27/5/2015
Palliative pharmacological sedation for terminally ill adults.
Palliative pharmacological sedation for terminally ill adults.
Beller EM , van Driel ML, McGregor L, Truong S, Mitchell G.
Abstract
Terminally ill people experience a variety of symptoms in the last hours and days of life,
including delirium, agitation, anxiety, terminal restlessness, dyspnoea, pain, vomiting, and psychological and
physical distress. In the terminal phase of life, these symptoms may become refractory, and unable to be
controlled by supportive and palliative therapies specifically targeted to these
symptoms. Palliative sedation therapy is one potential solution to providing relief from these refractory
symptoms. Sedation in terminally ill people is intended to provide relief from refractory symptoms that are not
controlled by other methods. Sedative drugs such as benzodiazepines are titrated to achieve the desired level
of sedation; the level of sedation can be easily maintained and the effect is reversible.
To assess the evidence for the benefit of palliative pharmacological sedation on quality of life,
survival, and specific refractory symptoms in terminally ill adults during their last few days of life.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; 2014, Issue
11), MEDLINE (1946 to November 2014), and EMBASE (1974 to December 2014), using search terms
representing the sedative drug names and classes, disease stage, and study designs.
We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs), quasiRCTs, nonRCTs, and
observational studies (e.g. beforeandafter, interruptedtimeseries) with quantitative outcomes. We excluded
studies with only qualitative outcomes or that had no comparison (i.e. no control group or no withingroup
comparison) (e.g. single arm case series).
Two review authors independently screened titles and abstracts of
citations, and full text of potentially eligible studies. Two review authors independently carried out data extraction
using standard data extraction forms. A third review author acted as arbiter for both stages. We carried out no
metaanalyses due to insufficient data for pooling on any outcome; therefore, we reported outcomes narratively.
The searches resulted in 14 included studies, involving 4167 adults, of whom 1137
received palliative sedation. More than 95% of people had cancer. No studies were randomised or quasirandomised.
All were consecutive case series, with only three having prospective data collection. Risk of bias
was high, due to lack of randomisation. No studies measured quality of life or participant wellbeing, which was
the primary outcome of the review. Five studies measured symptom control, using four different methods, so
pooling was not possible. The results demonstrated that despite sedation, delirium and dyspnoea were still
troublesome symptoms in these people in the last few days of life. Control of other symptoms appeared to be
similar in sedated and nonsedated people. Only one study measured unintended adverse effects of sedative
drugs and found no major events; however, four of 70 participants appeared to have druginduced delirium. The
study noticed no respiratory suppression. Thirteen of the 14 studies measured survival time from admission or
referral to death, and all demonstrated no statistically significant difference between sedated and nonsedated
groups.
There was insufficient evidence about the efficacy of palliativesedation in terms of
a person's quality of life or symptom control. There was evidence thatpalliative sedation did not hasten death,
which has been a concern of physicians and families in prescribing this treatment. However, this evidence comes
from low quality studies, so should be interpreted with caution. Further studies that specifically measure the
efficacy and quality of life in sedated people, compared with nonsedated people, and quantify adverse effects
are required.
PMID: 25879099 [P
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