Today, I review, link to, and excerpt from the Palliative Care Network Of Wisconsin‘s Dyspnea at End-of-Life.
All that follows is from the above resource.
Fast Fact Number: 27
By: David E Weissman MDCategories: Cancer, Cardiovascular, Emergency Medicine, End of Life Care, Fast Facts By Specialty, Hospice, Hospice/End of Life Care, Non-Pain Symptoms, Pulmonary and Critical Care, Symptoms
Published On: June 20, 2024Introduction Dyspnea is defined as a subjective sensation of difficulty breathing. This Fast Fact reviews key elements in the assessment and treatment of dyspnea near the end-of-life. See Fast Fact #376 for more information on chronic dyspnea and Fast Fact #453 for more information on assessment tools for dyspnea and respiratory distress
Etiology The causes of dyspnea include a wide spectrum of serious lung or heart conditions, anemia, anxiety, chest wall pathology, electrolyte disturbances, or even urinary retention, constipation, and other processes that increase intraabdominal pressure.
Assessment Looking for simple problems is always warranted: Is the supplemental oxygen turned on? Is the tubing kinked? Is there fluid overload from IV fluids or TPN? Is dyspnea part of an acute anxiety episode, severe pain, constipation, or urinary retention? Is there a new pneumothorax or worsening pleural effusion? Understanding 1) where patients are at in the dying trajectory, and 2) their identified goals of care, is essential to guide the extent of workup to discover reversible causes. If the patient is clearly dying (see Fast Fact #3), and the goals of care are comfort, then pulse oximetry, arterial blood gases, EKG, or imaging are not indicated.
Treatment
- General measures Positioning (sitting up), increasing air movement via a fan or open window, and use of bedside relaxation techniques are all helpful. In the imminently dying patient, discontinuing parenteral fluids is appropriate.
- Treatment with opioids Opioids are the drugs of choice for dyspnea at the end-of-life as well as dyspnea refractory to the treatment of the underlying cause. In the opioid naïve patient, low doses of oral (5 mg or less) or parenteral morphine (2 mg or less) often provide relief for most patients. Higher doses will be needed for patients on chronic opioids; consider raising baseline opioid dose by 25-50%. When dyspnea is acute and severe, parenteral is the route of choice: 1-3 mg IV every 30 minutes to 1 hour as needed in the opioid naïve patient. In the inpatient setting, a continuous opioid infusion, with a PCA dose that patients, nurses, or families can administer, will provide the timeliest relief (see Fast Fact #28 and Fast Fact #54). Nebulized morphine has been reported to provide benefit in uncontrolled case reports, however a controlled trial demonstrated no greater efficacy or lower rate of side effects compared to subcutaneous morphine.
- Treatment with oxygen is often, but not universally, helpful. When in doubt, a therapeutic trial, based on symptom relief, not pulse oximetry, is indicated in dying patients. A well-designed randomized, controlled trial of oxygen vs ambient air, delivered by nasal cannula, in normoxic patients with advanced illness and dyspnea showed no benefit of oxygen over ambient air delivered by nasal cannula. Patients generally prefer nasal cannula administration than a mask, especially in the setting of imminent death when agitation from the mask is commonly seen. There is little reason to go beyond 4-6 L/min of oxygen via nasal cannula in the actively dying patient. Request a face-tent for patients who are claustrophobic from a mask.
- Treatment with other medications Anti-tussives can help with cough (see Fast Fact #200), anticholinergics (e.g. scopolamine) will help reduce secretions, anxiolytics (e.g. lorazepam) can reduce the anxiety component of dyspnea. Other agents that may have specific disease-modifying effects include diuretics, bronchodilators, and corticosteroids.
Family/Team Discussions While there is no evidence that proper symptom management for terminal dyspnea hastens death, the course and management of terminal dyspnea, especially when opioids are used, should be fully discussed with family members, nurses and others participating in care to avoid confusion about symptom relief vs. fears of euthanasia or assisted suicide (see Fast Fact #8).
References
- Bruera E, Sweeny C, and Ripamonti C. Dyspnea in patients with advanced cancer. In: Berger A, Portenoy R and Weissman DE, eds. Principles and Practice of Palliative Care and Supportive Oncology. 2nd Ed. New York, NY: Lippincott-Raven; 2002.
- Chan KS et al. Palliative Medicine in malignant respiratory diseases. In: Doyle D, Hanks G, Cherney N, and Calman N, eds. Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine. 3rd Ed. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2005.
- Viola R et al. The management of dyspnea in cancer patients: a systematic review. Supp Care Cancer. 2008; 16:329-337.
- Navigante AH, et al. Midazolam as adjunct therapy to morphine in the alleviation of severe dyspnea perception in patients with advanced cancer. J Pain Sympt Manage. 2006; 31:38-47.
- Fohr SA. The double effect of pain medication: separating myth from reality. J Pall Med. 1998; 1:315-328.
- Bruera E, et al. Nebulized versus subcutaneous morphine for patients with cancer dyspnea: a preliminary study. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2005 Jun; 29(6):613-8. PMID 15963870.
- Abernethy AP, et al. Effect of palliative oxygen versus room air in relief of breathlessness in patients with refractory dyspnoea: a double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2010 Sep 4;376(9743):784-93. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20816546.
- NCCN Clinical Guideline Palliative Care 2015 Pal 11-12.
- Obarzanek L, Wu W, Tutag-Lehr V. Opioid management of dyspnea at end of life: a systematic review. J Palliat Med. 2023;26(5):711-726.
Version History: This Fast Fact was originally edited by David E Weissman MD in July 2005. Re-copy-edited March 2009; December 2012; April 2015; and June 2024 after reviewed and updated by Mary G Rhodes MD.
Conflicts of Interest: None to report.Fast Facts and Concepts are edited by Sean Marks MD (Medical College of Wisconsin) and associate editor Drew A Rosielle MD (University of Minnesota Medical School) with the generous support of a volunteer peer-review editorial board, and are made available online by the Palliative Care Network of Wisconsin (PCNOW). The authors of each individual Fast Fact and the Fast Fact and Concepts editors are solely responsible for that Fast Fact’s content. The full set of Fast Facts are available at Palliative Care Network of Wisconsin with contact information, and how to reference Fast Facts.
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