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Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment
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Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Mar 27, 2015

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Bryan Marshall
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Page 1: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Delirium in the Cancer Patient

A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment

Page 2: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

DeliriumDefinition

Recognition

Screening/diagnostic tools

Etiologic factors

Treatment of underlying cause

Prevention

Page 3: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

DefinitionEtiologically non-specific global cerebral

dysfunction associated with changes in LOC, attention, thinking, perception, memory, psychomotor behavior, emotion and the sleep/wake cycle

Page 4: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

DSM-IV CriteriaA) Change in consciousness with reduced

ability to focus, sustain or shift attention

B) Change in cognition (e.g., memory, disorientation, change in language, perceptual disturbance) that is not dementia

C) Abrupt onset (hours to days) with fluctuation

D) Evidence of medical condition judged to be etiologically related to disturbance

Page 5: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

CharacteristicsAbrupt onset

Disorientation, fluctuation of symptoms

Hypoactive vs hyperactive vs mixed

Early signs often mistaken as

anger, anxiety, depression, psychosis

Page 6: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Delirium TypesHypoactive

confusion, somnolence, alertness

Hyperactive

agitation, hallucinations, aggression

Mixed (>60%)

features of both

Page 7: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Prevalence of DeliriumCommon in terminally ill

Steifel et al: 20% of medical in-pts

Massie et al: >75% terminally ill

Pereira et al: 44% on admission

62% at death

30% reversible

Page 8: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

IncidenceGagnon et al, (J Pall Care 1998)

89 consecutive pts, CRS used

20% delirious on admission

30-40% during stay

44% reversed, >50% died in delirium

Ass’d with high opioid dose

Page 9: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

IncidenceLawlor et al (J Pall Care 1998)

103 pts, MDAS used

50% of episodes reversible

Terminal delirium in 88%

Hyperactive (3%) vs hypoactive (47%)

Mixed (48%) most common

Page 10: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Delirium vs DementiaDelirium

Impaired memory

Impaired judgement

Impaired thinking

Disorientation

Dementia

Impaired memory

Impaired judgement

Impaired abst thinking

Impaired cortical f’n

Disorientation

Page 11: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Delirium vs DementiaDelirium

Abrupt onset

Decreased LOC

Sleep/wake cycle Reversible

Dementia

Insidious, progressive

Alert, LOC intact

Minimal Irreversible

Page 12: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Screening ToolsDelirium Rating Scaletemporal onset

perceptual hallucinations

psychomotor behavior

cognitive status

mood lability

variability of symptoms

MMSE

orientation

registration

attention/calculation

recall

language

Page 13: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

CausesCausesCNS effects: tumour

seizuresRT

Indirect:Metabolic

Ca++

Na+, Na+ K+

Mg++ O2, CO2

Page 14: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

CausesInfection:

pneumonia, sepsis

Hematologic: Hgb, WBC, protein

Metabolic encephalopathy:organ failure, paraneoplastic syndromes

Page 15: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

CausesEndocrine:

hyper/hypothyroidism, Cushing syndrome

Drug withdrawal:alcohol, narcotics, hallucinogens

Immunologic:SLE, vasculitis

Nutritional deficiencies

Page 16: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Drug CausesChemotherapy:

MTX, 5FU, VCR/VBL, Bleo, Plat, IL-2

Steroids

Opioids

BZD, phenothiazines

Anti-cholinergics (Gravol, Elavil)

Anti-virals

Page 17: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Opioid-Induced Neurotoxicity (OIN)

Neuropsychiatric syndrome

Cognitive dysfunction

Delirium

Hallucinations

Myoclonus/seizures

Hyperalgesia/allodynia

Page 18: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

OIN: Risk FactorsHigh opioid doses

Prolonged opioid treatment

Borderline cognition/delirium

Dehydration

Renal failure

Psychoactive drugs

Advanced age

Page 19: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

TreatmentStop any offending Rx

Hydration (oral, IV, SC)

Correct metabolic abnormalities

Structured setting

quiet room, low lights, calendar, clock

Family support

Page 20: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

TreatmentOpioid rotation

Adjunct medications haloperidol (Haldol): 0.5-5 mg q2-4 h PO/SC/IV/IM

MTMZ (Nozinan): 12.5-50 mg q2-4 h PO/SC/IM

midazolam (Versed): 1-20 mg q2 h SC/IV or 30-100 mg/24 h CSCI

or CIVI

Page 21: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

Sedation in Terminal DeliriumSedation in Terminal Delirium

Mild: haloperidol 1-2 mg PO/SC q8h plus q1h prn

Moderate: haloperidol 2.5 - 5 mg

+ SC q4h plus q1h prn

midazolam 2.5 - 5 mg

Severe: haloperidol 5 mg + SC q4h plus q1h prn

midazolam 5 - 20 mg

OR CSCI or CIVI:

haloperidol 1.25 mg/hr + midazolam 1.25 - 5 mg/hr

Page 22: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

PreventionStaff and family awareness

Structured settings

Minimize use of medications

Opioid rotation

Hydration

Page 23: Delirium in the Cancer Patient A guide to identification, assessment, and treatment.

AlgorithmAgitation

cognition LOC

Confirm with tool MMSE/DRS/CRS

Reversible cause? Investigations Interventions

Medications Prevention