Introduction. In contemporary oncology, palliative care is increasingly conceptualized as an integrated longitudinal intervention rather than an exclusively terminal stage. This shift is supported by the consensus-based redefinition of palliative care and by updates to oncologic guidelines recommending its integration into standard care. The “early integrated palliative care” model involves the concurrent introduction of palliative care alongside active antineoplastic therapies, with the objective of systematically monitoring symptomatology and toxicities, preserving functional status and supporting patient-centered therapeutic decision-making. Aim. This narrative review critically synthesizes the 2020-2025 literature regarding the optimal timing of palliative care initiation in patients with advanced locoregional or metastatic cancer, examining the relationship between timing and symptom burden, functional status, tolerability of oncologic treatments and continuity of care. Methodology. A narrative analysis was conducted of international guidelines, randomized and observational studies and real-world practice reports published between 2020 and 2025. The selection targeted papers relevant to the temporality of initiation and to clinically meaningful outcomes: symptomatology, functional status, stages of oncologic treatment, healthcare utilization and treatment tolerability. Results. Convergent evidence indicates that the benefits of palliative care are dependent on the timing of initiation. Concurrent integration with active treatment facilitates early identification of symptoms and toxicities, reduces clinical instability, and supports the preservation of functional autonomy. In contrast, delayed initiation in the context of advanced functional decline limits intervention to reactive symptom control and reduces its influence on the therapeutic trajectory. Recent literature identifies functional status, recurrent toxicities, repeated treatment adjustments and transitions between therapeutic lines as useful operational benchmarks for early initiation. Conclusions. Post-2020 publications support the transition from rigid prognostic criteria toward models guided by clinical needs and key therapeutic moments. Early and concurrent integration represents a modifiable determinant of the clinical trajectory, with potential to optimize treatment tolerability and continuity of oncologic care.
Crișan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.