Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2004, 204(2)

Morphine Use for At-Home Cancer Patients in Japan

KAZUHIKO KOTANI

Department of Medicine, Akasaki Public Clinic, Tottori, Japan, and Division of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago, Japan

Recently, many cancer patients have been cared for at home in Japan. Cancer pain control is one of the most important factors for terminal cancer patients to maintain functional lives at home. Morphine has long been the gold standard in the control of cancer pain. This paper examined the present status of the frequency of morphine use and its prescribing route for pain control in cancer patients at home monitored by doctors offering home care medicine in Japan. We reviewed the data based on the replies to questionnaires about morphine use in a textbook edited in 2001 by the doctors supportive of home care medicine nationwide in Japan. 301 (92.9%) among 324 doctors administered morphine for at-home cancer patients. 257 doctors’ replies were analyzed as to the prescribed pattern of morphine after excluding data without information on the administration route. The oral administration was most frequently used in 247 (96.1%) doctors and rectal administration was used in 217 (84.4%) doctors, while intravenous injection and epidural infusions were less common. The pattern of morphine administration was similar between doctors who worked at hospitals and clinics, except that doctors who worked at hospitals administered subcutaneously more frequently than doctors who worked at clinics (69.2% in the hospital vs. 39.4% in the clinic setting). This study has revealed that morphine is commonly prescribed to control pain in at-home cancer patients by doctors who support home care medicine in Japan. The restricted administration routes of morphine among the doctors and less prevalent use of the subcutaneous routes in doctors who work at clinics are also shown in the home cancer care setting. These findings might result from mutual relationship between the thought and experience of doctors and clinical characteristics of patients under home care medicine.

keywords —— home care; palliative care; cancer pain; administration of morphine; treatment

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Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2004, 204, 119-123

Address for reprints: Kazuhiko Kotani, M.D., Ph.D., Division of Clinical Laboratory Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, 86 Nishi-cho, Yonago 683-8503, Japan.

e-mail: kakotani@grape.med.tottori-u.ac.jp