Abstract
ObjectivesTo investigate the efficacy and safety of short subcutaneous infusions (SSCIs) for refractory symptoms in the palliative setting.MethodsA retrospective chart review of SSCIs in a single palliative care centre over an 18-month period. All clinical notes, medication administration records and infusion monitoring documentation were examined to ascertain therapeutic aim, efficacy and tolerability.Results111 patients received one or more SSCIs, 28 in the community and 83 in the inpatient hospice (21% of all admissions). SSCIs were used for a wide variety of reasons including loading doses (to achieve steady state and, thus, symptom relief, sooner), as required doses (for medications too irritant to give as bolus SC injections) and regular maintenance doses (where continuous subcutaneous infusion (CSCI), were unnecessary). 84 single drug SSCIs types and 51 admixtures SSCIs types (2 or more medications) were given. One infusion was poorly absorbed, but SSCIs were otherwise well tolerated.ConclusionsSSCIs appear to be a promising additional option for administering medicines that are too irritant or large in volume for SC bolus injection. For medications with longer half-lives (eg, phenobarbital, valproate, levetiracetam), SSCI loading doses would be expected to achieve steady state and, thus, symptom relief, sooner than CSCIs alone.
Subject
Medical–Surgical Nursing,Oncology (nursing),General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Cited by
1 articles.
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