Drug stability and compatibility in oncology care.

D A Williams
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Abstract

Infusional chemotherapy has been increasingly used based upon the fact that most drugs have a relatively short half-life following bolus exposure, and increasing the available drug concentration over time may maximize the antitumor effect. As a practical matter, the application of infusional chemotherapy especially in an ambulatory setting, absolutely requires that the individual antineoplastic agents be stable in solution at room temperature (or at body temperature for implanted pump systems) and that the drugs in the infusion (including antiemetics) be compatible. The capacity to mix antineoplastic agents and antiemetics (also colony-stimulating factors) in a single solution facilitates infusional combination chemotherapy. Technologic advances are on the horizon which will provide the capability of administration of multiple drugs through a single access site to allow one to utilize a single delivery source obviating the need for admixtures of drugs. However, in the interim, admixtures represent the optimal method for the delivery of multi-agent chemotherapy in the setting in which continuous infusional drug delivery for 24 hours or more is employed. The goal of continuous infusion cancer chemotherapy is to ensure delivery of an unaltered cytotoxic drug, avoiding situations that could affect the stability of the infusion admixture. With cancer chemotherapy infusion therapy being administered through oncology clinics without the benefits of a pharmacist, the nurse plays a pivotal role in the preparation of the infusion, supervision of the patient, and when applicable in providing counseling on the proper storage, handling of the cytotoxic drugs, and disposal of contaminated infusion materials. Thus, by optimizing the integrity of the chemotherapeutic infusion, the patient achieves maximum benefits of cancer chemotherapy and the level of success anticipated with oncology care. The nurse may also be involved with clinical studies involving the preparation of other combinations of infusional chemotherapy including antiemetics and colony-stimulating factors, requiring integrity of the infusion to incompatibility and instability. In order to avoid failure of the infusion through improper preparation or reconstitution of the infusion or improper storage conditions and the resulting unnecessary waste and disposal expenses, the nurse needs to be fully aware of the factors affecting the stability and compatibility of the infusion and to interact with other health professionals and the literature for the critical information related to maintaining the integrity of the cancer chemotherapy infusion. "Good intentions without good communication equals potential disaster."

肿瘤治疗中的药物稳定性和相容性。
输注化疗越来越多地使用,因为大多数药物在大剂量暴露后具有相对较短的半衰期,随着时间的推移增加可用药物浓度可以最大限度地发挥抗肿瘤作用。作为一个实际问题,输注化疗的应用,特别是在门诊环境中,绝对要求单个抗肿瘤药物在室温下(或在植入泵系统的体温下)在溶液中稳定,并且输注中的药物(包括止吐药)是相容的。在单一溶液中混合抗肿瘤药物和止吐药(也包括集落刺激因子)的能力促进了输注联合化疗。技术进步即将到来,这将提供通过单一通道给药多种药物的能力,从而允许人们利用单一给药来源,从而避免了对药物混合物的需要。然而,在此期间,外加剂代表了多药化疗的最佳方法,在连续输注药物递送24小时或更长时间。持续输注癌症化疗的目标是确保细胞毒性药物的传递不变,避免可能影响输注混合物稳定性的情况。由于癌症化疗输注治疗是通过肿瘤诊所进行的,没有药剂师的帮助,护士在输注的准备,病人的监督,以及在适当的情况下就适当的储存,处理细胞毒性药物和处理受污染的输注材料提供咨询方面发挥着关键作用。因此,通过优化化疗输注的完整性,患者可以获得癌症化疗的最大益处和肿瘤治疗预期的成功水平。护士也可能参与临床研究,包括准备其他输注化疗的组合,包括止吐药和集落刺激因子,要求输注的完整性不相容和不稳定。为了避免输液因配制不当或重新配制或储存条件不当而失败,造成不必要的浪费和处理费用,护士需要充分了解影响输液稳定性和相容性的因素,并与其他卫生专业人员和文献进行互动,以获取与维护肿瘤化疗输液完整性相关的关键信息。“良好的意愿没有良好的沟通等于潜在的灾难。”
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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