Effectiveness and Tolerability of Amidotrizoate for the Treatment of Constipation Resistant to Laxatives in Advanced Cancer Patients.

Date de l'article :
2010-09-18
Auteurs :
Sebastiano Mercadante MD, a, , Patrizia Ferrera MDa and Alessandra Casuccio BSa
Affiliations :
a Pain Relief and Palliative Care Unit (S.M., P.F.), La Maddalena Cancer Center, Palermo; and Palliative Medicine (S.M.), Department of Anesthesia & Intensive Care, and Department of Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neuroscience (A.C.), University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy
Source :
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management In Press, Corrected Proof, Available online 15 September 2010
Abstract :
Context Constipation is a common problem for advanced cancer patients, and is generally inadequately treated. Objectives The aim of this study was to prospectively evaluate the effectiveness and tolerability of amidotrizoate (AM) in patients unresponsive to current laxatives. Methods A consecutive sample of advanced cancer patients was surveyed. Inclusion criteria were no bowel movements for three days despite receiving regular doses of senna or lactulose. AM 50 mL was administered orally; the dose could be repeated the day after, based on clinical judgment and/or patients’ preference. Age, sex, primary tumor, previous abdominal surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy performed in the previous month, and the use of opioids were recorded. Nausea, the presence of early satiety, and fluid and food intake also were measured. Time to first bowel movement was recorded, and adverse effects attributable to AM. Results Ninety-nine patients were surveyed (36 women/63 men). The mean age was 65.7 years (SD ± 12.2) and the mean Karnofsky score was 46.8 (SD ± 9.4). Patients had no bowel movement for a mean of four days (SD ± 1.8, range 3–15 days). A total of 80.8% of patients were receiving opioids in doses of mean daily oral morphine equivalents of 164 mg (SD ± 235). After AM administration (mean 9.9 ± 6.5 hours), 44.4% of patients had a bowel movement within 24 hours. This effect was associated with significant improvement of other symptoms and was independent of age (P = 0.513), gender (P = 0.090), Karnofsky status (P = 0.979), days of constipation (P = 0.198), concomitant chemotherapy (P = 0.098) or radiotherapy (P = 0.414), and the use of opioids (P = 0.361), opioid doses (P = 0.420), and primary tumor (P = 0.231). The treatment was more effective in patients who had previous abdominal surgery (HR = 3.33). Conclusion AM was found to be an easy and inexpensive breakthrough medication to induce a bowel movement in about 45% of advanced cancer patients not responsive to common laxatives, with limited and acceptable adverse effects.
Commentaires :
cet article est intéressant car il rappelle l'utilité des substance de contrsaste hyperosmolaire qui peuvent être utilisées dans les cas de constipation réfractaire; on a beaucoup d'options maintenant , mais il y a toujours le patient différent des autres....