Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Home palliative
sedation checklist may ease concerns
Los Angeles, London, New
Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC (February
18, 2010) – Can patients near death safely
receive sedation at home, fully respecting
their own and their families' wishes? This
practice, which is on the rise, is coming
under increasing scrutiny and debate by
palliative care researchers and
practitioners.
Now palliative care
specialists from a team based in Spain have
documented their experiences and data, and
developed a standard checklist to help other
clinicians. Their research appears in the
journal Palliative Medicine, published by
SAGE.
Physicians use specific
sedatives to relieve intolerable suffering
as patients near death – a practice known as
palliative sedation (PS).
The rate of PS use varies
widely from 3-52% in terminally ill patients
according to the literature - a wide range
considering it is considered ethical and
legally acceptable for those with
irreversible and advanced disease. This
raises questions over whether the definition
of PS, or its setting could be behind these
differences.
Despite a trend for PS in
patients' homes increasing in recent years,
academics know very little about what kinds
of sedation are administered – or who is
receiving it – at home. Some fear that using
PS, particularly at home, should not replace
thorough assessment and treatment of
patients' physical symptoms, or their
psychological or spiritual distress. A set
of standard guidelines offers one solution.
Alberto Alonso-Babarro
from Hospital Universitario La Paz, Madrid
led the study into home PS, which was
conducted in Madrid by a palliative home
care team (PHCT) composed of two physicians,
two nurses, a nurse assistant, a part-time
social worker, and an administrative clerk.
The PHCT regularly follows up patients with
progressive, incurable diseases with many
symptoms who are referred by acute care
hospitals, medical oncologists or family
physicians.
Alonso-Babarro and his
team retrospectively reviewed medical
records from 370 patients, all of whom had
been followed by a palliative home care
team.
They developed a
decision-making and treatment checklist,
which they used to assess how frequently PS
was used for cancer patients dying at home,
and how effective it was. A total of 245
patients (66%) died at home, and 125
patients (34%) died at a hospital or
hospice.
Twenty-nine of 245
patients (12%) who died at home received PS.
Those who received it had a younger mean age
(58) than those who did not (69), but there
were no other differences detected between
these two patient groups. The most common
reasons for using PS were delirium (62%) and
dyspnea (laboured breathing), in the case of
14% of patients. The vast majority of
patients were given the sedative drug
midazolam for PS, with less than a tenth
receiving levomepromazine, an anti-psychotic
sedative used in Europe and Canada, but not
currently registered in the US.
On average, patients died
2.6 days after PS, and in almost half of
cases the decision to use PS was taken with
both the patient and his or her family. In
other cases the family made the decision.
Importantly, the authors concluded that
using PS does not hasten death.
Other interesting findings
were that at home, PS was used at a lower
rate than in hospital (where 20-50% of
palliative patients have PS). Hospitalised
patients often have a greater symptom
burden, or may be more agitated and so prone
to delirium than in a home setting, the
authors suggest.
There is also controversy
in the palliative care literature around
psycho-existential suffering, where cultural
context appears to play a role. In
particular, a multi-centre study found that
patients in Spain had a higher rate of PS
for this reason than in other countries.
Alonso-Babarro suggests that lack of
agreement on treatment between the patients
and their families in Spain could be a
significant factor in this distress.
"Incorporating the patient's wishes
regarding PS in advanced directives or
discussing these issues with patients prior
to the final days of their lives may help
avoid unnecessary patient and caregiver
stress and burden," he suggests.
"We concluded that
palliative sedation may be used safely and
efficaciously to treat dying cancer patients
with refractory symptoms at home," said
Alonso-Babarro, who added: "To our
knowledge, this is one of first studies
addressing PS in the home setting to
demonstrate the safety and efficacy of
at-home PS administered by a PHCT."
The checklist his team
developed recommends beginning PS with
midazolam followed by levomepromazine if
midazolam proves ineffective. If both
midazolam and levomepromazine fail,
phenobarbital is the next option to
consider. The team also recommends these
medications should be injected.
The team hope that their
checklist will provide other researchers and
clinicians with an easy-to-use decision aid
and treatment tool to facilitate the PS
process. Researchers will need to carry out
further multi-centre prospective home-based
studies to replicate their findings.
In some cases, PS may be
the only way to achieve a peaceful death at
home, thus ensuring that the wishes of the
patients and their caregivers are respected.
###
At-home palliative
sedation for end-of-life cancer patients and
how
Home palliative
sedation checklist may ease concerns
by
Alberto Alonso-Babarro, Maria Varela-Cerdeira,
Isabel Torres-Vigil, Ricardo
Rodríguez-Barrientos, Eduardo Bruera is
published in Palliative Medicine published
by SAGE, DOI: 10.1177/0269216309359996 and
will be available free of charge for a
limited time at
http://pmj.sagepub.com/cgi/rapidpdf/0269216309359996v1
.
... ..
...
...