| Literature DB >> 28864877 |
Shirley Harvey Bush1,2,3,4, Sallyanne Tierney5, Peter Gerard Lawlor6,7,8,5.
Abstract
Delirium is a neurocognitive syndrome arising from acute global brain dysfunction, and is prevalent in up to 42% of patients admitted to palliative care inpatient units. The symptoms of delirium and its associated communicative impediment invariably generate high levels of patient and family distress. Furthermore, delirium is associated with significant patient morbidity and increased mortality in many patient populations, especially palliative care where refractory delirium is common in the dying phase. As the clinical diagnosis of delirium is frequently missed by the healthcare team, the case for regular screening is arguably very compelling. Depending on its precipitating factors, a delirium episode is often reversible, especially in the earlier stages of a life-threatening illness. Until recently, antipsychotics have played a pivotal role in delirium management, but this role now requires critical re-evaluation in light of recent research that failed to demonstrate their efficacy in mild- to moderate-severity delirium occurring in palliative care patients. Non-pharmacological strategies for the management of delirium play a fundamental role and should be optimized through the collective efforts of the whole interprofessional team. Refractory agitated delirium in the last days or weeks of life may require the use of pharmacological sedation to ameliorate the distress of patients, which is invariably juxtaposed with increasing distress of family members. Further evaluation of multicomponent strategies for delirium prevention and treatment in the palliative care patient population is urgently required.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28864877 PMCID: PMC5613058 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-017-0804-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Fig. 1Model of palliative care throughout trajectory of life-limiting illness (adapted from Canadian Hospice Palliative Care Association [159]). EOLC end-of-life care, QOL quality of life
Fig. 2Algorithm for the assessment and management of delirium in palliative care patients. AP antipsychotic, BDZ benzodiazepine, CAM Confusion Assessment Method, DSM-5 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition, EOL end of life, EPS extrapyramidal side effects, ICD-10 International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision
Commonly used delirium screening tools [17, 23, 24]
| Tool or criteria | Administration | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) | Healthcare team: mixed observational and direct patient questioning | Moderate rater training required; training manual available at |
| Nursing Delirium Screening Scale (Nu-DESC) | Nursing: end of each nursing shift | Some training required; lower sensitivity for detection of hypoactive delirium; no published formal validation study in palliative care patients |
| Delirium Observation Screening (DOS) Scale | Nursing: end of each nursing shift | Some training required; validated in palliative care patients |
Examples of delirium assessment tools (for diagnosis and severity rating) [8, 10, 17, 28, 29]
| Tool or criteria | Administration | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic criteria | ||
| DSM-5 | High level of training required | |
| ICD-10 | High level of training required | |
| Delirium-specific assessment tools | ||
| Delirium Rating Scale-revised-98 (DRS-R-98) | 16-item clinician rated scale (13 severity items and 3 diagnostic items) | Designed for broad phenomenological assessment of delirium; manual to guide rating available |
| Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale (MDAS) | 10-item clinician-rated scale (possible range of total score 0–30); originally designed for administration by psychiatrists to assess delirium severity; diagnostic cutoff score of 7 (was 13/30 in original study) | Training required |
| Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) diagnostic algorithm | Brief 4-item tool (requires coadministration of a brief cognitive assessment tool) | Validated in palliative care population |
DSM-5 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th Edition, ICD–10 International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision
Fig. 3Factors contributing to delirium in cancer patients (adapted from Bush and Bruera [160], with permission from the publisher)
Non-pharmacological delirium strategies for palliative care patients [55, 56]
| Delirium management strategies | Details |
|---|---|
| Optimize sleep–wake pattern | Daytime: increase exposure to daylight. Shades/curtains open |
| Patient orientation | Reorientate person: |
| Communication | Use eye glasses, hearing aids, and dentures where needed |
| Encourage mobility | Mobilize as patient’s performance status allows |
| Monitor hydration and nutrition | Encourage patient to drink, if able to swallow safely |
| Monitor bladder and bowel function | Assess for urinary retention, constipation, and fecal impaction. Avoid unnecessary catheterization |
| Provide support and education | Reassure patient with calming voice |
Randomized trials for the pharmacological management of delirium in medical settings
| Year | References | Study design | Patient population (healthcare setting) | Study size | Study intervention | Primary outcome | Main study finding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | Breitbart et al. [ | Randomized double-blind, comparative parallel trial (single site) | AIDs patients (hospital inpatients): age, mean years [SD]: 39.2 [8.8] | 30 | Haloperidol vs. chlorpromazine vs. lorazepam | Efficacy (DRS, MMSE), Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale, and safety | Treatment with haloperidol or chlorpromazine in relatively low doses demonstrated significant improvement in delirium symptoms (as measured by DRS). No improvement in the lorazepam group ( |
| 2004 | Han and Kim [ | RCT: double-blind, comparison (single site) | Medical patients (medical, ICU, and oncology hospital inpatients): age, mean years [SD]: 66.5 [15.9] in haloperidol group, 65.6 [8.3] in risperidone group | 28 | Risperidone vs. haloperidol | Efficacy (MDAS) and safety | Delirium improved significantly in both treatment arms over the course of 7 days; no significant difference in efficacy or response rate was found between the 2 arms |
| 2010 | Kim et al. [ | RCT: single-blind (rater blinded), comparison (single site) | Medical patients (hospital inpatients referred to psychiatry): age, mean years [SD]: 66.7 [12.1] in risperidone group, 68.3 [10.7] in olanzapine group | 32 | Risperidone vs. olanzapine (rescue intramuscular injection of haloperidol or benzodiazepine was permitted) | Efficacy (DRS-R-98), neurological items on UKU side effect rating scale, and safety | Delirium improved significantly in both treatment arms, with no significant difference in efficacy or safety between the arms. Response to risperidone was poorer in patients ≥70 years in comparison to <70 years |
| 2010 | Tahir et al. [ | RCT: double-blind, parallel-arm (single site) | Medical, surgical, orthopedic patients (hospital inpatients): age, mean years [SD]: 84.2 [8.3] | 42 | Quetiapine vs. placebo | Efficacy (DRS-R-98) and safety | Although delirium severity tended to decrease more rapidly in the quetiapine arm, no differences at day 1, 3, and 10 reached statistical significance. The quetiapine group improved significantly faster than the placebo group for non-cognitive scores |
| 2011 | Grover et al. [ | RCT: single-blind, flexible-dose regimen, comparison (single site) | Medical and surgical patients (consultation–liaison psychiatry practice referrals): age, mean years [SD]: 44.1 [16.8] in haloperidol group, 45.4 [19.2] in olanzapine group, 46.5 [14.5] in risperidone group | 64 | Haloperidol vs. olanzapine vs. risperidone | Efficacy (DRS-R-98) and safety (Simpson Angus Scale, Abnormal Involuntary Movement [AIMS] and UKU rating scales) | All participants showed improvement in delirium severity over the study duration (6 days); however, no differences between the 3 groups were found |
| 2013 | Maneeton et al. [ | RCT: prospective, flexible dose, double-blind (single site) | Medical patients with delirium (hospital inpatients): age, mean years [SD]: 56.8 [11.8] | 52 | Quetiapine vs. haloperidol | Efficacy (DRS-R-98) and safety (modified Simpson-Angus Scale—excluded gait stability) | Response rates by study end were not significantly different between groups (79.2% in quetiapine arm vs. 78.6% in haloperidol arm). Times to response and remission were similar between both treatment arms |
| 2017 | Agar et al. [ | RCT: double-blind, parallel-arm, dose-titrated (multicenter) | Palliative care patients (hospice inpatients or hospital-based palliative care inpatients): age, mean years [SD]: 74.9 [9.8] | 247 | Risperidone vs. haloperidol vs. placebo (rescue subcutaneous injection of midazolam was permitted) | Efficacy (‘delirium symptoms score’ = sum of Nu-DESC items 2, 3, and 4; MDAS), Extrapyramidal Symptom Rating Scale, and safety | Participants who received antipsychotics (risperidone or haloperidol) exhibited higher levels of behavioral, communication, and perceptual symptoms of delirium and had more extrapyramidal effects than the placebo group. Participants in the placebo group had longer median survival |
DRS Delirium Rating Scale, DRS-R-98 Delirium Rating Scale-Revised-98, ICU intensive care unit, MDAS Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, Nu-DESC Nursing Delirium Screening Scale, RCT randomized controlled trial, SD standard deviation, UKU Udvalg for Kliniske Undersøgelser
Receptor affinities for selected antipsychotics (derived from Procyshyn et al. [92] Howard et al. [93], and Lal et al. [94])
| Drug | D2 blockadea | 5-HT1A blockade | 5-HT2A blockade | α1 blockadeb | α2 blockade | H1 blockadec | M1 blockaded |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haloperidol | +++++ | + | +++ | +++ | + | + | + |
| Levomepromazine (methotrimeprazine) | +++ | ? | ++++ | +++++ | ++ | +++++ | ++ |
| Chlorpromazine | ++++ | + | ++++ | ++++ | ++ | +++ | +++ |
| Olanzapine | +++ | + | ++++ | +++ | ++ | ++++ | ++++ |
| Quetiapine | ++ | ++e | +++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | ++ |
| Risperidone | ++++ | ++ | +++++ | ++++ | ++ | +++ | – |
| Aripiprazole | +++++e | ++++e | ++++ | +++ | +++ | +++ | – |
The lower the K value, the higher the receptor affinity
Increased sedation associated with increasing H1 blockade
5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine-1A (serotonergic) receptor, 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine-2A (serotonergic) receptor, D dopamine-2 receptor, H histamine-1 receptor, K inhibition constant, M anticholinergic (muscarinic-1) receptor, α alpha-1 adrenergic receptor, α alpha-2 adrenergic receptor, – indicates K > 10,000 nM, + indicates K 1000–10,000 nM, ++ indicates K 100–1000 nM, +++ indicates K 10–100 nM, ++++ indicates K 1–10 nM, +++++ indicates K 0.1–1 nM, ? indicates unknown K
aPharmacological effects of antagonism in nigrostriatal system: extrapyramidal side effects partially mitigated in second-generation (atypical) antipsychotics by 5-HT2A receptor antagonism
bPharmacological effects: postural hypotension, dizziness, sedation
cPharmacological effects: sedation, anxiolytic effects
dPharmacological effects: moderation of extrapyramidal adverse effects; anticholinergic effects: blurred vision, dry mouth, constipation, etc
ePartial agonist
Fig. 4Metabolism of haloperidol [100–102] (note large interindividual variations in haloperidol pharmacokinetics). CPHP 4-(4-chlorophenyl)-4-hydroxypiperidine, CYP cytochrome P450, EPS extrapyramidal side effects
Profile of adverse effects for selected antipsychotics at therapeutic doses (derived from Procyshyn et al. [92])
| Drug | Sedationa | Hypotension/dizzinessb | Extrapyramidal side effectsc | Anticholinergic effectsd |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haloperidol | + | + | +++ | + |
| Levomepromazine (methotrimeprazine) | +++ | +++ | ++ | +++ |
| Chlorpromazine | +++ | +++ | ++ | +++ |
| Olanzapine | +++ | + | + | ++ |
| Quetiapine | +++ | ++ | + | +++ |
| Risperidone | ++ | ++ | ++ | + |
| Aripiprazole | ++ | + | + | + |
+ indicates frequency >2%, ++ indicates frequency >10%, +++ indicates frequency >30%, ↓ indicates decreased, ↑ indicates increased
aDue to antihistaminic effect of certain antipsychotics
bHypotension/dizziness: due to adrenergic side effects
cSee text for details
dPeripheral: blurred vision, dry mouth, constipation, ↓ bronchial secretion, ↓ sweating, difficulty urination, urinary retention, tachycardia; central: impairment of concentration and memory, ↑ confusion (delirium)
Medications commonly used for palliative sedation in the management of refractory agitated delirium within the last 2 weeks of life [140, 147–150]
| Medication | Details |
|---|---|
| Midazolam (drug of first choice) | Rapid onset of action |
| Lorazepam | Lorazepam less amenable to rapid titration up or down than midazolam because of its slower pharmacokinetics |
| Levomepromazine (methotrimeprazine) | Administration: SC or IV (PO, IM) |
| Chlorpromazine | Administration: IV, deep IM, PR (PO) |
| Phenobarbital (phenobarbitone) | Administration: SC or IV (IM, PR, PO) |
CIVI continuous intravenous infusion, CSCI continuous subcutaneous infusion, IM intramuscular, IV intravenous, PO by mouth, PR per rectum, qx h every x h, qx min every x min, SC subcutaneous
| In inpatient palliative care settings, delirium prevalence increases from 13–42% on admission to 88% in the last weeks–hours of life. Delirium causes significant morbidity, including increased frequency of falls, increased cognitive and functional impairment, and significant patient and family psychological distress, and is associated with increased mortality. |
| Although antipsychotics are commonly used in the management of delirium in palliative care patients, recent research evidence in mild- to moderate-severity delirium suggests that antipsychotics are associated with both increased delirium symptoms and reduced patient survival. |
| While non-pharmacological delirium strategies should intuitively be an integral part of quality patient care, their role in the management of delirium in the palliative care context is unclear; outcome evidence in terms of their effectiveness in this patient population is still required. |