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1.
HNO ; 70(3): 167-178, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Alemão | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35171305

RESUMO

The German Association of Palliative Care developed an evidence-based guideline about the management of malignant wounds in adult patients with incurable cancer. There is a lack of evidence-based guidelines about fungating wounds and a confusing wide range of available wound dressings. The goal of the guideline is to reduce the suffering of patients with malignant wounds and stabilize or improve their quality of life. The guideline is constructed following the German Instrument for Methodological Guideline Appraisal (DELBI): A systematic review was carried out for guidelines and reviews. A wound expert group discussed these research findings and suggested recommendations which were adapted and consented by representatives of 62 medical and health professionals associations.The guideline has 34 recommendations, thereof nine (26%) are evidence based with an evidence level from 2+ to 4 (according to SIGN). The assessment chapter comprises specific assessment tools for malignant wounds, odor and wound-related quality of life. Three recommendations address the psychosocial support of patients and their family caregivers and aim to reduce the impact of the wound on their emotional wellbeing, caregiver burden and social participation. The pain recommendations focus on a preventive atraumatic dressing change, positioning, systemic pain medication (anticipated, rescue and baseline) and local application of morphine or local anesthetics. The guideline gives recommendations on odor management (metronidazole, active coal and antiseptic dressings) and management of exudate (super absorber). The recommendations on prevention and management of bleeding (antifibrinolytica, haemostyptica) are vital for patients and caregivers. This guideline is one of the first evidence-based and consented guideline on malignant wound care and has the potential to improve the palliation of patients who suffer from there malignant wounds.


Assuntos
Neoplasias , Qualidade de Vida , Adulto , Humanos , Neoplasias/terapia , Dor , Cuidados Paliativos
2.
Int J Clin Pharm ; 45(3): 774-780, 2023 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36753020

RESUMO

Off-label drug use is common practice in palliative care. It may pose a risk to the patient and benefit should outweigh harm. A decision and documentation aid for off-label use was developed to support practitioners in clinical practice off-label use. Using the example of the rectal administration of levetiracetam in three patient cases, the utilisation and benefits of the decision and documentation aid are presented and discussed. The rectal administration of levetiracetam clearly is an experimental treatment approach with little underlying evidence. To support and document the decision-making process for or against such an off-label use in clinical practice, it is helpful to have a structured approach in order to make this data comprehensible for a later point in time. Off-label use may be a permissible treatment alternative without underlying evidence, provided it takes place in a well-planned and well-monitored therapeutic setting and the benefits outweigh the potential risks.


Assuntos
Uso Off-Label , Cuidados Paliativos , Humanos , Levetiracetam , Administração Retal , Tomada de Decisões
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