1 / 35

Artificial feeding & venting gastrostomy in palliative patients

Artificial feeding & venting gastrostomy in palliative patients. Dr Nicholas Herodotou Macmillan Consultant Palliative Medicine L&D University Hospital, Luton/S. Beds Community, Keech Hospice. Topics . Case reports: Palliative Venting Gastrostomy (PVG) & Artificial Nutrition (AN)

glen
Télécharger la présentation

Artificial feeding & venting gastrostomy in palliative patients

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Artificial feeding & venting gastrostomy in palliative patients Dr Nicholas Herodotou Macmillan Consultant Palliative Medicine L&D University Hospital, Luton/S. Beds Community, Keech Hospice

  2. Topics • Case reports: Palliative Venting Gastrostomy (PVG) & Artificial Nutrition (AN) • Ethics & Evidence • Development of a hospital pathway for AN & Venting PEG

  3. Artificial feeding in terminally ill cancer patients with bowel obstructionNicholas Herodotou. European Journal of Palliative Care, 2012; 19(5)

  4. Case 1 • 42 year female, married, 1 adult son • Peritoneal carcinomatosis Sept 2010 • Carboplatin 6 cycles (Ended Dec 2010) • Worsening disease Aug 2011 • 2nd course carboplatin (ended Jan 2012)

  5. Background • Two hospital admissions for vomiting & constipation during Aug-Dec 2011 • Admitted to Milton Keynes hospital March 2012 diagnosed small bowel obstruction • Persistent vomiting since Christmas 2011, not controlled by syringe driver • Previous admission to hospice • Not eaten-except for some milk

  6. PMH • Appendectomy 1996 • peritoneal adhesions 2000 • TAH, BSO for adhesions 2003

  7. Medication used in CSCI • Morphine 100mg • Haloperidol 3mg • Buscopan 100mg • Ondansetron SC PRN • Had used… • Maxalon • Cyclizine • Nozinan SC (made her drowsy)

  8. How I got involved? • Lecture to district nurses on venting PEG • District Nurse mentioned her patient • I agreed to review her via her GP • Admitted to L&D 29 March 2012

  9. Management • Didn’t appear to be in dying phase • Started dexamethasone IV 12mg & Losec • Switched morphine to Fentanyl 50mcg • Switched CSCI to: • Midazolam 5mg • Octreotide 600mcg • Nozinan 6.25mg

  10. Management • Enemas • IV fluids over weekend • Review after weekend; if still vomiting then Venting PEG and PEG feeding regime

  11. Reviewed after weekend • Ate for first time for weeks, but next day vomiting returned • Colicky pain, buscopan restarted • Looked more poorly • Not suitable for TPN feeding as prognosis less than 2 months • Agreed to Venting PEG & artificial feeding via PEG

  12. Surgeon vented patient on 3 April • Ate toast and oral food for first time! • Dietician advised trying high calorie drinks via PEG & clamping to allow absorption • Stopped octreotide, nozinan & steroids

  13. Outcome • Discharged home on 6 April • Kept on CSCI with midaz & buscopan • Added in voltarol via PEG for pain relief • Patient died at home peacefully 15 April, 12 days after procedure • GP & DN said family & patient felt it made a big difference to her quality of life

  14. Case 2 • 32 yr male Irish traveller, married, fifth baby due shortly • Admitted to the L&D with abdominal pain • Diagnosed advanced inoperable colon cancer, with small bowel obstruction • Profuse vomiting • IV fluids for days

  15. Prognosis about 2 months given • Some mobility & wanted to see baby born • Advise sought if AN appropriate • Patient agreed & IV feeding commenced • ?suitability for Home Parenteral Nutrition (HPN)

  16. Nutrition Team secured funding from PCT for home parenteral nutrition (HPN)-private service • Logistics of follow up as mobile caravan • Survived 4 months and saw his baby born

  17. What is a venting PEG?

  18. Venting PEG has a wider bore tube 18-25F (feeding is12F)

  19. Types of artificial feeding • Gastrostomy: PEG, RIG, SIG • Jenunostomy:PEJ, PEGJ, FNJ • Parenteral route : via Hickman or IV • Nasogastric tube (NGT)

  20. Routes for enteral feeding

  21. Ethics & Evidence • Autonomy • Beneficence • Non-maleficence • Justice

  22. Legal issues • Tony Bland case (1993 House of Lords ruling) • Mental Capacity Act 2005 • GMC guidance (End of Life Care & AN)

  23. Concerns around AN • Prolong suffering • Complications from procedure: Refeeding Syndrome • Delays preparing for death • When to stop feeding regime • Costly & labour intensive, especially HPN

  24. Evidence for artificial Nutrition (AN) in palliative patients • Medically assisted nutrition for palliative care in adult patients. Cochrane database of Systematic Reviews, 2008, Good P, Cavenagh J, Mather M, Ravenscroft P • No RCT or prospective controlled trials • Conclusion: “Insufficient good quality trials to recommend medically Assisted Nutrition (AN) in palliative care patients”

  25. Evidence for venting PEG1? • Retrospective study1 in 2002 looked at Palliative Venting Gastrostomy (PVG) over a seven-year period of 51 advanced cancer patients who had bowel involvement and symptoms of nausea and vomiting. • Of these patients, 41 (92%) had their symptoms relieved by PVG, and median survival after PVG insertion of all patients was 17 days 1Palliative venting gastrostomy in malignant intestinal obstruction. M A Brooksbank, P A Ashby; Palliative Medicine, 2002; 16: 520

  26. Hospital pathway for Venting PEG & Artificial nutrition in palliative (terminal) patients

  27. Why was it needed? • No guidance in place • Patients dying badly from uncontrolled vomiting • Terminal patients denied nutritional intervention

  28. How the pathways were developed? • Multi-professional team work • Persistence! • Mutual trust

  29. Home Parenteral Nutrition (HPN) pathway for terminally ill Patients with confirmed bowel obstruction Patient not eaten for >5 days, hunger symptoms, vomiting or dysphagia. No Prognosis 2-3 months? Yes Yes Has patient capacity to consent? Assessment by multi-professional teams involved to agree decision on HPN Address any symptoms-seek specialist advise if unsure. No Not suitable for HPN Yes If indicated Venting PEG prior to transfer to St Marks Refer to St Mark’s Hospital by consultant gastroenterologist. Discussion & document with patient/family on: goals, limitations, requirements, complications & stopping HPN. Consent form & patient leaflet Plan discharge & support by St Mark’s hospital/Macmillan service

  30. If prognosis <1 month • Can consider PEG feeding regime • Theory that some feed is still absorbed even in malignant bowel obstruction due to slow flow rate • Benefit?

  31. Pathway for Palliative venting gastrostomy (PVG) in terminally ill patients with confirmed irreversible bowel obstruction Uncontrolled vomiting due to confirmed bowel obstruction; patient has capacity to consent Under specialist advise, try & control the pain & vomiting symptoms with a Syringe Driver using various medications such as: morhpine, midazolam 5-10mg, Buscopan 60-120mg, Dexamethasone 12-16mg, cyclizine 150mg, nozinan 6.25-25mg, octreotide 300-1.2mg. (Minimum trial of 48 hrs) NO Are symptoms controlled? Yes Does 24 hour NGT trial 14F relieve symptoms? NO Remove NGT, sedate patient surgical/gastro/nutrition/palliative assessment for consideration of Venting PEG. Venting equipment for discharge & EOLC planning including info for community team Yes Pain review by Macmillan team pre/post PEG

  32. Summary • Consider venting Peg for uncontrolled vomiting 2nd to irreversible malignant bowel obstruction • Remember to consider artificial feeding if ethically appropriate: PEG or HPN • End of life does NOT mean End of Care!

  33. Finally, remember….

  34. The Art of medicine

More Related