Principles of Palliative Care in Gynae Oncology - Comfort & Compassion
- Goal: Enhance Quality of Life (QoL) for patients & families with advanced gynae cancers; focus on comfort & dignity.
- Scope: Addresses physical, psychosocial, & spiritual suffering.
- Timing: Early integration with primary treatment, not just end-of-life.
- Core (📌 PCS):
- Pain & other symptom control (e.g., nausea, dyspnea).
- Clear communication & shared decision-making.
- Support (psychosocial & spiritual).
- Approach: Multidisciplinary team essential.
⭐ Early palliative care referral is associated with improved survival and QoL in advanced cancer patients.
Symptom Management in Advanced Gynae Cancers - Easing Burdens
- Pain: WHO ladder. Opioids (Morphine, Fentanyl). Adjuvants: NSAIDs, Corticosteroids (Dexamethasone 4-8mg), TCAs, Gabapentin. Nerve blocks, palliative radiotherapy.
- Nausea/Vomiting: Antiemetics: Ondansetron, Metoclopramide, Haloperidol. Dexamethasone. Rule out obstruction.
- Malignant Bowel Obstruction (MBO):
- Ascites: Therapeutic paracentesis (drain <5L). Diuretics (Spironolactone). Low Na+ diet. Indwelling catheter.
⭐ Octreotide, a somatostatin analogue, is key for reducing secretions in inoperable MBO.
- Cachexia/Anorexia: Megestrol acetate (160-800mg/day). Corticosteroids. Nutritional support.
- Dyspnea: Oxygen. Low-dose Morphine (2.5-5mg oral). Anxiolytics.
- Fatigue: Treat reversible causes (anemia). Energy conservation. Exercise.
Psychosocial and Spiritual Support in Gynae Oncology - Mind, Soul Care
- Holistic Approach: Addresses emotional, social, spiritual, and existential distress alongside physical symptoms.
- Psychosocial Interventions:
- Screen for distress (anxiety, depression) using tools like HADS or PHQ-9.
- Counseling: individual, family; cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).
- Support groups: peer validation and coping strategies.
- Communication: empathetic, patient-centered; address body image, sexual health.
- Spiritual Care:
- Assess spiritual needs, beliefs, and values respectfully.
- Provide access to chaplaincy or spiritual advisors.
- Support practices fostering peace, meaning, and hope.
⭐ Depression and anxiety are prevalent (up to 40%) in gynecologic cancer patients; routine screening is crucial for early intervention and improved quality of life (QoL).
Communication & End-of-Life Care in Gynae Oncology - Guiding Transitions
- Empathy, active listening, clear communication are paramount.
- Breaking bad news: Use SPIKES protocol for structured discussions.
- Discuss realistic goals of care: curative vs. palliative, quality of life.
- Advance Care Planning (ACP) is crucial:
- Document wishes: living will, healthcare proxy.
- Clarify DNR/Allow Natural Death (AND) orders.
- Timely hospice transition for comfort-focused end-of-life care.
- Uphold ethics: autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence.
⭐ The SPIKES protocol is a key framework for sensitively breaking bad news and discussing prognosis in gynecologic oncology.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Palliative care focuses on improving quality of life in advanced gynecologic cancers, not just end-of-life.
- Prioritize symptom control: pain (opioids often needed), nausea/vomiting, fatigue, ascites, and bowel obstruction.
- Early integration with oncologic treatment can improve outcomes and patient satisfaction.
- Effective communication regarding prognosis, goals of care, and advance directives is crucial.
- Address psychosocial and spiritual distress alongside physical symptoms.
- Hospice care is considered when life expectancy is typically <6 months.
- Interdisciplinary team approach is vital for comprehensive palliative management.
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