Bowel Obstruction - Yorkshire and the Humber Deanery
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Transcript Bowel Obstruction - Yorkshire and the Humber Deanery
Becky Owen
22/2/12
Overview
Case Study
Clinical Presentation
Management
Case Study Update
Summary
Questions
Mrs JL
55 yr Ovarian Carcinoma
Diagnosed 2010
4 cycles palliative chemotherapy
Stable disease until June 2011
Increased abdominal distension, nausea, vomiting,
weight loss
CT – disease progression, subacute small bowel
obstruction
What would you do next?
Bowel Obstruction in Palliative
Care
Due to functional or mechanical obstruction of bowel
lumen and/or peristaltic failure
Can be partial or complete
Can occur at any level
Oesophageal
Gastric outlet & proximal small bowel
Distal small bowel
Large bowel
Causes
The cancer itself
Past treatment
Adhesions, postradiation ischaemic fibrosis
Drugs
Opioids, antimuscarinics
Debility
Faecal impaction
Unrelated benign condition
Strangulated hernia
Clinical Picture
Abdominal pain
Abdominal distension
Vomiting
Nausea
Intestinal colic
Variable bowel habit
Bowel obstruction – Pathophysiology
Partial or complete bowel obstruction
Reduction or stop movement
Intestinal content
Increased bowel contractions
Increased bowel distension
Increased luminal content
Increased gut epithelial surface area
Increased bowel secretions (H2O, NaCl)
Damage epithelium
Oedema and hyperaemia
Production noiceceptive mediators
Continuous pain
Colicky pain
Nausea and vomiting
Management - Surgery
Consider if;
Single discrete organic obstruction i.e. adhesions, isolated
neoplasm
Good performance status
Patient willing to undergo surgery
Contra-indications;
Previous laparotomy findings preclude prospect of successful
intervention
Diffuse intra-abdominal carcinomatosis
Massive ascites (re-accumulates rapidly after paracentesis)
Management - Medical
Focus on symptomatic relief
Anti-emetics
Opioids
Review laxatives
Corticosteroids
Anti-secretory drugs
Octreotide
Anti-emetics
Patient without colic + passing flatus – Prokinetic first
drug of choice
Patient with colic – antisecretory + antispasmodic
drug (Buscopan)
To be aware of anti-cholinergic effect of some drugs –
can inhibit gut motility
Octreotide
Synthetic analogue of somatostatin with longer
duration of action
Inhibitory hormone – found throughout the body
Inhibits release of Growth Hormone, TSH, Prolactin,
ACTH in hypothalamus
Inhibits peptides of Gastro-enteropancreatic system
Octreotide and bowel obstruction
<50% patients – respond to typical starting dose of 300
micrograms/24hr
75-90% respond to 600-800 micrograms/24hr
Comparisons with buscopan – Octreotide more
effective and rapid relief of nausea, vomiting and
reduced NG output
NB after 4-6 days overall symptom comparison is similar
Lanreotide – alternative sandostatin analogue
available in depot formations
Octreotide and ascites
Can suppress diuretic induced activation of renin-
aldosterone-angiotensin system
May interfere with ascitic fluid formation by reducing
splanchnic blood flow or as a result of a direct tumour
anti-secretory effect
May also help improve efficacy of diuretics in cirrhosis
Undesirable effects from
Octreotide
Bolus SC injection painful
Dry mouth
Flatulence
Nausea
Abdominal pain
Diarrhoea
Impaired glucose tolerance
Gallstones
Cautions
Insulinoma
Type 1 diabetes
Cirrhosis
Renal Failure
Avoid abrupt withdrawal of short-acting octreotide
after long-term treatment
Monitor thyroid function
Octreotide Drug Interactions
Octreotide markedly reduces plasma ciclosporin
concentrations and inadequate immunosuppression
may result.
Octreotide CSCI Compatability
2 drug compatibility data for octreotide and;
Morphine sulphate, metoclopramide, hyoscine butylbromide,
diamorphine, alfentanil (in WFI)
Check PCF4 / palliativedrugs.com
Conflicting observational reports with
levomepromazine
Depot Formulation of Octreotide
Sandotatin – 10-30mg every 4/52
Relative bio-availability of 60% compared to SC
Deep IM injection
Used in patients with symptoms already controlled
with octreotide therapy
Lanreotide – 60mg every 4/52
‘Somatuline Autogel’ preparation can be given SC
Management - Interventions
Dependant on level and extent of obstruction
Stents
Venting gastrostomy
Mrs JL Cont.
Not suitable for surgery/intervention
No colic – initially trialled metoclopramide CSCI
Not effective – converted to levomepromazine CSCI
(12.5mg over 24 hr)
Ongoing large volume vomits – octreotide added to
CSCI (1 mg over 24 hr)
Helped stabilise symptoms and allow for period of
6/52 at home with family
In Summary
One of the most challenging problems in palliative
care
To focus on improving quality of life
If focal obstruction – consider possibility / suitability
of intervention
Rarely need IV fluids or NG tube to relieve symptoms
Any Questions?
References
Palliative Care Formulary 4th Edition; R Twycross, A Wilcock.
Symptom Management in advanced cancer 3rd Edition; R Twycross, A
Wilcock.