Opioid Use in Palliative Care of Children and Young People with Cancer
Objective
Identify opioids prescribed, preferred routes, and doses among children with incurable cancer.
Study design
Prospective survey with monthly questionnaires regarding patients 0 to 19 years old from oncology centers. Data were collected by professionals on each patient for 6 months or until death, and analyzed from patients who died. Impact of tumor was analyzed with Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney tests. Major opioid dosages are expressed as oral morphine equivalents.
Results
Of 185 children recruited, 164 (88 boys, 76 girls) died. Mean palliative care duration was 67 days. One hundred forty-seven (89.6%) received major opioids. Morphine, diamorphine, and fentanyl were prescribed in 75%, 57.9%, and 11.6%, respectively. Seventy-three (44.5%) received >1 major opioid. Median monthly maximum doses prescribed rose from 2.1 mg/kg/24 h (study entry) to 4.4 mg/kg/24 h (death) (P < .001); overall variable (0.09-1500 mg/kg/24 h, median 3.7 mg/kg/24 h). Opioids were given by the oral (117/164, 71.3%), intravenous (68/164, 41.5%), subcutaneous (40, 28%), rectal (20, 12.2%), and transdermal (18, 11%) routes. There was a shift to intravenous use as death approached. Numbers within each tumor group were too small to show significance. Children with solid tumors outside the central nervous system were likely to receive more opioids, be given multiple different opioids, and receive opioids in the last month.
Conclusions
The study shows the United Kingdom practice of opioid use and provides comparator data for practice in children’s palliative medicine.
Abbreviations: CNS, Central nervous system tumors, LL, Leukemia/lymphoma, OME, Oral morphine equivalent, PC, Palliative care, PCA, Patient-controlled analgesia, ST, Solid tumors, UKCCSG, United Kingdom Children’s Cancer Study Group, WHO, World Health Organization
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PII: S0022-3476(07)00657-9
doi:10.1016/j.jpeds.2007.07.005
© 2008 Mosby, Inc. All rights reserved.
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