|
Table
8.3 Key Studies of Constipation in Palliative Care
Populations
|
|---|
|
Author(s)
|
Ramesh
et al., (1998)
|
Agra
et al., (1998)
|
Sykes
(1999)
|
|---|
| Design
| Randomized,
non-blinded, parallel group design in cancer patients
receiving morphine comparing:
- senna
with
- Ayurvedic
laxative preparation called Misrakasneham
| Randomized,
parallel group, unblinded design in a palliative
care population comparing:
| Randomized,
crossover design in hospice cancer population comparing:
- senna
+ lactulose with
- danthron
+ poloxamer
|
|---|
| Outcome
measures
| 4-point
scale based on the subjects’ level of satisfaction
with their bowel actions
| #
of defecation days divided by # of days in study;
plus # of defecation-free 72-hour periods (investigators
considered it unethical for patients to go any longer
before offering additional intervention)
| 10-point
discrete response scale measured subjects’ level
of satisfaction with their bowel actions
|
|---|
| Duration
| 14
days
| Variable;
up to 34 days
| 14
days
|
|---|
| Dosing
| 3-level
dose titration available according to response after
minimum 2-day interval; allowed 4-fold increase
in Misrakasneham, and 3-fold increase in senna
| 4-fold
increase in laxative dose permitted; when ceiling-dose
of first agent reached, second agent added and dose
titrated in turn
| 4-fold
titration range available for each combination
|
|---|
| Drop-out
rate
| 28%
drop-out rate; drop-outs uneven between groups
| 18%
within first 4 days; 49% failed to complete entire
course
| 56%
drop-out rate in 14-day trial period
|
|---|
| Adverse
effects
| Adverse
effects of both preparations compared
| Adverse
effects of both preparations compared
| Almost
equal numbers of patients (15 for LS, 14 for CD)
preferred each laxative preparation;
Reports of adverse effects were surprisingly rare.
Two patients complained of perianal soreness and
burning with codanthramer
|
|---|
| Financial
cost
| Strongly
favored Ayurvedic treatment
| Senna
significantly cheaper than lactulose
| At
published prices (British National Formulary) the
combination of senna and lactulose used in this
study was over 40% cheaper than the same, less effective,
volume of codanthramer
|
|---|
| Key
and findings
| Despite
starting with 25 patients in each arm, the study
design and drop-out rate resulted in the trial producing
no statistically significant results
| 37%
of patients required both agents for satisfactory
bowel function;
No
significant difference in efficacy between therapies
| Significant
level of patient-defined "normal bowel function"
following use of lactulose + senna;
Significant
worsening of constipation when danthron + poloxamer
followed lactulose + senna, and a non-significant
improvement in constipation when it preceded them
|