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Treatment Algorithm for Nausea and Vomiting in the Palliative Phase

R

Radboud University Medical Center

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

Vomiting
Nausea
Cancer

Treatments

Drug: metoclopramide
Drug: Granisetron 2Mg Tablet
Drug: Dexamethasone
Drug: granisetron

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Nausea and vomiting are frequently occurring problems in the palliative phase of patients with cancer. Between 20-50% of them regularly suffer from nausea, retching or vomiting. Often the cause of nausea and vomiting is multifactorial and symptomatic treatment is necessary.

Potential drugs for symptomatic anti-nausea therapy are metoclopramide, serotonin antagonists, the combination of both and dexamethasone as rescue medication in case of failure. There is no data that depicts which strategy is the best. This study will be conducted to unravel which treatment algorithm is most successful.

Full description

Nausea and vomiting are frequently occurring problems in the palliative phase of patients with cancer. Between 20-50% of them regularly suffer from nausea, retching or vomiting. Often the cause of nausea and vomiting is multifactorial and symptomatic treatment is necessary.

Potential drugs for symptomatic anti-nausea therapy are metoclopramide, serotonin antagonists, the combination of both and dexamethasone as rescue medication in case of failure. There is no data that depicts which strategy is the best. This study will be conducted to unravel which treatment algorithm is most successful: 1 to start with metoclopramide, to add a serotonin antagonist (granisetron transdermal patch and 2 milligram granisetron oral loading dose if the patient can swallow) in case of failure and to add dexamethasone as rescue medication versus 2 an algorithm to start with a serotonin antagonist (granisetron transdermal patch and 2 milligram granisetron oral loading dose if the patient can swallow), to add metoclopramide in case of failure and to add dexamethasone as rescue medication. Granisetron plaster is a new formulation of a well known serotonin antagonist and might be useful especially within the patient group in the palliative phase.

The questions are:

Is it feasible to compare treatment algorithms for symptomatic treatment of nausea and vomiting in palliative cancer patients? And is a stepwise symptomatic treatment algorithm to manage nausea and vomiting using metoclopramide or granisetron transdermal patch as a start medication effective in palliative patients in at least one of both treatment arms? Patients will be asked to complete the QLQC30 and ESAS on different moments during the study. Besides, they will be asked to complete a diary for nausea severity (NRS scale 0-10) and for the frequency of vomiting and retching twice daily.

Success of a treatment algorithm is defined as nausea is < 3 on NRS or a decrease of >2 on NRS for nausea combined with an absence of vomiting or retching in the last 3 days. Incomplete success is defined as nausea of 3 on NRS during one occasion of the last 3 days before the end of study but less than 4, no more than one retching a day during that period and absence of vomiting. Complete failure is defined as nausea of 4 or more on an NRS during the last 3 days or more than one retching daily or any vomiting or in case the patient has stopped all medication due to side effects.

Enrollment

20 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • patients 18 years or older in the palliative phase and
  • who suffer from nausea or vomiting with a rating on a numeric rating scale (NRS) of more than 2 and
  • have a wish to be treated and
  • where no treatable cause is assignable

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients not able to sign informed consent.
  • Patients with known contra-indications for metoclopramide, 5HT-3 antagonists or dexamethasone.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 2 patient groups

algorithm 1 first metoclopramide
Active Comparator group
Description:
metoclopramide 10 mg tablets 3x daily orally and in those patients that cannot swallow tablets the medication will be substituted by suppositories 10 mg 3x daily rectally. In case of failure, granisetron patch 3.1mg/24 hours will be added to the treatment and a loading dose of 2 mg granisetron oral if the patient can swallow. In case of toxicity metoclopramide will be stopped. In case of failure of the combination (second step) or toxicity, an oral dose of dexamethasone 8 mg will be added daily.
Treatment:
Drug: Dexamethasone
Drug: granisetron
Drug: metoclopramide
Drug: Granisetron 2Mg Tablet
algorithm 2 first granisetron
Active Comparator group
Description:
granisetron patch 3.1 mg/24 hours will be offered to the patient, and a loading dose of 2 mg granisetron oral if the patient can swallow In case of failure, metoclopramide 10 mg tablets 3x daily orally will be added and in those patients that cannot swallow tablets the oral medication will be substituted with rectal suppositories 10 mg. The granisetron patch will only be withdrawn from patients that suffer from clinically relevant toxicity. Metoclopramide will then be administered. In the case of secondary failure or toxicity, dexamethasone 8 mg orally daily will be added.
Treatment:
Drug: Dexamethasone
Drug: granisetron
Drug: metoclopramide
Drug: Granisetron 2Mg Tablet

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Christa v Schaik; C.A.H.H.V.M. Verhagen, M.D. Ph.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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