Laxative management in ambulatory cancer patients on opioid therapy: a prospective, open-label investigation of polyethylene glycol, sodium picosulphate and lactulose.
2012 Jan;21(1):131-40.
Source
Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care Medicine, Pain Therapy, Palliative Medicine, CURA-Hospital, Schuelgenstrasse 15, Bad Honnef, Germany. stefan.wirz@cura.orgAbstract
Constipation
and the laxatives polyethylene glycol (PEG), sodium picosulphate (SPS)
and lactulose (L) were investigated in outpatients with cancer and on
opioid therapy. Randomly selected patients were enrolled in a
prospective, controlled, open-label trial.
Endpoints were number of
patients taking laxatives >28 days, number of patients with a
stool-free interval >72 h (sfi72), dosage, numerical rating scale
(NRS) for constipation, and European Organization for Research and
Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life (QoL) questionnaire scores.
The 348 patients had comparable demographic and medical data. In this
ambulatory population, mobility scores remained unaffected. Constipation
incidence was 5.7%, with sfi72 42, mean NRS 2.3557 and mean QoL 2.1. A
total of 53.2% discontinued their laxative medication.
Laxative use
correlated with higher opioid usage (morphine-equivalent mg/day: no
laxative 98.2, SPS 128.2, PEG 139.9, L 154.5). PEG was the most
frequently prescribed laxative (PEG 27.3%, SPS 10.3%, L 9.2%). PEG
(sfi72 12.6%, NRS 2.2, QoL 2.1) and SPS (sfi72 11.1%, NRS 2.7, QoL 2.2)
proved more effective than L (sfi72 15.5%, NRS 3.8, QoL 2.5). In spite
of opioid therapy, the incidence of constipation was low in these
ambulatory cancer pain patients at an early disease stage. For
prevention of constipation, PEG or SPS is recommended instead of L.
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