Other considerations

Table of contents
  1. Complementary and alternative medicine
  2. Deprescribing in palliative care
  3. Benefits
  4. Triggers
  5. Enablers for deprescribing
  6. Barriers to deprescribing
  7. The deprescribing process
  8. Common deprescribing
  9. Dexamethasone use
  10. Adverse effects
  11. Prescribing
  12. Diabetes, hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia
  13. Diabetes
  14. Hyperglycaemia
  15. Hypoglycaemia
  16. Palliative chemotherapy
  17. Benefits
  18. Adverse effects
  19. Palliative sedation
  20. Terminal agitation
  21. Causes
  22. Management

Complementary and alternative medicine

Health professionals unfamiliar with CAM therapies that their patients are taking should seek information from a drug information pharmacist.

Deprescribing in palliative care

Deprescribing is the process of ceasing inappropriate medications safely and effectively.

Benefits

Triggers

Enablers for deprescribing

Barriers to deprescribing

When deprescribing a medication remember that the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of other medications may be affected; use recognised tools as a starting point

The deprescribing process

Common deprescribing

Dexamethasone use

Steroids are often seen as cure-all/miracle drugs in palliative care. Careful consideration should be given to initiating these drugs as they have many adverse effects. Most of the use in palliative care is for unlicensed and/or non-evidence based indications e.g. spinal cord compression, nerve compression, dyspnoea (from a number of causes), SVC obstruction and inflammation following radiation therapy, pain relief, anti-cancer hormone therapy, appetite stimulation and the enhancement of well-being.

Adverse effects

Prescribing

Diabetes, hyperglycaemia and hypoglycaemia

The pathophysiology of diabetes in the palliative care setting (and particularly in the terminal phase) may be complex as the control of blood glucose may be lost due to insulin resistance associated with illness and also because of erratic nutritional intake. Certain malignancies e.g. pancreatic cancer also affect the beta cells directly.

Key considerations include

Diabetes

Type 2 diabetes

Type 1 diabetes

Patients with Type 1 diabetes make little or no insulin themselves; these are the minority of patients who are on insulin.

Hyperglycaemia

Symptoms

NB Some of these symptoms may be present in terminally ill patients in the absence of high blood glucose concentrations.

Causes

Management

Hypoglycaemia

Symptoms – CNS

Symptoms – peripheral

Causes

Management

Palliative chemotherapy

Benefits

Adverse effects

Palliative sedation

This is considered when all other symptom-relieving measures have failed and the patient is clearly distressed. This is a MDT decision with significant discussion with patient and whānau-family.

Reasons for palliative sedation

How palliative sedation is achieved

Regularly review the target level of sedation and effectiveness of sedation e.g. using RASS-PALL tool.

Involve specialist palliative care team early in discussions.

Sedation of this type may be subject to the principle of ‘double effect’ which has the dual effects of intentional relief of suffering and increased risk of hastening death. Palliative sedation itself has not been shown to hasten death

Terminal agitation

Perhaps best conceptualised as a prolonged delirium, this may indicate physical, psychological and/or spiritual discomfort. It is usually a 'pre-death' event.

A significant proportion of new-onset BPSD-type behaviours in fact represent terminal agitation. Early recognition of the syndrome enables appropriate palliative measures to be instituted early.

In the residential care setting, predictors of terminal agitation can include chest infections, unexplained fevers, poor oral intake, significant recent weight loss, the presence of bed sores, and increases in verbal and motor behaviours.

Terminal agitation is poorly recognised and is often interpreted by care staff as a worsening of behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD). Early data from the Australian national Severe Behaviour Response Teams (SBRT) found that up to 10% of referrals to this service were ultimately revealed to have been on a terminal trajectory.

Causes

Management

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