Commentary

Diarrhea in Cancer Therapies — Part 1: Chemotherapeutics


 

Therapy for Grades 1-2

The standard therapeutic after excluding infectious causes is loperamide (initially 4 mg orally, followed by 2 mg every 2-4 hours). A daily dose should not exceed 16 mg.

For irinotecan-associated diarrhea, adjunctive administration of budesonide (3 mg orally three times per day) with loperamide was shown to be effective in a small, randomized study (off-label). Another randomized study demonstrated the efficacy of combining loperamide with racecadotril (100 mg orally three times per day for 48 hours).

Therapy for Grade 3 Diarrhea

In severe diarrhea persisting despite loperamide therapy for 24-48 hours, octreotide (100-150 μg subcutaneously three times per day) may be administered (maximum three times 500 μg). Although octreotide is often used successfully for chemotherapy-induced diarrhea, it is not approved for this indication (off-label use).

According to the authors, other therapy options for loperamide-refractory diarrhea include codeine, tincture of opium, budesonide, and racecadotril. Psyllium husk or diphenoxylate plus atropine may also be attempted. In patients with prolonged neutropenia, overdosing of motility inhibitors should be avoided because of the risk for ileus.

The use of probiotics for chemotherapy-induced diarrhea cannot be generally recommended because of insufficient evidence, and cases of probiotic-associated bacteremia and fungemia have been described.

A particularly serious complication of intensive chemotherapy associated with diarrhea is NEC. It is characterized by fever, abdominal pain, and diarrhea during severe neutropenia (neutrophil count < 500/μL), the authors explained. NEC occurs predominantly, but not exclusively, after intensive chemotherapy for hematologic malignancies, especially acute leukemias.

More common than NEC and often preceding it is the so-called chemotherapy-associated bowel syndrome. It is characterized by fever ≥ 37.8 °C and abdominal pain or absence of stool for at least 72 hours.

Therapy consists of conservative symptomatic measures such as diet, adequate hydration with electrolyte balance, and analgesia. Due to the high risk for bacteremia, antibiotic therapy is indicated after blood cultures are obtained (piperacillin-tazobactam or a carbapenem). According to the authors, NEC improves in most patients with neutrophil regeneration. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor therapy appears reasonable in this context, although conclusive studies are lacking. Surgical intervention with removal of necrotic bowel segments may be considered in exceptional cases.

This story was translated from Univadis Germany, which is part of the Medscape professional network, using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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