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From Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Department of Anesthesia, Pain Management, Philadelphia, Pa.
Address correspondence to Ann Kim, MD, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Department of Anesthesia, Pain Management, 834 Chestnut St, Suite T-150, Philadelphia, PA 19107-5127. E-mail: dejogger{at}cs.com
Many developments have occurred in the prevention and treatment of cancer, but death from this disease is still common. According to the World Health Organization, 7 million deaths were due to cancer worldwide in 1999. For dying patients, it is most important to improve quality of life and relieve suffering. Palliative care is defined as the active total care of patients whose disease is not responsive to curative treatment. It encompasses all treatment modalities that are aimed at enhancing quality of life rather than curing disease. Each patient's definition of quality of life is unique. As such, it is important to treat each person as an individual and to continue to view the patient holistically. Controlling cancer-related symptoms can ameliorate the patient's limited remaining time with family and friends. Palliative chemotherapy, rehabilitation, radiation therapy, surgery, and interventional pain management can help to achieve this objective.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), palliative care is defined as the active total care of patients whose disease is not responsive to curative treatment.1 The term palliative care often is used interchangeably with hospice care, and its goal is to ensure that the patient and family achieve the best possible quality of life.
In 1842, Mme Jeanne Garnier, who founded the Dames de Calvaire in Lyons, France, was the first to use the term hospice as referring to the care of the dying. In the United Kingdom, the Sisters of Charity opened Our Lady's Hospice in Dublin in 1879 and St Joseph's Hospice in East London in 1905. Since then, other facilities have opened and provided care for the incurable and dying.
In 1967, Dame Cicely Saunders founded St Christopher's Hospice in London, the first research and teaching hospice that included home care, family support throughout the illness, and bereavement follow-up. This inpatient facility paved the way for the hospice movement in North America and the beginning of palliative medicine.
Palliative medicine can be defined as the study and management of patients with active, progressive, far-advanced disease, for whom the prognosis is limited and the focus of care is the quality of life.2 Interdisciplinary teamwork is vital to ensure that every patient need is fulfilled and a holistic approach to the patient and family is maintained. Patient comfort and control of cancer-related symptoms can optimize the patient's limited remaining time with family and friends. The hope is to achieve this goal through palliative chemotherapy, radiation therapy, appropriate surgical management, interventional pain management, and rehabilitation to improve patient function and enable self-care.
| Palliative Chemotherapy |
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Even without evidence of tumor response to chemotherapy, patients can clinically benefit. In patients with pancreatic cancer, gemcitabine hydrochloride did not prolong life; however, its use was associated with less requirement for analgesics and improvement in patient function.8
Cytotoxic drugs used in palliative chemotherapy attack cells during cell division; agents are phase specific and cycle specific. Phase-specific drugs terminate cells only if given during a certain phase of the cells'cycle. Prolonging treatment increases the number of cells killed because dividing cells cycle at random; it is therefore a reasonable approach.
Cycle-specific drugs target cells during any phase of division; thus, higher doses kill more cells than lower doses. Cytotoxic drugs can also be classified according to their specific cellular mode of action. Antimetabolites (5-fluorouracil, fludarabine phosphate, methotrexate, gemcitabine) interfere with the incorporation of nucleic acid bases into DNA; their activity peaks during the S phase of the cell cycle. Alkylating drugs (cyclophosphamide, ifosfamide, chlorambucil, melphalan, cisplatin, carboplatin) form linkages between the strands of DNA that prevent this biogenic substance from separating during the M phase of the cell cycle.
Antitumor antibiotics (bleomycin, doxorubicin hydrochloride, epirubicin hydrochloride) typically interfere with binding of base-pair molecules and prevent separation of DNA strands during the M phase of the cell cycle. Plant alkaloids act as either mitotic spindle inhibitors (vincristine, vinblastine, paclitaxel) or topoisomerase inhibitors (topotecan hydrochloride, irinotecan, and etoposide).9
Given the potential toxicities of chemotherapeutic agents, it is critical to educate patients about their illness and to discuss their expectations of treatment. Many agents are available for palliation, and it is important to be aware of their potential adverse effects (Table 3). Ideal candidates for palliative treatment are patients with excellent performance status and a tumor sensitive to chemotherapy. Performance status is a measure of a patient's functional capacity. Use of an evaluation tool such as the Karnofsky scale enables assessment of a patient's ability to accomplish self-care activities (Table 4).9 A patient with significant comorbidities and poor functional status will have difficulty tolerating treatment and may become more disabled.
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The most challenging issue for both patient and physician is balancing symptom relief against treatment toxicity. When adverse effects of palliative chemotherapy begin to cause a decline in performance status, physicians must reconsider treatment and patient goals. Working together as a team, the patient, family, and physician can make the best decision.
| Palliative Rehabilitation |
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Cancer rehabilitation provides patients with a chance to achieve optimal functional capacity within the limits of the disease. By setting realistic goals, they can have a better sense of control and reduce their dependency on others. Rehabilitation teams can consist of an oncologist, physiatrist, physical therapist, occupational therapist, speech therapist, social worker, nurse, dietitian, and psychologist. Cancer rehabilitation goals are not universal; they should be set according to each patient's prognosis.
Preventive rehabilitation focuses on preserving strength, flexibility, and endurance before cancer treatment such as radiation therapy, which can lead to soft tissue and muscle contracture. Patients can mitigate such contracture if they are taught to stretch the muscles when radiation therapy begins. Restorative rehabilitation aims to return patientsspecifically those with a good prognosisto their pre-illness state. For example, a patient with breast cancer who undergoes mastectomy is expected to recover strength and full shoulder range of motion.
Supportive rehabilitation attempts to help patients adapt to permanent functional deficits caused by cancer and to maximize their autonomy. After brain tumor resection, for instance, patients may have cognitive deficits for which they can be taught to compensate with therapy.
Palliative rehabilitation focuses on patients with advanced cancer to provide comfort and support and to maximize independence with various assistive devices. For example, providing a bedside commode with grab bars allows patients with bladder dysfunction to be independent.10
Cancer rehabilitation can be beneficial even for those patients with advanced disease. In a case series of 115 patients with cancer who were admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation unit, there was no significant difference in functional gains achieved between patients with limited and those with advanced stages.13 Another case series of 301 terminally ill patients with cancer found that they benefited from physical therapy and demonstrated clinically significant increases in Barthel mobility indices.11 Another study focused on 32 inpatients with metatstatic spinal cord compression and found that 84% were able to be discharged to their home.14
Five-year cancer survival rates vary depending on the type. Issues of poor prognosis and short life expectancy must be taken into consideration when developing rehabilitation goals. A retrospective study of 60 patients with metastatic spinal cord compression admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation unit showed that median survival time was 4.1 months; 82% could be discharged to home.15 In addition, this study found a 1-month gap between time of diagnosis and time of transfer to the rehabilitation unit. The authors suggested that rehabilitation for these patients should be of short duration with early transfer to a rehabilitation service.
| Palliative Radiation Therapy |
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Cancer syndromes and symptoms that are treatable with radiation include painful bone metastases, brain metastases, spinal cord compression, superior vena cava syndrome, and bleeding associated with stomach, esophageal, head, neck, bladder, and cervical cancers among others. External beam radiation of lytic lesions in bone yields pain relief in more than 75% of patients treated.17 Healing and reossification of nonfractured bone occurs in 65% to 85%of lytic bone lesions treated with radiation.
Malignancies most commonly subjected to palliative XRT are lung cancer, bone metastases, brain metastases, advanced pelvic malignancies, lymph node metastases, and spinal cord metastases.18 Lung cancer is the most frequent cancer in North America and is the most common cause of cancer-related mortality in both men and women.17,18 Palliative XRT is an integral part of treatment of patients with lung cancerrelated lesions causing atelectasis, postobstructive pneumonia, shortness of breath, large airway obstruction, and pain.
| Palliative Surgery |
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The concept of monitoring and improving morbidity and mortality is difficult when the goal may not be to extend life. Improvement in quality of life is more difficult to measure than a decrease in hospital days or infections. Although death within the 30-day postoperative period is universally considered a failure by surgical and medical teams, this view must be overcome when dealing with procedures of palliative intent.
Selecting patients for surgery requires a definitive understanding of disease morbidity, surgical morbidity, severity of presenting symptoms, and the likelihood that surgery will relieve them. It is also imperative to determine if the intended relief is outweighed by potential risks involved in the surgery.20 Common indications for palliative surgery include pain and uncontrolled bleeding (Figure).
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Approximately 250,000 gastrointestinal cancers are diagnosed in the United States each year. Of those, nearly 80% comprise gastric, pancreatic, and colorectal cancers.16 Although the incidence of gastric cancer is on the decline in the United States, it continues to be a substantial cause of overall morbidity and mortality. This disease is often diagnosed during laparotomy, and in nearly half of these cancers, the subsequent resection is considered palliative because of local or systemic spread and high mortality. Surgical resection of gastric tumors usually offers the best form of palliative care, relieving symptoms of obstruction or bleeding. Repair of hemorrhage and perforation are fairly common operations done in patients with gastric cancer. These procedures can be considered forms of palliative surgical care, though their purpose serves a more acute problem.
Pancreatic cancer is diagnosed in nearly 30,000 patients each year in the United States. Palliative surgery in such patients with terminal disease is focused on three areas: obstructive jaundice, duodenal obstruction, and general cancer pain. The most common symptom of pancreatic and cholangiocarcinoma is painless jaundice secondary to mechanical obstruction of the distal common bile duct. Various endoscopic and percutaneous stents are aimed at palliation of symptoms related to mechanical obstruction of pancreatic or biliary ducts or both. Tumor debulking via hepatojejunostomy is also commonly done for palliation of pancreatic and biliary cancer symptoms. Pancreaticoduodenectomy is a surgical option usually reserved for curative candidates. Surgical palliation of duodenal obstruction is usually accomplished via gastrojejunostomy unless life expectancy is only 3 to 6 months. Pancreatic cancerassociated pain is often the most debilitating symptom of this disease.
Surgical palliation is aimed at the specific structure or organ causing the painful symptoms. Often, pain is well controlled with opioids or a combination of opioids and interventional pain management procedures.21 Neurosurgeries including cordotomy, dorsal rhizotomy, hypophysectomy, myelotomy, and deep brain stimulation are relatively common for their palliative intent. Other forms of cancer amenable to surgical palliation are too numerous for the scope of this article, but interest in and acceptance by surgeons and other medical practitioners in this area of care are growing rapidly.
| Interventional Palliative Procedures |
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Sympathetic and Splanchnic Blocks
Visceral cancer pain uncontrolled by opioids or other analgesics is an
appropriate target for sympathetic and splanchnic blocks. Advantageously,
visceral afferent fibers that transmit visceral-type pain are situated with
autonomic nerve fibers, which allows for their blockade without deleterious
effects on somatosensory or motor
nerves.23
Other Palliative Interventional Modalities
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| Footnotes |
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This continuing medical education publication is supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Purdue Pharma LP.
| References |
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