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Palliative cancer care - nausea & vomiting - Management
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What simple measures may help nausea and vomiting in palliative care?
- Make sure the person has access to a large bowl, tissues, and water.
- The sight and smell of food or drink may provoke nausea:
- Provide a calm environment away from where food is usually prepared or consumed.
- If the person is usually responsible for cooking, make alternative arrangements.
- Make sure that meals are small and palatable.
- Carbohydrate meals are often better tolerated.
- Offer cool, fizzy drinks (citrus flavours are often preferred).
- Consider parenteral hydration if appropriate.
- Consider relaxation and acupressure bands to relieve symptoms.
- Consider cognitive behavioural therapy for anticipatory nausea or vomiting.
- In general, avoid nasogastric suction.
In depth
How should I manage nausea and vomiting of known cause?
- Manage the underlying cause or correct reversible causes if possible and appropriate.
- Try simple measures to relieve symptoms.
- Choose a first-line anti-emetic according to the cause of nausea and vomiting:
- Chemotherapy-induced: seek advice from the specialist supervising the person's chemotherapy.
- Drug-induced or metabolic causes: haloperidol, 1.5 mg at night and when required, increasing up to 10 mg/day.
- Intracranial disease: cyclizine, 25–50 mg three times a day and when required, up to a maximum of 150 mg/day; if intracranial pressure is raised, consider adding high-dose dexamethasone (e.g. 8–16 mg daily for up to 7 days, with subsequent reduction to 4–6 mg daily if possible). Stop dexamethasone if there is no obvious benefit within 3–5 days, or if it becomes ineffective.
- Movement-related (vestibular disorder): cyclizine 25–50 mg three times a day and when required, up to a maximum of 150 mg/day.
- Peristaltic failure or gastric stasis: metoclopramide, 10–20 mg three times a day (usually parenterally, unless mild) or 30–100 mg/24 hours via continuous subcutaneous infusion (CSCI). If extrapyramidal effects are a problem with metoclopramide use domperidone (30–60 mg rectally every 4–8 hours).
- Mechanical bowel obstruction:
- Exclude or treat constipation.
- Give cyclizine, 50–150 mg/24 hours via CSCI.
- If symptoms persist: add haloperidol, 2.5–10 mg/24 hours or as a single night-time dose, or levomepromazine, 5–25 mg/24 hours or as a single night-time dose.
- For colic and large-volume vomiting: hyoscine butylbromide, 20 mg immediately by subcutaneous injection, then 60–120 mg/24 hours via CSCI. If large-volume vomiting persists, consider octreotide (specialist palliative care advice is advised).
- Abdominal or pelvic tumour (causing distension, compression, or disturbance of abdominal or pelvic organs): give cyclizine 25–50 mg three times a day and when required (up to a maximum of 150 mg/day) or 75–150 mg/24 hours via CSCI.
- Anxiety-related: a benzodiazepine (e.g. lorazepam, 0.5–1 mg sublingually) or levomepromazine, 3–6 mg orally or 2.5–6.25 mg by subcutaneous injection.
- Ascertain the most appropriate route of administration of the anti-emetic.
- Prescribe anti-emetics regularly and as required.
- Review the effectiveness of anti-emetic treatment every 24 hours.
- Continue anti-emetics unless nausea and vomiting has resolved.
In depth
How should I manage nausea and vomiting of unknown cause?
- Try simple measures to relieve symptoms.
- Review the history, examination, and medication and consider further investigations if appropriate.
- If the cause is still uncertain or further investigation is not appropriate:
- Try haloperidol, 1.5–10 mg daily:
- Starting dosage: 1.5 mg immediately and at night.
- Usual dosage: 3–5 mg at night or in divided doses.
- Usual maximum dosage: 10 mg/day (at night or in divided doses).
- Add cyclizine (25–50 mg three times a day) if haloperidol alone is not effective.
- If still ineffective, change to levomepromazine or consider a trial of dexamethasone (seek specialist advice first).
- Ascertain the most appropriate route of administration of the anti-emetic.
- Prescribe anti-emetics regularly and as required.
- Review the effectiveness of anti-emetic treatment every 24 hours.
- Continue anti-emetics unless nausea and vomiting has resolved.
In depth
What should I do if a first-line anti-emetic has not worked?
- If a single first-line anti-emetic does not relieve nausea and vomiting:
- Confirm that the cause of nausea and vomiting has been correctly identified.
- Optimize the dose and route of the first-line anti-emetic.
- If nausea and vomiting persist after two or three doses of optimal first-line anti-emetic:
- Change to an anti-emetic with a different action, or
- Combine anti-emetics with complementary action.
- Refer to a specialist palliative care team if symptoms remain uncontrolled after 24 hours.
In depth
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