1.A Retrospective Analysis of the 44 Cases with Opioid Switching to Methadone
Sachiko Kimura ; Yoshinobu Matsuda ; Kozue Yoshida ; Rie Hiyoshi ; Kaori Tohno ; Sachiko Okayama ; Hideki Noma ; Takayasu Itakura
Palliative Care Research 2015;10(3):194-200
Purpose:Methadone is an opioid used in Japan for the treatment of cancer pain. A thorough consideration of complex pharmacokinetics with individual differences and of serious adverse effects is necessary before switching to methadone; therefore, methadone is not yet widely used. We examined the analgesic and adverse effects of methadone through clinical cases and considered the clinical significance of methadone as an opioid analgesic for the treatment of cancer pain. Methods:The clinical course of 44 patients with cancer pain who were switched to methadone from other opioids was analyzed. Results:Out of the 44 cases investigated, 37 cases (84.1%) were successful. In the successful cases, pain intensity before and after methadone administration was reduced from an average of 7.5 to 2.8, respectively, on the numerical rating scale. Strong drowsiness (six cases) and nausea (three cases) were observed as adverse effects. However, no serious effects, such as QT prolongation and respiratory depression, were recognized. Conclusion:For patients with refractory cancer pain who require a high opioid dose, methadone is considered to be one of the alternatives in pain therapeutics.
2.A retrospective analysis of patients who were switched from methadone to a different opioid: How to treat cancer pain after patients become unable to take methadone orally at the end of life
Takayasu Itakura ; Yoshinobu Matsuda ; Sachiko Okayama ; Kaori Tohno ; Rie Hiyoshi ; Kozue Yoshida ; Sachiko Kimura ; Hideki Noma
Palliative Care Research 2015;10(4):245-250
Background: Methadone can only be administered orally in Japan. However, it is unclear how to treat pain when patients become unable to take methadone orally because of the progression of the disease. Aims: To assess retrospectively end-of-life pain control management after patients become unable to take methadone orally. Methods: Twenty-eight patients with cancer pain undergoing treatment with oral methadone died at a palliative care unit between April 2013 and September 2014. All patients died of cancer and were unable to swallow before death. We assessed pain control approaches after the patients became unable to take methadone orally. Results: Twenty-one patients survived 1 day or longer after becoming unable to swallow. Methadone was switched to another opioid because of pain. Of these 21 patients, 10 patients survived for 1 week or longer after being switched to another opioid. At this point, methadone would be mostly eliminated from the blood circulation. Among these 10 patients, seven patients were treated with subcutaneous morphine, and three patients were excluded because their pain could not be evaluated. The conversion ratio from final oral methadone dosage to oral morphine equivalent dose of opioids used on the seventh day was 6.1. Conclusion: Even when patients become unable to ingest methadone, switching to other opioids may not always be necessary because of the long half-life of methadone when pain is absent at the end of life. If necessary, pain could be managed by switching to other opioids with a conversion ratio of 6.1.
3.A Case of Obstructive Jaundice-associated Pruritus Which Was not Improved by an Antihistamine and a Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor Treatment, but Was Responded to Nalfurafine Hydrochloride
Yoshito Yoshikawa ; Yoshinobu Matsuda ; Sachiko Okayama ; Juri Nimura ; Minako Doi ; Shinobu Nagata
Palliative Care Research 2017;12(1):506-510
Introduction: We encountered a patient in whom pruritus was induced by obstructive jaundice associated with metastatic liver cancer. Nalfurafine hydrochloride, a selective κ receptor agonist, improved the patient’s pruritus. Case Presentation: The patient was a 70-year-old woman who developed metastatic liver tumor-associated jaundice after surgery for colorectal cancer. She developed pruritus, which was not improved by an antihistamine or a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor treatment. Nalfurafine was administered for suspected central pruritus. The numerical rating scale for pruritus improved from 9 to 3. Discussion: Compared to other skin diseases such as urticaria and atopic dermatitis, pruritus that accompanies a systemic disease such as chronic renal failure and liver disease does not respond to existing therapeutic drugs in many patients. Chronic liver disease-associated pruritus is intractable and central. Pruritus through central and peripheral mechanisms was mixed in this patient; however, central pruritus may have been dominant. The antipruritic effect of nalfurafine has been confirmed. It may be an effective therapeutic drug for obstructive jaundice-associated pruritus.
4.A patient with cancer pain that was successfully relieved by methadone with supportive care given by a certified nurse in palliative care in the outpatient setting
Sachiko Okayama ; Yoshinobu Matsuda ; Yoshiko Sakota ; Rie Hiyoshi ; Kaori Tohno ; Kozue Yoshida
Palliative Care Research 2014;9(3):506-510
Introduction: This is the first report about an outpatient who was successfully switched from oxycodone to methadone without any serious problems in Japan. Case report: A man in his 60s who was diagnosed as advanced pancreatic cancer with multiple bone and liver metastases. Since he complained severe cancer pain in spite of taking oxycodone 40mg/day, he was referred to the palliative care team. After discussion about switching from oxycodone to methadone in the palliative care team and obtaining informed consent from him, it was decided to prescribe methadone in the outpatient setting. During induction of methadone, a palliative care certified nurse (CN) played important roles about explanation of futures, pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics and side effects, education how to take, monitoring of analgesic and side effects and supports to patient anxieties about methadone. His dose titration of methadone was completed for 15 days, and his adequate dose was decided as 20 mg/day finally. After titration of methadone, pain relief could be achieved. Conclusion: Although methadone has a possibility to improve management of cancer pain, it has some serious problems, such as respiratory depression, QT interval prolongation and others due to unsuitable use. Therefore, patients with prescription of methadone must be educated, monitored and supported by special medical staff with much experiences and knowledge about cancer pain, opioid therapy and methadone. CNs may play important role to keep safety and resolve patients and families’ anxieties for prescription of methadone.
5.A case report with the coincidental complication of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the course of methadone administration due to cancer pain
Yoshinobu Matsuda ; Yoshito Yoshikawa ; Sachiko Okayama ; Rie Hiyoshi ; Kaori Tohno ; Momoyo Hashimoto ; Hideki Noma ; Mamoru Ohnishi ; Takayasu Itakura ; Sachiko Kimura ; Shun Kohsaka
Palliative Care Research 2016;11(1):501-505
Introduction: Paroxysmal atrial fibrillation (Paf) occurred in an inpatient who has been prescribed methadone for cancer pain in our palliative care unit, but oral administration of aprindine (antiarrhythmic agent) succeeded in defibrillation and methadone administration could be continued. Case: A 75-year-old man had developed multiple bone metastases after resection of thyroid cancer. Due to refractory cancer pain, switching from oxycodone to methadone was performed. Pain relief was achieved with methadone 40 mg/day and without QT interval prolongation. After methadone administration about 9 months, there suddenly became loss of appetite in the morning of one day. ECG examination revealed Paf onset. Aprindine 20 mg was orally administered for the purpose of defibrillation. After about 2 hours sinus rhythm was gained and later without recurrence. Conclusion: This case was considered to have the coincidental complication of paroxysmal atrial fibrillation in the course of methadone administration. If administration of antiarrhythmic agents is performed in a patient whom has been prescribed methadone, it is feared to lead to result in QT interval prolongation due to drug interactions. It is important to carefully select an agent that rarely leads to QT prolongation.
6.Association between Short Maternal Height and Low Birth Weight: a Hospital-based Study in Japan.
Sachiko INOUE ; Hiroo NARUSE ; Takashi YORIFUJI ; Tsuguhiko KATO ; Takeshi MURAKOSHI ; Hiroyuki DOI ; S V SUBRAMANIAN
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2016;31(3):353-359
Anthropometry measurements, such as height and weight, have recently been used to predict poorer birth outcomes. However, the relationship between maternal height and birth outcomes remains unclear. We examined the effect of shorter maternal height on low birth weight (LBW) among 17,150 pairs of Japanese mothers and newborns. Data for this analysis were collected from newborns who were delivered at a large hospital in Japan. Maternal height was the exposure variable, and LBW and admission to the neonatal intensive care unit were the outcome variables. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the associations. The shortest maternal height quartile (131.0-151.9 cm) was related to LBW (OR 1.91 [95% CI 1.64, 2.22]). The groups with the second (152.0-157.9 cm) and the third shortest maternal height quartiles (158.0-160.9 cm) were also related to LBW. A P trend with one quartile change also showed a significant relationship. The relationship between maternal height and NICU admission disappeared when the statistical model was adjusted for LBW. A newborn's small size was one factor in the relationship between shorter maternal height and NICU admission. In developed countries, shorter mothers provide a useful prenatal target to anticipate and plan for LBW newborns and NICU admission.
Adult
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*Body Height
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Body Mass Index
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Female
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Hospitals
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Humans
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*Infant, Low Birth Weight
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Infant, Newborn
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Intensive Care Units, Neonatal
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Japan
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Logistic Models
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Male
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Mothers/*statistics & numerical data
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Odds Ratio
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Risk Factors
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Weight Gain
7.For making a declaration of countermeasures against the falling birth rate from the Japanese Society for Hygiene: summary of discussion in the working group on academic research strategy against an aging society with low birth rate.
Kyoko NOMURA ; Kanae KARITA ; Atsuko ARAKI ; Emiko NISHIOKA ; Go MUTO ; Miyuki IWAI-SHIMADA ; Mariko NISHIKITANI ; Mariko INOUE ; Shinobu TSURUGANO ; Naomi KITANO ; Mayumi TSUJI ; Sachiko IIJIMA ; Kayo UEDA ; Michihiro KAMIJIMA ; Zentaro YAMAGATA ; Kiyomi SAKATA ; Masayuki IKI ; Hiroyuki YANAGISAWA ; Masashi KATO ; Hidekuni INADERA ; Yoshihiro KOKUBO ; Kazuhito YOKOYAMA ; Akio KOIZUMI ; Takemi OTSUKI
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 2019;24(1):14-14
In 1952, the Japanese Society for Hygiene had once passed a resolution at its 22nd symposium on population control, recommending the suppression of population growth based on the idea of cultivating a healthier population in the area of eugenics. Over half a century has now passed since this recommendation; Japan is witnessing an aging of the population (it is estimated that over 65-year-olds made up 27.7% of the population in 2017) and a decline in the birth rate (total fertility rate 1.43 births per woman in 2017) at a rate that is unparalleled in the world; Japan is faced with a "super-aging" society with low birth rate. In 2017, the Society passed a resolution to encourage all scientists to engage in academic researches to address the issue of the declining birth rate that Japan is currently facing. In this commentary, the Society hereby declares that the entire text of the 1952 proposal is revoked and the ideas relating to eugenics is rejected. Since the Society has set up a working group on the issue in 2016, there have been three symposiums, and working group committee members began publishing a series of articles in the Society's Japanese language journal. This commentary primarily provides an overview of the findings from the published articles, which will form the scientific basis for the Society's declaration. The areas we covered here included the following: (1) improving the social and work environment to balance between the personal and professional life; (2) proactive education on reproductive health; (3) children's health begins with nutritional management in women of reproductive age; (4) workplace environment and occupational health; (5) workplace measures to counter the declining birth rate; (6) research into the effect of environmental chemicals on sexual maturity, reproductive function, and the children of next generation; and (7) comprehensive research into the relationship among contemporary society, parental stress, and healthy child-rearing. Based on the seven topics, we will set out a declaration to address Japan's aging society with low birth rate.
Aging
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Birth Rate
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trends
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Child
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Child Health
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Environmental Exposure
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adverse effects
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prevention & control
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Female
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Health Planning Guidelines
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Humans
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Japan
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epidemiology
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Male
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Occupational Health
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Reproductive Health
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education
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Research Design
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standards
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Societies, Scientific
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organization & administration
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Stress, Psychological
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prevention & control
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Women's Health