| Literature DB >> 28632002 |
Martha Kingman1, Christine Archer-Chicko2, Mary Bartlett3, Joy Beckmann4, Robin Hohsfield5, Sandra Lombardi6.
Abstract
Therapies that target the prostacyclin pathway are considered effective, yet are complex to dose and may cause dose-limiting side effects for patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Careful side effect management and the ability to discern side effects from worsening disease are essential in order for patients to continue, and benefit from, prostacyclin therapy. This manuscript was developed through a collaborative effort of allied health providers with extensive experience in managing patients with PAH who are treated with medications that target the prostacyclin pathway. This article provides an overview of individual prostacyclin pathway therapies approved in the United States, side effects most commonly associated with these therapies, and practical suggestions for side effect management. Most patients will experience significant side effects on prostacyclin therapy. Creating a proactive and careful side effect management program will increase the likelihood that patients are able to stay on therapy and receive the benefits afforded by prostacyclin therapy.Entities:
Keywords: adverse events; prostacyclin therapy; pulmonary arterial hypertension; pulmonary hypertension
Year: 2017 PMID: 28632002 PMCID: PMC5841898 DOI: 10.1177/2045893217719250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Circ ISSN: 2045-8932 Impact factor: 3.017
Common side effects of medications that target the prostacyclin pathway.
| Medications | Route | Related to the administration routes | Related to the pharmacological action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Epoprostenol | Continuous intravenous infusion | Catheter-related infections, sepsis, thromboembolic event, bleeding, drug-delivery system malfunction | Jaw pain, diarrhea, flushing, headaches, nausea, vomiting |
| Iloprost | Inhaled | Cough, throat irritation | Flushing, jaw pain, headaches, hypotension, body aches, nausea, diarrhea, dizziness |
| Treprostinil | Oral | Pill shell may not be absorbed and may be visibly excreted in the feces | Headaches, flushing, nausea, diarrhea, jaw pain, vomiting, extremity pain |
| Continuous subcutaneous infusion | Infusion site pain, site reaction, and site abscess | Diarrhea, jaw pain, flushing, nausea, rash, dizziness, vomiting, headaches, flushing | |
| Continuous intravenous infusion | Catheter-related infections, thromboembolic event, drug-delivery system malfunction | Extremity pain, headaches, diarrhea, jaw pain, nausea, fatigue, loose stools, vomiting, dizziness, dyspnea, flushing, palpitations, peripheral edema | |
| Inhaled | Cough, throat irritation, | Headaches, nausea, flushing, diarrhea, dizziness | |
| Pharyngolaryngeal pain | Dizziness | ||
| Selexipag | Oral | N/A | Headache, diarrhea, jaw pain, nausea, myalgia, vomiting, pain in extremity, flushing |
N/A, not applicable.
Fig. 1.Balancing PAH symptoms versus prostacyclin pathway therapy side effects. PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension.
Prostacyclin pathway side effects: interventions and considerations.
| Side effect | Intervention | Consideration/rationale |
|---|---|---|
|
| Non-pharmacologic: heating pad, massage, acupuncture, acupressure, relaxation techniques | First-line options to relieve pain |
| Pharmacologic: acetaminophen, ibuprofen (if not contraindicated), gabapentin, pregabalin, tramadol, narcotics-hydrocodone, fentanyl, or codeine on a case-by-case basis | Second-line option to relive pain | |
| Lowering the dose of prostacyclin or switching to a different prostacyclin therapy | Dose-limiting side effect | |
| Refractory pain should be referred to pain management or palliative care | Pain management is better trained and equipped to manage severe long-term pain | |
|
| Screen for iron deficiency; Gabapentin may be a more successful analgesic for leg pain | Decreased RBC oxygen carrying capacity, with reduced circulation in lower extremities |
|
| Usually no interventions needed; reassure patient that this will get better with time | Not a dose-limiting side effect, loss of jaw pain may indicate need for up-titration |
| Take slow bites or sips of water, suck on saltine cracker or hard candy, chew gum before eating | Jaw pain is intermittent and generally occurs with first bite of the meal | |
|
| Ice, warm bath with Epsom salt, aloe vera gel, arnica oil, capsaicin cream | First-line options to relieve site reaction or pain |
| Anesthetic agents (lidocaine 5% patches, lidocaine/prilocaine cream, calamine lotion/cream [pramoxine], menthol/methyl salicylate cream) | Analgesic and anti-pruritic effects; used during initiation phase of new subcutaneous site | |
| Vasoconstrictive agents (hemorrhoid ointment) | Anti-pruritic and relieves discomfort | |
| Corticosteroids (hydrocortisone cream, triamcinolone acetonide, fluticasone propionate nasal spray, clobetasol propionate cream) | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory; relieves erythema and discomfort | |
| Calcineurin inhibitors (pimecrolimus cream) | Second-line option in patients who have failed to respond adequately to other topical prescription treatments | |
| Histamine H1 receptor antagonists (diphenhydramine HCl, topical) | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory | |
| Histamine H1 and H2 antagonist (doxepin cream) | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory | |
| PLO gel compounds, microemulsion-based gel that has been used to deliver different types of pain drugs topically and transdermally | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory; extensively used (for current and old sites), often as first-line option | |
| Non-opioid analgesics (ibuprofen, acetaminophen) | Non-opioid analgesics, first-line options | |
| GABA analogs (gabapentin, pregabalin) | Second-line option after non-opioid analgesics | |
| First-generation anti-histamine (hydroxyzine pamoate) | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory (for severe cases) | |
| Histamine H1 receptor antagonists (loratadine, fexofenadine HCl, cetirizine HCl, ranitidine HCl, famotidine) | Anti-pruritic and anti-inflammatory | |
| Opioid analgesics (tramadol HCl, fentanyl patch, hydrocodone with acetaminophen | For severe pain | |
| Antidepressant (amitriptyline HCl) | Used as analgesic for chronic pain | |
|
| Pre-treat before oral or inhaled doses or prior to up-titration of parenteral prostacyclin | Used to prevent headache or lessen severity |
|
| Acetaminophen | Use smallest amount for the shortest amount of time and monitor LFTs |
| Ibuprofen | On a case-by-case basis, limited short-term use; monitor total daily dose | |
| Tramadol | Reduce dose in patients with cirrhosis | |
| Assess volume status | Hypotension and hypertension may contribute to headache | |
|
| Hydrocodone, oxycodone | Appropriate for in-hospital treatment or short-term outpatient treatment |
| Referral to neurology -if titration becomes limited or headache becomes chronic | May be helpful with patients who have a history of migraines | |
| Evaluate for secondary cause (i.e. check INR, brain imaging, referral to specialist) | Rule out life-threatening cause of acute onset or worsening headache | |
|
| Decrease blood pressure medication if needed and/or diuretics | Prostacyclins can lower blood pressure |
| Assess and managed dehydration or over-diuresis | Diuretics combined with fluid and sodium restriction can occasionally lead to dehydration | |
| Close monitoring of blood pressure by patient in the home with parameters to call clinic | Establish pattern of low blood pressure | |
| Caution about sudden change in position | Orthostatic hypotension | |
| Avoid inadvertent bolus of prostacyclin, increase fluids, decrease dose, vasopressors may be needed | Bolus can lead to hypotension and/or syncope | |
| Decrease dose if needed | Dose-limiting side effect | |
| If pre-syncopal or syncope event, evaluate in clinic or hospital | May indicate clinical worsening | |
|
| Take with food, eat small frequent meals, ginger-based foods (ginger ale) | |
| Anti-emetics: Ondansetron | Vomiting can lead to vagal event and should be avoided | |
| For inhaled therapies, swish and spit after each treatment session, temporarily decrease by one breath four times a day | Swallowing inhaled prostacyclin can lead to nausea | |
| Rule out pregnancy | Pregnancy can be life-threatening in PH | |
| Refer to gastroenterologist | Rule out other causes | |
| Slow titration or decrease dose | Dose-limiting side effect | |
|
| Dietary consult | Individualized assessment to calculate nutritional needs |
| Increase caloric content, small frequent meals, nutritional supplement | Smaller, more frequent meals better tolerated | |
| Evaluate for other metabolic causes of weight loss | Thyroid dysfunction and cancer can contribute to weight loss | |
|
| Diphenoxylate/Atropine | |
| Loperamide | ||
| Slow up-titration or decrease dose | Dose-limiting side effect | |
| Dietary changes: increase fiber, gluten free, low fat, BRAT diet | Decrease motility | |
| Probiotic | Restore normal bowel flora | |
| Decrease diuretic | Avoid hypovolemia | |
| Rule out other causes, such as | ||
| Refer to GI | Rule out other conditions/complications | |
|
| Reassurance | Reduce anxiety |
| Slow down up-titration only if absolutely needed | Not considered a dose-limiting side effect | |
| Cold packs, compress at back of neck | Relieve feeling of warmth | |
| Inhaled therapies: if severe, can decrease by one breath four times a day and then increase again when symptom improves | Decrease vasodilation | |
|
| Inhaled anticholinergics or beta agonists | Relief of bronchospasm |
| Inhaled steroids | Reduce inflammation | |
| Oral phenol-based analgesic sprays administered before treatments | Reduce throat irritation by numbing the throat | |
| Cough medicine over the counter or prescribed cough preparations but avoiding cough drops to decrease the risk of aspiration | Reduce incidence or intensity of cough | |
| Drink very cold or warm water before a treatment | Cold for numbing effect; warm for soothing and relaxing effect | |
| Maintain normal breathing pattern (aerosol is “waiting” for the patient during the green light and they just need to breathe it in) | Improves administration and distribution of medication | |
| Do not hold breath once medication is inhaled | Not needed for medication administration | |
| Use the pause button between breaths if needed | When learning, this reduces anxiety associated with the breathing treatment pattern | |
| Reduce the number of breaths per treatment and/or titrate slower (e.g. by one breath four times a day) | Allows the patient to adapt to the medicine and increases tolerance |
GABA, gamma-amino butyric acid; GI, gastrointestinal; H1/H2, histamine; HCl, hydrogen chloride; INR, prothrombin time international normalized ratio; PH, pulmonary hypertension; PLO, pluronic lecithin organogel; LFT, liver function test.
Fig. 2.Photos of rash (courtesy of Robin Hohsfield, RN, BSN, University of Colorado Health, Denver, CO, USA; informed consent was received from the patient to include picture in publication).
Fig. 3.Photo of subcutaneous site reaction (courtesy of Kathy McCloy, NP, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA; informed consent was received from the patient to include picture in publication).