| Literature DB >> 34617161 |
Lisanne N van Merendonk1, Mirjam Crul2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Palliative cancer patients can benefit from deprescribing of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs). Tools and guidelines developed for the geriatric population are mainly available. This systematic review gives an overview of available guidelines and tools to deprescribe for palliative cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Deprescribing; PIMs; Palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34617161 PMCID: PMC8857105 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-021-06605-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.359
Fig. 1Preferred reporting item for systematic reviews and meta-analysis (PRISMA) flow diagram
Summary of tools and guidelines identified
| Tool | Description | Target population during development |
|---|---|---|
| OncPal [ | Validated against an expert opinion panel in a single-center study. It includes medications with a limited benefit in palliative cancer patients. It consists of 8 medication classes: anticoagulants, cardiovascular agents, osteoporosis medications, peptic ulcer prophylaxis, oral hypoglycemics, vitamins, minerals, and complementary-alternative medicines | Palliative cancer patients with a life expectancy < 6 months |
| 6-Step method [ | A systematic method for deprescribing consisting of 6 steps Step 0: reappraisal of the patient’s clinical situation, setting treatment goals Step 1: to find out all the medications a patient is taking Step 2: agreement with patient and carers Step 3: identify drugs that can be deprescribed in the first place without causing harm Step 4: address medication that requires a long time until benefit, outside of the patients’ expected lifespan Step 5: identification of medications that could be withdrawn, but slowly Step 6: monitor carefully to identify clinical problems | Advanced cancer patients |
| Steps to deprescribe [ | A periodically carried out comprehensive medication assessment following 5 steps to deprescribe: Step 1: reconcile all medications and consider indications Step 2: consider overall risk of harm Step 3: assess each drugs in terms of current or future benefit in relation to current or future harm Step 4: prioritize drugs for deprescribing, giving preference to those that have the most unfavorable risk/benefit ratio and least likelihood of withdrawal symptoms Step 5: implement a discontinuation plan and monitor | Older patients with cancer |
| Futility criteria by Oliveira et al. [ | Criteria for futility of 7 medication categories, criteria modified from Fede et al. [ | Advanced cancer patients with a life expectancy < 6 months |
| Preventative medications by Todd et al. [ | Classes of the most common inappropriate preventative medication in patients with life-limiting illness based on a systematic review: vitamins and minerals, antidiabetic, antihypertensive, antihyperlipidemic, and antiplatelet medications | Patients with a life-limiting illness |
| Medications for chronic diseases by Garfinkel et al. [ | Medications for chronic diseases. Topical preparations and drugs for oncological treatments were excluded (oral and/or intravenous cytostatic drugs and biological agents) | End-stage cancer patients referred to homecare hospice |
| Beers criteria [ | PIMs to avoid by older adults in most circumstances or under specific situations, updated by the American Geriatrics Society | Geriatric population |
| STOPP criteria [ | Screening tool of older people’s prescription (STOPP) criteria consists of 80 criteria. These medications are associated with adverse drug events and can be used for older people | Older patients |
| Medication appropriateness index [ | A questionnaire of 10 questions used by physicians to fill in a score to assess if the use of a certain drug is appropriate of inappropriate. Questions are focused on, e.g., indications, dosage, durations, interactions, and effectiveness | Ambulatory, elderly patients |
Outcomes of PIMs in studies applying tools or guidelines
| Article | No. cancer patients | Population type | Study type | Criteria for PIM | % | % PIMs | Most frequently prescribed PIM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Use of tool developed specific for cancer patients | |||||||
| Marin et al. [ | 266 | Cancer patients seen by the palliative care consult team | Retrospective database review | OncPal (not used by palliative team) | 82% before consultation, 57% after consultation | 21% PIMs before, 14% PIMs after | Vitamin, minerals Antihypertensives Peptic ulcer prophylaxis |
| Wenedy et al. [ | 6158 | Cancer patients in home hospice care | Retrospective study | OncPal to assess appropriateness of discontinuation | NA | NA | Omeprazole, furosemide, simvastatin |
| Lindsay et al. [ | 61 | Palliative cancer in patients with < 6-month prognosis | Prospective, non-interventional cohort study | OncPal | 70% | 21.4% | Antihypertensive, dyslipidemic agents, CAMs |
| Todd et al. [ | 125 in the UK 191 in the USA | Patients who died of lung cancer with a hospital admission within the last 6 months of life | Retrospective cohort study | The most common inappropriate preventative medications | At admission: 73% in the UK 80% in the USA At discharge: 63% in the UK 69% in the USA | NA | UK: antihypertensive agents US: vitamin and minerals |
| Oliveira et al. [ | 448 patients | Patients referred to the palliative care service of an oncology institute | Retrospective analysis | Focus on the prescription of gastric protectants, antihypertensive agents, antidiabetic agents, anticoagulants, antidementia drugs, and statins (criteria modified from Fede et al. [ | Futility within categories: Statins: 97% Gastric protectors: 50% Antihypertensive agents: 27% Antidiabetic: 1% Bisphosphonates: 26% Antidementia: 100% | NA | Gastric protectants |
| Garfinkel et al. [ | 202 patients | End-stage cancer patients at the time of admission to homecare hospice | Retrospective chart review | Medications for chronic diseases, excluding oncological treatments Appropriateness of preventative medication was not assessed | NA | NA | 2 months before death: 31% patients were treated with statins 23% with aspirin 16% with blood pressure-lowering drugs |
| Use of tool developed not specific for cancer patients | |||||||
| Karuturi et al. [ | 1595 breast cancer patients 1528 colorectal cancer patients | Patients ≥ 65 years with breast or colorectal cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy | Retrospective cohort study | DAE and Beers criteria | NA | At baseline DAE criteria: 22.2% in the breast cohort 15.5% in the colorectal cohort Beers criteria: 27.6% in the breast cohort 24.8% in the colorectal cohort | |
| Karuturi et al. [ | 1595 breast cancer patients 1528 colorectal cancer patients | Patients ≥ 66 years with stage II/III breast or colorectal cancer receiving adjuvant chemotherapy | Retrospective cohort study | STOPP criteria | NA | 31.5% in the breast cohort 30.9% in the colorectal cohort | NA |
| Hong et al. [ | 301 | Older adults (≥ 70 years) with histologically diagnosed solid cancer who were candidates for first-line palliative chemotherapy | Secondary analysis of a prospective observational study | 2015 Beers criteria with exclusion of medication typically used to alleviate chemotherapy-induced nausea | 45.5% | 12.4% | |
| Nightingale et al. [ | 172 patients who used no complementary and alternative medications (CAM) 62 patients who used complementary and alternative medications | Ambulatory older adults with cancer who received an initial comprehensive geriatric oncology assessment | Secondary analysis of a retrospective study | Three tools: -STOPP criteria -DAE -Beers criteria | No CAM: 52.3% CAM: 50% | NA | NA |
| Flood et al. [ | 47 | Older adult cancer patients admitted to the oncology-acute care for elderly | Prospective, observational study | Beers criteria | 21% on admission | NA | PRN promethazine for nausea Diphenhydramine before blood transfusion |
| Nightingale et al. [ | 142 of which 41 received iMAP | Patients ≥ 65 years who received an initial geriatric oncology assessment | Prospective, exploratory pilot into pharmacist-led individualized medication assessment and planning (iMAP) | Beers criteria | All patients: 39.4% Patient that received iMAP: 46% | NA | NA |
| Zhou et al. [ | 311 chemotherapy order templates | No patients were included | Review of order templates | Six medications defined as PIMs by the Beers criteria and frequently prescribed for supportive care: antihistamines, benzodiazepines, corticosteroids, H2-receptor antagonists, metoclopramide, and antipsychotics | 45% of the chemotherapy order templates | NA | Antihistamines (39.5% of the templates) |
| Domingues et al. [ | 71 patients | Cancer patients at the time of transition to the palliative care setting | Prospective observational study | Medication appropriateness index | NA | After first consultation in the palliative care setting: 28.2% drugs were suspended | Most frequently suspended medications: Psychoactive drugs (13.5%) Analgesics (12.4%) Laxatives (9.6%) |
NA not available