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Palliat Support Care · Jun 2015
Palliative sedation for cancer patients included in a home care program: a retrospective study.
- Claudio Calvo-Espinos, Estefania Ruiz de Gaona, Cristina Gonzalez, Lucia Ruiz de Galarreta, and Cristina Lopez.
- Palliative Care Service,Hospital San Juan de Dios,Navarre,Spain.
- Palliat Support Care. 2015 Jun 1;13(3):619-24.
ObjectivePalliative sedation is a common treatment in palliative care. The home is a difficult environment for research, and there are few studies about sedation at home. Our aim was to analyze this practice in a home setting.MethodWe conducted a retrospective cross-sectional descriptive study in a home cohort during 2011. The inclusion criteria were as follows: 18 years or older and enrolled in the Palliative Home Care Program (PHCP) with advanced cancer. The variables employed were: sex, age, primary tumor location, and place of death. We also registered indication, type, drug and dose, awareness of diagnosis and prognosis, consent, survival, presence or absence of rales, painful mouth, and ulcers in patients sedated at home. We also collected the opinions of family members and professionals about the suffering of sedated patients.ResultsA total of 446 patients (56% at home) of the 617 admitted to the PHCP between January and December of 2011 passed away. The typical patient in our population was a 70-year-old man with a lung tumor. Some 35 (14%) home patients required sedation, compared to 93 (49%) at the hospital. The most frequent indication was delirium (70%), with midazolam the most common drug (mean dose, 40 mg). Survival was around three days. Rales were frequent (57%) as well as awareness of diagnosis and prognosis (77 and 71%, respectively). Perception of suffering after sedation was rare among relatives (17%) and professionals (8%). In most cases, the decision was made jointly by professionals and family members.Significance Of ResultsOur study confirmed the role of palliative sedation as an appropriate therapeutic tool in the home environment.
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