| Literature DB >> 33161452 |
Kenjiro Aogi1, Hideki Takeuchi2,3,4, Toshiaki Saeki5, Keisuke Aiba6,7, Kazuo Tamura8, Keiko Iino9, Chiyo K Imamura10,11, Kenji Okita12,13, Yoshikazu Kagami14, Ryuhei Tanaka15, Kazuhiko Nakagawa16, Hirofumi Fujii17, Narikazu Boku18, Makoto Wada19, Tatsuo Akechi20, Hirotoshi Iihara21, Shoichiro Ohtani22, Ayako Okuyama23, Keiko Ozawa24, Yong-Il Kim25,26, Hidenori Sasaki27, Yasuo Shima28, Masayuki Takeda16, Eijiro Nagasaki6,7, Toshihiko Nishidate12,13, Takahiro Higashi23, Kouichi Hirata12,13.
Abstract
Patients with cancer should appropriately receive antiemetic therapies against chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting (CINV). Antiemetic guidelines play an important role in managing CINV. Accordingly, the first Japanese antiemetic guideline published in 2010 by the Japan Society of Clinical Oncology (JSCO) has considerably aided Japanese medical staff in providing antiemetic therapies across chemotherapy clinics. With the yearly advancements in antiemetic therapies, the Japanese antiemetic guidelines require revisions according to published evidence regarding antiemetic management worldwide. A revised version of the first antiemetic guideline that considered several upcoming evidences had been published online in 2014 (version 1.2), in which several updated descriptions were included. The 2015 JSCO clinical practice guideline for antiemesis (version 2.0) (in Japanese) has addressed clinical antiemetic concerns and includes four major revisions regarding (1) changes in emetogenic risk categorization for anti-cancer agents, (2) olanzapine usage as an antiemetic drug, (3) the steroid-sparing method, and (4) adverse drug reactions of antiemetic agents. We herein present an English update summary for the 2015 JSCO clinical practice guideline for antiemesis (version 2.0).Entities:
Keywords: Antiemesis; Chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting; Clinical practice guideline
Year: 2020 PMID: 33161452 DOI: 10.1007/s10147-020-01818-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Oncol ISSN: 1341-9625 Impact factor: 3.402