More cancer patients are able to receive chemotherapy, including both oral and intravenous agents, in the home setting. Clearly, the option to self-administer therapy in the absence of an oncology nurse or other healthcare provider poses a potential safety risk.
provides quick, reader-friendly snapshots of interesting people, news, and current research related to cancer and its management. These 5-point profiles take only about 5 minutes to read and often feature audio or video.
Oncology Nursing Society 36th Annual Congress
Poster 329 / abstract 1053389-Standardizing Patient Education for Safe Handling of Chemotherapy at Home
Bernadette Lore, RN, BSN, OCN, Beth Boseski, RN, MSN, OCN, department of nursing, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY
More cancer patients are able to receive chemotherapy, including both oral and intravenous agents, in the home setting. Clearly, the option to self-administer therapy in the absence of an oncology nurse or other healthcare provider poses a potential safety risk. In 2008 the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) and the Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) published chemotherapy administration standards, to address concerns about patient safety during chemotherapy. Many cancer centers, however, still need to determine how to optimize communication and patient education regarding safe handling of cytotoxic chemotherapy agents by patients and their families at home.
The Chemotherapy Practice committee at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) identified the need to provide patients and their family members/caregivers with consistent, easy-to-read instructions about how to safely handle cytotoxic drugs at home, to help them avoid inadvertent drug exposure.
• To address this issue, a multidisciplinary task force was established at MSKCC, with representatives from the departments of medicine, pharmacy, nursing, safety, and patient education.
• The MSKCC patient guidelines were developed using the ASCO/ONS guidelines as a framework, together with best available evidence found in a literature search (eg, guidelines from other hospitals), MSKCC’s standard operating procedure for safe handling of cytotoxic drugs, and safety recommendations from the National Institutes of Health, “Handling Hazardous Drugs Safely at Home.”
• A patient education fact card appropriate for patients of all ages and their caregivers was created and is now completing review by MSKCC’s nursing leadership, Chemotherapy Practice committee, and department of patient education. The card advises on chemotherapy drug storage, safe handling of the drugs, safe use and disposal of needles and other equipment used in drug administration (for injected agents), safe handling of body waste (eg, emesis, urine, stool), and safe patient contact with family members. Specific instructions are provided on when and how to use safety gloves.
Oncology nurses at MSKCC will review safe handling of cytotoxic chemotherapy drugs with patients before they are discharged to their homes.
As advances in technology and drug development allow increasing numbers of patients to receive cytotoxic chemotherapy outside of the cancer center setting, it is imperative that, before patients are discharged, they receive appropriate comprehensive education regarding how to handle their chemotherapy drugs at home, how to manage drug spills, and how to safely dispose of chemotherapy waste materials and body waste. It also is necessary to teach patients and their caregivers why safety precautions are so important, given that exposure to cytotoxic agents can occur through the skin and by inhalation, in addition to ingestion and injection.
Important Tips for Patients Receiving Chemotherapy at Home
• Make sure you are not storing your chemotherapy with your regularly prescribed drugs.
• Take note of whether your chemotherapy drug needs to be refrigerated.
• Dispose of your chemotherapy waste (eg, containers, needles) properly (eg, double-bagged and returned to the institution where you received your chemotherapy).
• Keep the telephone number of your local poison control center handy in case of accidental exposure, especially if there are children and/or pets in the home.