Fujii Hironori, Ueda Yukino, Hirose Chiemi, Ohata Koichi, Sekiya Kumiko, Kitahora Mika, Sadaka Shiori, Yamamoto Senri, Watanabe Daichi, Kato-Hayashi Hiroko, Iihara Hirotoshi, Kobayashi Ryo, Kaburaki Miho, Matsuhashi Nobuhisa, Takahashi Takao, Makiyama Akitaka, Yoshida Kazuhiro, Hayashi Hideki, Suzuki Akio
Department of Pharmacy, Gifu University Hospital, Yanagido 1-1, Gifu, 501-1194, Japan.
Laboratory of Pharmacy Practice and Social Science, Gifu Pharmaceutical University, Gifu, Japan.
J Pharm Health Care Sci. 2022 Mar 2;8(1):8. doi: 10.1186/s40780-022-00239-w.
The effect of pharmaceutical intervention to treat adverse events on quality of life (QOL) in outpatients receiving cancer chemotherapy is unclear. We investigated whether pharmaceutical intervention provided by pharmacists in collaboration with physicians improves QOL with outpatient cancer chemotherapy.
We conducted a single-center retrospective descriptive study of pharmaceutical intervention for patients receiving outpatient cancer chemotherapy at Gifu University Hospital between September 2017 and July 2020. We assessed patient QOL using the Japanese version of the EuroQol 5 Dimension5 Level (EQ-5D-5L). Adverse events were graded using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE) version 4.0. We compared the EQ-5D-5L utility value and incidence of grade 2 or higher adverse events before and after pharmaceutical intervention.
Our analysis included 151 patients who underwent 210 chemotherapy cycles. Pharmaceutical intervention significantly improved patients' EQ-5D-5L utility values from 0.8197 to 0.8603 (P < 0.01). EQ-5D-5L utility values were significantly improved after pharmaceutical intervention for nausea and vomiting (pre-intervention 0.8145, post-intervention 0.8603, P = 0.016), peripheral neuropathy (pre-intervention 0.7798, post-intervention 0.7988, P = 0.032) and pain (pre-intervention 0.7625, post-intervention 0.8197, P = 0.035). Although not statistically significant, the incidence of grade 2 or higher adverse events, including nausea and vomiting, dermopathy, pain, oral mucositis, diarrhea and dysgeusia, tended to be lower post-intervention than pre-intervention.
Pharmaceutical intervention by pharmacists in collaboration with physicians may improve QOL in patients undergoing outpatient cancer chemotherapy.
药物干预治疗不良事件对接受癌症化疗的门诊患者生活质量(QOL)的影响尚不清楚。我们调查了药剂师与医生合作提供的药物干预是否能改善门诊癌症化疗患者的生活质量。
我们对2017年9月至2020年7月期间在岐阜大学医院接受门诊癌症化疗的患者进行了药物干预的单中心回顾性描述性研究。我们使用日本版的欧洲五维健康量表(EQ-5D-5L)评估患者的生活质量。不良事件使用不良事件通用术语标准(CTCAE)第4.0版进行分级。我们比较了药物干预前后EQ-5D-5L效用值和2级或更高等级不良事件的发生率。
我们的分析包括151例接受210个化疗周期的患者。药物干预使患者的EQ-5D-5L效用值从0.8197显著提高到0.8603(P < 0.01)。药物干预后,恶心和呕吐(干预前0.8145,干预后0.8603,P = 0.016)、周围神经病变(干预前0.7798,干预后0.7988,P = 0.032)和疼痛(干预前0.7625,干预后0.8197,P = 0.035)的EQ-5D-5L效用值显著提高。虽然无统计学意义,但包括恶心和呕吐、皮肤病、疼痛、口腔黏膜炎、腹泻和味觉障碍在内的2级或更高等级不良事件的发生率在干预后往往低于干预前。
药剂师与医生合作进行的药物干预可能会改善接受门诊癌症化疗患者的生活质量。