTS THAT MAY ENCOURAGE OR bursement rates, local supply of physicians,
DISCOURAGE THE PROVISION OF use of medical specialists (vs generalists), and
MEDICALLY FUTILE CARE? the availability of hospital beds rather than
Chronic critical illness and multiorgan failure the health care status of a given population or
were previously not compatible with survival. concerns related to the best care for the pa-
However, contemporary patients can often tient.33-35 Furthermore, discussions with pa-
survive for extended and indenite (but not tients and families concerning the negative
innite) timeframes if sustained by heroic consequences of aggressive care often do not
measures and technological advances.3 Annu- occur because nancial reimbursements for al-
ally, 65% of deaths in the United States take ternatives, such as palliative care and hospice
place within a hospital setting.26 This can be care, are relatively low.33,34
at great cost (as stated earlier, 25% of Medicare Economic analysis of the benet of con-
dollars are spend in the last year of life),27 tinued treatment to patients in terms of quality
which may lead to questions about health or survival can be calculated; however, such
care allocation.28 measures should not routinely be used to deter-
A recent study evaluated care of 1136 pa- mine whether care is futile. As described by
tients in the intensive care unit within one Siddiqui and Rajkumar,36 who explored the or-
health care system during a 3-month period. igins of high costs of cancer drugs, measures
The ndings revealed that approximately 11% such as quality-adjusted life-years (dened as
of these ICU patients were receiving care the number of years of life added by an interven-
considered to be futile, and such care was at tion that is adjusted for quality of life) and incre-
an estimated cost of $2.6 million (or 3.5% of mental cost-effectiveness ratios are means
total hospital costs for the patients studied).29 commonly used in the evaluation of economic
Care considered to be unnecessary is not benet of drugs and devices. These formula-
limited to end of life; the Institute of Medicine based measures are often criticized for not
estimates that up to 30% of US health care ex- considering the patient as a person. Further-
penditures may be nonindicated.30 more, concerns about equity in health care
The current nancial incentives in US can be raised if it appears that there is care
health care are not necessarily conducive to discrimination on the basis of patient age or a
efciently managing patients at the end of life. bias regarding quality of life.37 Despite their
As the US population ages, Medicare and inherent limitations, it remains to be seen
Medicaid will likely become the primary means whether the tools of value-based analyses such
of paying for health care, thereby placing added as these will eventually make their way into
strain on all taxpayers.31 Because patients and futile care decision processes because the nan-
their families do not pay for the entire amount cial burden of providing unbridled end-of-life
of health services provided, as they might for a care continues to increase.
nonehealth careerelated commodity, the cost Domestic nancial pressures related to
for potentially futile care may pit the patient futile care may inuence both patients and their
against those who help fund this care (ie, those families. Some patients may fear that the costs
who pay insurance premiums and taxpayers). incurred with aggressive treatment may have
This payment process may place physicians a negative effect on either their own nances
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

or those of their spouse.38 On the other hand, case decided by the US federal courts in
patients and families may demand that futile 1993, the judiciary held that because the claim
care continue out of fear that death may cause of futility was regarding an anencephalic infant
their family to lose income from the patients (ie, a condition from which there is no recov-
salary or pension.38 With continued increases ery), withholding potentially life-sustaining
in health careerelated costs, along with a shift treatments (eg, mechanical ventilation and
in age demographic characteristics in the United CPR) was in violation of the Americans with
States and implementation of evolving strate- Disabilities Act.42 These 2 cases are examples
gies for health care reimbursement (eg, strate- of court decisions that inuence futile care
gies restructured under the Affordable Care without directly facing the issue of futility itself.
Act), nancial concerns related to futile care In the Cruzan case, the courts fear was the irre-
will likely continue to affect the decisions of pa- versible nature of inaccurate medical decisions,
tients, families, health care professionals, and whereas in the Baby K case, the court used pro-
the nation as a whole well into the future.29-31,39 tection through classifying an ill child as
One way health care reimbursement reform disabled.43
can affect health care delivery is by restricting Legal concepts factor in both encouraging
potentially futile care and reappropriating the and discouraging the provisions of futile care.
saved funds. It has been suggested that differ- Shiner42 argued that a patients request for treat-
ences in ICU resources between countries in ment deemed medically inappropriate and a
Western Europe and the United States are courts decision to support that decision may
linked to variability in treatment withdrawal undermine the ethical integrity of the medical
patterns.40 Furthermore, because of limited re- professions judgments. Furthermore, requiring
sources, some argue that it is acceptable under a physician or other medical practitioner to treat
the construct of social justice to direct care to a patient when considered at odds with their
those most likely to survive.41 Thus, it is fore- medical judgment may in turn violate their per-
seeable that attempting to rein in health care sonal ethics. Many professional organizations
costs while still providing services to the great- and state laws allow practitioners to refuse treat-
est number of the population may result in ment and transfer a patient to other facilities or
future adjustments to the boundaries of that practitioners when the practitioners beliefs are
care. at odds with a patients treatment decision.8,42
Any rules or laws that require medical prac-
QUESTION 5: WHAT ARE THE CORE LEGAL titioners to provide care they believe futile may
CONCERNS THAT INFLUENCE THE affect the use of scarce resources otherwise
PROVISION OF MEDICALLY FUTILE CARE? benecial to others in need.8,42 This scenario
Courts have maintained the importance of the has played out in situations of mass causalities,
principle of individual patient autonomy at such as the triaging of Hurricane Katrina vic-
the expense of historically paternalistic stan- tims regarding who would and who would
dards once prevalent within medical decision not receive the most aggressive medical treat-
making. Furthermore, the states strong desire ments.44 Triage criteria have been enacted to
to preserve the lives of its citizens and the attempt to guide clinicians but are not without
courts role of representing those state interests critics.45,46
may potentially limit practitioners decisions Government modulation of futile care de-
to terminate end-of-life treatment, especially livery can emanate from all branches of govern-
when practitioners decisions are at odds with ment (ie, legislative, judicial, and executive).
those of patients, their families, or their surro- The executive branch of government has inter-
gates.42 As an example, in the 1990 landmark vened in several cases, with subsequent execu-
decision of Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Depart- tive order or legislative action leading to the
ment of Health, the US Supreme Court spoke of creation of new law or policy. Baby Doe was a
concern for the irreversibility of erroneous de- child born with Down syndrome and a trache-
cisions to terminate life.42 Still further, legal ar- oesophageal stula in Bloomington, Indiana, in
guments surrounding patients with disabilities 1982. The parents asked that the stula not be
have inuenced the continuation of what some repaired and that the child be allowed to die
may consider futile treatment. In the Baby K because of the disability. In response to the

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Baby Doe case, then President Ronald Reagan additional life if an intervention is successful.
worked with the US Secretary of Health and Clinicians have an obligation to serve as advo-
Human Services to mandate that children cates for minors when social, cultural, religious,
with disabilities be provided necessary life- or spiritual issues on the part of parents, guard-
sustaining treatments.47 Regarding the case of ians, or surrogates encourage interventions and
Terri Schiavo, a woman in a persistent vegeta- care that deviate from accepted standards.
tive state after an anoxic brain injury, there When challenges occur, clinical ethics consul-
was unprecedented intervention by then Flor- tation may be helpful, and sometime legal assis-
ida Governor Jeb Bush, who ordered that tance is required.
Schiavos feeding tube be continued or not Similar situations can occur in patients with
removed even though it was not in his power disabilities or elderly patients because some
to do so.48 clinicians may challenge whether a treatment
When considered in aggregate, there are is able to qualitatively or quantitatively affect
many examples in which legal decisions, legis- outcome, given exigent confounding issues.
lative actions, and executive decisions have Most futility conicts question whether the
either encouraged or discouraged the delivery family members or other patient surrogates
of futile care without facing the issue of med- are making decisions on the basis of the prior
ical futility directly. When physicians and hos- verbalized requests of the patients, proper
pitals have withdrawn support against family substituted judgment, or the best interests of
wishes, courts have typically sided with the the patients and whether health care profes-
medical professionals.43 However, when med- sionals are required to follow the dictates of
ical professionals have preliminarily sought the patients surrogate.3,49,50 In these situa-
support for their decisions before stopping tions, it is recommended that clinicians work
life-sustaining treatments, the courts have with their legal advisers to be certain that surro-
more often sided with families.43 Because of gates are appropriately exerting inuence on a
the lack of legal consensus on end-of-life futil- plan of care that is consistent with norms and
ity disputes, strong efforts to resolve these dis- values that go beyond the surrogates personal
agreements should best take place outside the opinion.
judicial arena.43 Surrogates and families may perceive sig-
nicant vulnerabilitydresulting from factors
QUESTION 6: DOES THE DEFINITION OF such as lower socioeconomic state or inade-
MEDICAL FUTILITY DIFFER DEPENDING ON quate insurance statusdwhen they are asked
THE TYPE OF PATIENT? to make decisions for patients when outcome
We believe that futility is best adjudicated by is uncertain and care options have widely
determining the clinical benet of an interven- divergent costs.51 A recent study illustrated
tion or lack thereof and how this affects the this concept with the nding that nonwhite
goals of care. This rule should be uniformly patients with neurologic injuries were less
applied whether a patient is young or old, likely to have mechanical ventilation with-
poor or rich, learned or with limited educa- drawn.52 Clinical ethics committees are often
tion. However, there are certain vulnerable used as advisers or arbiters when vulnerability
groups that may require extra scrutiny. exists. However, when the option to unilater-
Patients, in particular those who are legally ally withdraw treatments is available, this can
minors, may require scrutiny to see whether the amplify power inequalities between patients
plan of care is consistent with the goals of care and surrogates vs the health care team or sys-
of the surrogate vs the standard of care as out- tem.53 When physicians and ethics commit-
lined by the clinician and the state. Mechanical tees are employed by the same institution, it
ventilation of anencephalic or extremely pre- may be difcult for the ethics committee
mature infants may physiologically provide to be unbiased.53 Furthermore, despite the
oxygenation; however, it may be incompatible growth of hospital ethics consultation services
with the standards of care or the patients inter- during the past quarter-century, most hospital
mediate to long-term survival. ethics committees are ill equipped with suf-
One upside to the pressure to extend care cient medical knowledge to have life and death
to patients who are minors is the length of decision making in their hands.53
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

QUESTION 7: DO THE STANDARDS OF given the global decrease in mortality after


APPROPRIATE VS FUTILE MEDICAL CARE LVAD implantation (42% in 2005 vs 17% in
CHANGE WITH TIME? 2009), patients likely once deemed too sick to
With the passage of time, treatments once undergo anything but emergency surgery
viewed as medically futile are no longer consid- related to their underlying cardiovascular
ered as such, and conversely many treatments condition will increasingly present for none
once viewed as benecial are now viewed as cardiacerelated operations in the future.58
medically futile. Medical research and clinical In another example of augmented or
experience continue to rene best evidence- replaced cardiac function, Tweet et al17 re-
based practices and how a treatment is viewed ported on a 46-year-old woman who presented
as benecial or not.54 to the emergency department with symptoms
Advances in medications and medical tech- consistent with a myocardial infarction. When
nology have, in many instances, contributed to an unstable hemodynamic prole and cardiac
routine expectations for life prolongation and arrhythmias persisted after emergency coronary
improvements in the quality and quantity of revascularization, the patient was given extra-
life among critically ill patients.55 However, corporeal membrane oxygenation for 8 days
not all appealing therapies substantially alter before she was able to maintain her own, life-
outcomes, and, even among those that eventu- sustaining cardiac output.17 Although extracor-
ally prove efcacious, there can be a prolonged poreal membrane oxygenation appears to be
learning curve to identify which patients will more effective for patients with in-hospital car-
benet most from such treatments. In a recent diac arrest vs those with out-of-hospital arrests,
editorial, Mueller and Hook3 reported that pa- misunderstanding of this detail may lead to the
tients and their families may grasp for options treatment being used or requested in both
to arrest and reverse life-threatening illness, subsets.59,60
which, in many instances, may lead practi- Because countless examples are possible,
tioners to feel compelled to offer treatments Table 1, Table 2, and Table 3 offer additional
that remain yet unproven. Restated simply, examples of therapeutic measures once con-
there is, at times, an unrealistic pressure to sim- sidered benecial that now are considered
ply do something. futile, measures once considered futile that
As time passes, however, shifts in views now are deemed useful, and those that will
may result from new outcomes-based research require further evaluation over time to deter-
and reassessments of health care economics, mine their true benet, respectively.
often leading to a more objective analysis of
treatment benet or lack thereof.54 One QUESTION 8: HOW DOES ONE ADJUDICATE
example relates to the use of left ventricular OUTSIDE THE LEGAL SYSTEM WHETHER
assist devices (LVADs) to treat advanced heart MEDICAL CARE IS FUTILE AND WHETHER
failure. Once considered merely a means of SUCH CARE SHOULD BE CONTINUED OR
biding time for patients with advanced heart STOPPED?
failure until a transplant was available, LVADs The courts have preferred to distance them-
have been found to be benecial as a destination selves from cases that involve end-of-life treat-
therapy for a group of patients who are unable ment issues, which in turn has helped foster
to or do not wish to undergo transplanta- local efforts, including the evolution of hospital
tion.56,57 Appropriately selected patients can ethics committees for resolving disputes in a
have excellent improvement in quality of life, more germane setting.99 Fortunately, most fu-
with downstream opportunities and pitfalls tility disputes are resolved through collabora-
shared with other patients. tion and effective communication involving
Barbara et al58 recently reported on 33 pa- family members, other surrogate decision
tients with LVAD who underwent 67 none makers, and health care professionals.2,100 Inci-
cardiacerelated operations under general anes- dentally, failure of these initial attempts at
thesia during an approximately 7-month communication, and not ethical dilemmas per
period. None of the patients studied died as a se, accounts for the greatest number of requests
consequence of undergoing nonecardiace for ethics committee intervention.101-103 Not
related operations. The authors suggest that surprisingly, all disputes cannot be resolved,

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TABLE 1. Situations in Which an Intervention Once Thought to Be Benecial Is Now Viewed as Futile
Scenario Comments
Feeding tubes in critically ill patients Once viewed as a temporizing measure to keep patients supported nutritionally until a diagnosis could be
in whom a diagnosis has not established, studies in calorie-deprived patients have found that this nutritional support is likely not
been conrmed or outcome needed short term, and it often leads to prolongation of life, enhanced complications of therapy
estimated48,61 (eg, infections), and increased medical care costs without benet to the patient.
Prolonged deep anesthesia in Although it is known that prolonged seizures correlate with brain injury (in part by metabolically etching
patients with status neuronal pathways), many, if not most, patients who have status epilepticus do so because of irreversible
epilepticus62,63 brain injury. In these patients, deep anesthesia will temporarily interrupt the seizures; however, unless an
underlying source is identied and the pathophysiologic condition reversed, the patients will simply return
to status epilepticus and typically die after use of the anesthetic is discontinued.
High-dose corticosteroid therapy High-dose corticosteroid therapy was once believed to benecially affect outcome after closed head
to treat cerebral ischemia and injury as a result of its antioxidant and antiedema effects. However, more recent studies have
severe closed head injury64-67 reported a toxic effect of corticosteroids, mediated through both glucose-dependent and direct
cytotoxic mechanisms of action. Furthermore, the most authoritative trials of corticosteroids to date
proved that they do not benecially affect neurologic outcome after stroke or closed head injury,
yet concomitantly can cause systemic adverse effects.
Antibacterial antibiotics in patients Patients who aspirate gastrointestinal contents may experience chemical and/or microbial pneumonitis.
having aspiration pneumonia or Corticosteroids and antibacterial drugs were once given immediately after aspiration to prevent
severe viral infections68,69 sequelae; however, concerns for superinfections with selected, drug-resistant bacteria and no proven
benet of the corticosteroids have caused practitioners to abandon this practice. In addition, antibiotics
have been used in the setting of several viral infections because of concerns of risk of superinfections,
but as noted above, drug-resistant infections appear to be of greater concern.
Mild induced hypothermia for The practice of inducing mild intraoperative hypothermia during surgery for the repair of intracranial
cerebral aneurysm clipping70 aneurysms was routine but was proved to be nonbenecial by the IHAST trial.
IHAST Intraoperative Hypothermia for Aneurysm Surgery.

even with the assistance of in-house ethics case. Such resources may include consultation
experts.48 with a hospital clinical practice committee,
The use of clinical ethics consultation has the hospital legal counsel, or other colleagues
been suggested as a means to help all involved with experience in the area. In rare circum-
parties identify the most appropriate plan of stances, these efforts may be insufcient to
care. Devising a patient-centered plan of care rectify insoluble problems. In these situations,
includes examining nancial and economic the courts have been asked to intervene.
effect, as well as medical and psychosocial fac- If problems continue to persist, there is
tors. For patients with the worst prognoses, often a fundamental misunderstanding of how
these same ethics teams may work in concert the stakeholders use words and convey con-
with palliative medicine teams to help patients cepts of prognosis and the likelihood of success.
and their families deal with the inevitability of Family members and patient surrogates should
death and the quality of life during the pa- assist in making medical decisions for patients
tients limited remaining time.104,105 Using on the basis of their direct communications
this combined approach, one study estimated with those patients concerning treatments.
that the cost savings after use of ethics consul- When unavailable, substituted judgment criteria
tation in the ICU approximated the cost of followed by best interest judgments are used. In
stafng such a service.106 As such, the patient a recent study by Combs et al,49 most physicians
and families benetted in an environment that agreed that surrogates should decide on treat-
was revenue neutral for the hospital, thus ment measures according to what the patient
attenuating any real or perceived pressure to would have wanted even when perceived as
alter care simply for economic expediency. not in the best interest of the patient.
When efforts at communication and educa- States, such as Texas, have passed laws that
tion fail, secondary resources may be required outline a due-process approach to situations
to provide an alternative perspective on the where futility concerns are invoked. The
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

TABLE 2. Situations in Which an Intervention Once Thought to Be Futile Is Now Viewed as Benecial
Scenario Comments
Induced mild hypothermia for comatose Once it was thought that hypothermia would have to occur during the ischemic insult to be
survivors of cardiac arrest71-75 protective and that mild-to-moderate hypothermia was inadequate to protect the brain and
instead would worsen outcome because of systemic toxic effects. Recent research has now
proven the treatment benecial.
Induced mild hypothermia for newborns Same reasons as above.
who have sustained hypoxic
encephalopathy at birth67,73,76,77
Prolonged drug therapy to treat Early drugs used to treat HIV/AIDS were expensive, plagued with adverse effects, and less effective
HIV/AIDS78-81 in altering outcomes, in part because of limitations of the existing drug therapies and poor
treatment adherence. However, today with advances in pharmacology and treatment protocols,
increasing numbers of patients are being sustained with long-term anti-HIV/AIDS medications.
Intensive care treatment involving In the earlier days of neonatology, the care of infants who were considerably preterm was less
mechanical ventilation and drug aggressive than today. Concerns at the time were that despite expensive therapies the infants
therapies to sustain and treat may not survive or would survive but never live independently. With more experience and better
preterm infants born at 23-25 therapies, there have been progressive improvements, resulting in functional survival of younger
weeks gestation82-85 and younger preterm infants.
HIV human immunodeciency virus.

process in Texas operationalizes how health review process may also allow for discussions
care professionals and institutions can seek to of the appropriate balance between the thera-
discontinue life-sustaining treatments if they peutic benets of a treatment vs its costdto
are believed to not meet their medical objec- society and to the individual.111
tives.107 Some hospitals have established their In a commentary accompanying the recent
own futility policies for determining whether study by Huynh et al29 regarding costs of poten-
care is appropriate and whether, under appli- tially futile care in the ICU, Truog and White39
cation of laws such as the Texas Advance suggest a framework for addressing possible
Directive Act, care should be discontinued.107 futile care. They recommended using the term
Unfortunately, the concept of unilateral with- potentially inappropriate instead of the word
drawal of life-sustaining measures of disputed futile and looking to fair processes of dispute
efcacy is almost never morally or ethically resolution over unilateral withdrawal of dis-
justied given several concerns about what de- puted care. In addition, Truog and White sug-
nes due process, who actually is dening futil- gest that no clear rules exist that clinicians can
ity, and the many opportunities for conicts of appeal to that justify the right to outright refuse
interest to creep in.53,107,108 care (short of brain death). Lastly, Truog and
One reason that health care institutions White suggest that clinicians should see futile
need to have a mechanism for approaching situations as an invitation to intensify commu-
futilitydwhether practice based, ethics based, nication efforts, rather than outright refusing
or legal baseddis that when concerns about medical interventions. In the nal analysis,
futility are invoked, they are often accompa- there is potential for all parties to benet from
nied by a sense of moral distress in physicians, these discussions.
nurses, and other caregivers who participate in
the provision of the alleged futile care.5,6,109 QUESTION 9: HOW DOES ONE ADJUDICATE
Such distress may result from professional WITHIN THE LEGAL SYSTEM WHETHER
caregivers having feelings that their immense MEDICAL CARE IS FUTILE AND WHETHER
understanding of the medical issues and their SUCH CARE SHOULD BE CONTINUED OR
medical judgment are not being appropriately STOPPED?
considered. A formal process to have these sit- If legal interventions are required for resolu-
uations reviewed may provide caregivers a tion of a situation, success (when viewed
forum to express themselves and an opportu- from the perspective of all parties in aggregate)
nity to lessen such distress.110 Having a formal becomes increasingly less likely because legal

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TABLE 3. Situations in Which an Intervention May Likely Change Its Position Regarding Futility
Scenario Comments
Prolonged extracorporeal membrane oxygenation Technology traditionally demanded immense cardiopulmonary bypass machines that
in a patient who would otherwise die of hypoxia were largely restricted to cardiac surgery operating rooms. These machines
or ischemia (eg, massive pulmonary embolus, required much labor, space, and anticoagulants, and the technique was injurious to
pulseless electrical activity after acute coronary blood cells, all of which limited their use long-term. New technologies have now
artery thrombosis)17,86,87 made it possible to provide circulation of oxygen-rich blood for prolonged periods
outside the operating room until underlying conditions can be treated and the
patient returns to endogenous circulation and blood oxygenation.
Prolonged cardiopulmonary resuscitation to treat Tradition and experience have established that patients who were not resuscitated
refractory cardiac arrest18,19,88,89 quickly after cardiac arrest were doomed to death, either from failure to restart the
heart or from brain death in patients in whom the heart was restarted but not
quickly enough to maintain adequate cerebral blood ow and oxygen delivery.
Recent advances in basic and advanced cardiac life support, better training of life-
support providers, the use of capnography to conrm the adequacy of circulation
during chest compressions, and better acute coronary care in the hospital offer the
possibility of full resuscitation and return to productive life in patients requiring
prolonged cardiac resuscitation.
Prolonged mechanical ventilation and other support Experiences with scientist Stephen Hawking and actor Christopher Reeve have
in patients with otherwise debilitating and proven that technology can maintain life and useful functionality for some after an
life-threatening upper cervical spine or brain lesions90,91 otherwise life-threatening insult to the brain and spinal cord. However, these
techniques will not gain widespread use and public acceptance until the costs are
reduced or new innovations (eg, stem cell therapy, brain to computer to spinal cord
interfaces) are used to augment recovery.
High-dose steroids for acute spinal cord injury64,92,93 Long viewed as a panacea for a variety of acute neurologic injuries because of
theoretically important antioxidant and other properties, high-dose steroids were
found to be benecial in a human trial of spinal cord injury. Despite limitations of
the trial (minimal neurologic benet, insufcient documentation of adverse effects),
the therapy once became a mainstay of treatment. However, with reexamination of
the aws within the original trial, further experience with the treatment, and the
introduction of better therapies, high-dose steroid therapy may migrate toward the
futile therapy identier with time.
Use of multiple, expensive drugs in select types of Contemporary drug treatments of solid tumor cancers and hematologic malignant
neoplastic disease in an attempt to induce tumors have often relied on multiple, highly expensive drugs, given simultaneously
cures36,94 or sequentially, in an attempt to promote a cancer cure. However, newer
approaches to therapy suggest that limiting spread of or arresting the neoplastic
disease, not curing it, may be the more expedient, cost-effective strategy in the long
term. As such, patients who have such neoplastic diseases might someday die of
other age-related diseases, not cancer.
In utero surgery for congenital abnormalities95-98 Once viewed as experimental and potentially futile, in utero surgery is proving feasible
and cost-effective to treat conditions such as myelomeningoceles, cardiac defects,
aberrations of the urologic system, and other disease states. With time, more
experience, and evidence of favorable outcomes and long-term cost savings, these
treatments should progressively become more mainstream.

intervention generally suggests that stake- may be the best legal means of resolving futility
holders support widely disparate approaches. conicts.112 However, the strong power tradi-
A major reason that futility is difcult to adju- tionally granted to patient surrogates in health
dicate from a legal perspective is that the term care decisions law has rendered mediation
futility is value laden, the denition of futility largely ineffective.112 The often uncompro-
has not been successfully operationalized, and mising perspective of the surrogate is based in
its use is often fraught with confusion, incon- part on a mistrust of the health care profes-
sistency, and controversy (see question 1).5 sionals, their unrealistic expectations of the
Some legal experts have suggested that health system, strong religious beliefs, inability
dispute-resolution tools, such as mediation, to tolerate the emotional burden of their
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

decision, and immunity from the costs and and surrogate decision maker, Mr Wanglie,
consequences of their decisions.112 This some- believed that life should be maintained as long
times leaves the courts as the remaining neutral as possible, no matter what the circumstances,
party for review. When required to adjudicate, and he asserted that his wife shared this belief.119
judges typically award only temporary restrain- The court sided with Mr Wanglie. This decision
ing orders or preliminary injunctions to allow comported with the long-standing belief that
time for more extensive review of the conict appropriately appointed surrogates can make de-
among the interested parties.99 In most cases, cisions that are consistent with the patients
the courts are immune from further interven- values, even after the patient is no longer able to
tion because the most critically ill patients make those wishes known at that time.
(often involved in the most contentious futility If Wanglies case had occurred in Texas (not
discussions) are likely to die during this prelim- Minnesota), where Texas Advance Directive Act
inary review period.99,113 In the small percent- legislation exists, mechanical ventilation would
age of cases in which courts are required to likely have been withdrawn because it could not
further rule, their decisions have resulted in restore the patient to health, which was the goal
both limiting the time during which futile med- of the critical care. As Angell119 states, the
ical care is provided or conversely extending [Minnesota] institution saw the respirator as
that care. non-benecial because it would not restore
The concept that physicians should not be [Wanglie] to consciousness. In the familys
required to offer treatments of questionable view, however, merely maintaining life was a
benet is generally supported but has been worthy goal, and the respirator was not only
viewed variably in the law.100,114,115 A Massa- effective toward that end, but essential.
chusetts Superior Court upheld that clinicians The court-litigated examples described
can withhold provision of CPR if it is judged above involve patients with conditions that are
to be futile116; however, the courts have ruled less legally settled than persons diagnosed as
in other cases that measures that may be viewed being brain dead or, perhaps more accurately
as being of disputed efcacy cannot be stopped stated, as being dead by neurologic criteria.113
unilaterally.117,118 Although almost all court- The legal standard of care is that once a patient
instructed injunctions that involve futility dis- is determined to be dead by neurologic criteria,
putes place only a temporary hold on halting health care professionals are under no obligation
treatment, the 2009 New Jersey case of Betan- to continue medical treatment. However, this
court v. Trinitas Hospital offers one example of notion has received immense media attention
how a judges ruling may extend the course of recently, and public comment by both experts
futile medical treatment indenitely.113 In this (in medicine, ethics, and the law) and nonex-
case, Betancourt was a 73-year-old man with perts regarding the unfortunate case of a 13-
irreversible brain injury. The court ruled in year-old girl, Jahi McMath, who was determined
favor of Mr Betancourts surrogate and granted to be dead by neurologic criteria as a result of
a permanent injunction that required the hos- massive systemic hemorrhage after a routine
pital not to suspend treatment.113 Despite tonsillectomy.120,121 Of note, the legal standard
acknowledging that Mr. Betancourt remained recognized both in this case and prior cases re-
in a persistent vegetative state, the judge argued mains unchanged by these recent events. Conse-
that the courts role was limited to appointing a quently, we contend that the concept of medical
guardian and that the decision to continue or futility as dened earlier in this article applies to
terminate life support systems is not left to patients who are alive and not to cases that
the courts.99,118 involve those declared dead by neurologic
The ruling in Betancourt v. Trinitas Hospital criteria or other accepted biological criteria.
was almost identical to the Minnesota court A nal aspect to consider is the widespread
holding 17 years earlier In Re Helga M. Wanglie, acceptance of surrogates as valid participants in
a case that involved an elderly patient in a persis- the decision-making process. Patients, their
tent vegetative state who was receiving mechan- appointed proxies, their families, or legally
ical ventilatory support. In this case, the hospital appointed surrogates have the ability to
sought to have a ventilator removed against the make decisions on the basis of immediate (or
surrogates decision.117 The patients husband previously exercised) self-determination or a

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determination of what is in the best interest of QUESTION 10: HOW DOES ONE PREVENT
the patient. Angell119 notes, Institutions lie MEDICAL FUTILITY?
outside this hierarchy of decision making and As presented throughout our article, the concept
should intervene by going to court only if they of medical futility remains a challenge to dene
believe a decision violates these standards. Dis- by objective measures, and thus conicts may be
agreements between family members and/or difcult to prevent. Nevertheless, we present
surrogates as to what the patient may want some practical considerations regarding how
with regard to treatment measures are thank- to approach situations that may be viewed as
fully rare yet often gain much media attention futile.
when they are refereed within the court system. First, we believe it is important to encourage
The events surrounding the case of Terri medical care that is given on the basis of evi-
Schiavo make it perhaps the most widely pub- dence from the best available medical research.
licized of all court decisions involving a dispute This foundational medical research, in turn, has
solely among family members (and not conict the best promise of helping prevent futility if
between her physicians and her surrogate).48 it addresses challenging questions, uses sound
Even today, some still raise questions of methods, and reaches sound conclusions.
whether Schiavos feeding tube should have Furthermore, the ndings must be widely
been discontinued and who was the appro- embraced by clinicians who will not only incor-
priate surrogate to make this decision. Florida porate the research ndings into their practices
state statue is clear that in the absence of a but also eagerly share with patients and their
duly-appointed health care proxy, a spouse is families that they are doing so.
the highest in order of preferred surrogate deci- Second, although practicing evidence-
sion makers. This was not the issue under based medicine is a standard to which many
contention; instead, the debated issue was clinicians aspire, it is unlikely that scientic
whether Schiavos spouse was indeed making evidence alone will guide clinicians to act pru-
decisions that where consistent with her beliefs dently in all clinical situations.123 Best evidence
and in accordance with her best interests.48 can lead to the development of standards of
As discussed in earlier articles by 2 of practice, but there must be room for exigencies
us,100,122 as well as others,114,115 one of the and individual patient variability within such a
more recent examples of physician and surro- system. Avoiding dogmatic and legalistic ap-
gate dispute involves the 2011 case of Albert proaches to clinical problems, many of which
Barnes. Mr Barnes had deteriorating health for come with arbitrary cutoffs for treatment (eg,
a number of years, during which time his wife, hemodialysis on the basis of age or comorbid-
acting as his supposed heath care agent, ities), may help in approaching challenges
requested 78 emergency transfers and 10 sepa- that may be viewed as futile but in essence
rate hospital admissions (8 within the year may not be.
immediately preceding the courts decision) to Third, we hope that each of these ap-
Twin Cities hospitals in Minnesota.114 During proaches will lead to improved communication
the court proceedings, it became apparent that by clinicians with patients and their loved
Mrs Barnes had altered her husbands original ones. Although clinicians and patients struggle
advance directive documents, which conrmed with accurate prognostication and uncertainty
that he would not have wished the treatments regarding individual cases, it has been found
she was demanding of the health care profes- that most ethics consultations result from sub-
sionals.100,113,114,122 The courts decided that a optimal communication regarding end-of-life
state-appointed guardian would make further care or advance treatment preferences.101 In
health care decisions once it was determined addition to clinician education, programs
that Mrs Barnes had falsied her husbands that support the lay public in meaningfully
advance directive. Although Mr Barnes died in engaging their clinicians and how to communi-
the interim before this being necessary, this cate their health care preferences to their loved
case still serves as an important example of ones may be useful steps.124-128 Beyond the
how the legal system can help to terminate futile best evidence, creating more effective commu-
treatment when surrogates fail to represent a pa- nication tools, appropriately engaging in goal
tients wishes. setting, and reestablishing the clinicians role
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COMMON QUESTIONS ON MEDICAL FUTILITY

in making recommendations over simply remains in that individual human dignity may
asking what the patient wants are all ways of be violated. Previously, Angell119 noted that
maximizing shared decision making to opti- we as a society would be on the slipperiest of
mize outcomes and to avoid situations that slopes if we permitted ourselves to withdraw
could be considered futile.129 life support from a patient simply because it
Recently published research of the im- would save money.
portance of effective, constant, and updated Previous policies that have targeted vulner-
communication among the patient, family, sur- able populations have had repercussions that
rogate, and physician is contained in the report extend beyond the given populations. Indeed,
by Jesus et al50; the report found that, although some ill elderly patients in the Netherlands
patients may have made earlier general deci- would not seek medical care when needed
sions to forgo CPR efforts through do not resus- because of fear of the downstream effects of
citate and do not intubate orders on record, euthanasia laws; namely, the patients feared
these same patients often want CPR and/or that physicians would ignore the restrictions
tracheal intubation when provided with specic placed within the law and instead begin unilat-
clinical scenarios.50 An anecdote previously re- erally instituting patient euthanasia, indepen-
ported by one of us (W.L.L.) of a patient being dent of the prescribed checks and balances.
evaluated in an emergency department rein- As such, medical care was affected more than
forces this view. A patient who had received expected because patients feared that societys
treatment for lung cancer but later had chest and physicians actions might conict with the
radiographic evidence of a possible return of patients values.135
disease had clearly stated and documented in There is always opportunity to strive toward
his hospital record that he did not desire heroic improved communication and to provide pa-
end-of-life interventions. However, when he tients and their loved ones with accurate
was admitted to the hospital with a leaking prognostic information and honest opinions re-
abdominal aortic aneurysm and new-onset garding the potential efcacy of a treatment.
myocardial ischemia (likely in response to Although there is no certainty regarding pro-
blood loss and pain) and was informed by sur- gnostication, opinions in the American Medical
geons that he would almost certainly die within Association Code of Ethics (opinion 2.037)136
the next few hours without aortic surgery, the and elsewhere137 encourage clinicians to explore
still-lucid patient reversed his long-held views. patients goals of care to the best of our ability.
When questioned as to why, he stated, Doctor, Although such opinions are unlikely to x the
regarding my choices, everything that has problem of futility, they may be more likely to
happened to this point has been theory; this help clinicians obtain a frame of reference and a
is the real thing.124 starting point in these difcult situations.
Jesus et al50 emphasized that more work is
required to determine the reasoning underlying CONCLUSION
these discrepancies and changes of views; how- Futility has been dened by many individuals
ever, in the interim, the fact that such alter- and groups, and those denitions reect the
ations, of course, exist again emphasizes the variable focuses of the authors. We have exam-
need for ongoing communication about patient ined futility as excessive (in terms of effort and
desires for end-of-life care. Although advance nances) medical intervention with little pros-
care planning has been criticized for not being pect of altering a patients ultimate clinical
exible when needed and for being unable to outcome. The term is operationally dened,
anticipate future events and preferences, yet, even then, it is often challenging to deter-
completion of an advance care document be- mine whether a treatment is truly futile or not.
gins a dialogue that can likely facilitate further Patients goals, values, and preferences may
exploration.128,130-134 vary, and the efcacy of a given treatment may
Although due-process protocols, as encour- be difcult to predict. As medical science ad-
aged by the Texas Advance Directive Act and vances, there is an ever-increasing arsenal of
related laws in Texas, suggest that futility can drugs and technologies available, and there
be prevented by allowing clinicians to object often is an imperative to use such treatments
to providing futile care, a major concern even in the absence of expected efcacy.

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