End-of-life sedation: is there an alternative?

Purpose of review To evaluate the place and the usefulness of sedation in medical practice at the end of life. Recent findings Continuous sedation is an acknowledged medical practice for the management of refractory symptoms at the end of life. Guidelines and recommendations have been proposed in palliative care. Although considered as a good medical practice at the end of life, sedation is neither the only option nor the best. Summary This article presents the state-of-the-art (definitions, indications, and technical aspects) about continuous sedation, followed by an ethical reflection essentially based on the ‘Principle of Double Effect’, the impact on life expectancy, and the concept of ‘natural death’.

[1]  S. Sterckx,et al.  Controversies surrounding continuous deep sedation at the end of life: the parliamentary and societal debates in France , 2016, BMC Medical Ethics.

[2]  I. Kiesewetter,et al.  Medication and monitoring in palliative sedation therapy: a systematic review and quality assessment of published guidelines. , 2015, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[3]  E. Bruera,et al.  Bedside clinical signs associated with impending death in patients with advanced cancer: Preliminary findings of a prospective, longitudinal cohort study , 2015, Cancer.

[4]  P. Pizzo,et al.  Should we practice what we profess? Care near the end of life. , 2015, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  L. Deliens,et al.  Characteristics of Belgian "life-ending acts without explicit patient request": a large-scale death certificate survey revisited. , 2014, CMAJ open.

[6]  N. Cherny,et al.  ESMO Clinical Practice Guidelines for the management of refractory symptoms at the end of life and the use of palliative sedation. , 2014, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[7]  L. Deliens,et al.  Making sense of continuous sedation in end-of-life care for cancer patients: an interview study with bereaved relatives in three European countries , 2014, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[8]  C. Seale,et al.  Continuous sedation until death: the everyday moral reasoning of physicians, nurses and family caregivers in the UK, The Netherlands and Belgium , 2014, BMC Medical Ethics.

[9]  H. Ten Have,et al.  Palliative sedation versus euthanasia: an ethical assessment. , 2014, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[10]  S. Sterckx,et al.  Continuous Deep Sedation at the End of Life and the ‘Natural Death’ Hypothesis , 2012, Bioethics.

[11]  J. V. van Delden,et al.  Continuous palliative sedation for cancer and noncancer patients. , 2012, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[12]  G. Helgesson,et al.  European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) framework for palliative sedation: an ethical discussion , 2010, BMC palliative care.

[13]  M. Kuskowski,et al.  Continuous Deep Sedation Until Death in Belgium: A Nationwide Survey , 2010 .

[14]  L. Radbruch,et al.  Sedierung in der Palliativmedizin – Leitlinie1 für den Einsatz sedierender Maßnahmen in der Palliativversorgung , 2010 .

[15]  B. Onwuteaka-Philipsen,et al.  Medical end-of-life practices under the euthanasia law in Belgium. , 2009, The New England journal of medicine.

[16]  M. Maltoni,et al.  Palliative sedation therapy does not hasten death: results from a prospective multicenter study. , 2009, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[17]  Y. Engels,et al.  Changed patterns in Dutch palliative sedation practices after the introduction of a national guideline. , 2009, Archives of internal medicine.

[18]  B. Onwuteaka-Philipsen,et al.  Continuous deep sedation for patients nearing death in the Netherlands: descriptive study , 2008, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[19]  M. Chin,et al.  To Die, to Sleep: US Physicians' Religious and Other Objections to Physician-Assisted Suicide, Terminal Sedation, and Withdrawal of Life Support , 2008, The American journal of hospice & palliative care.

[20]  R. Reuzel,et al.  Improving prescription in palliative sedation: compliance with dutch guidelines. , 2007, Archives of internal medicine.

[21]  A. de Graeff,et al.  Palliative sedation therapy in the last weeks of life: a literature review and recommendations for standards. , 2007, Journal of palliative medicine.

[22]  N. Cherny Sedation for the care of patients with advanced cancer , 2006, Nature Clinical Practice Oncology.

[23]  J. V. van Delden,et al.  Terminal sedation and euthanasia: a comparison of clinical practices. , 2006, Archives of internal medicine.

[24]  T. Morita,et al.  Definition of sedation for symptom relief: a systematic literature review and a proposal of operational criteria. , 2002, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[25]  P. Rousseau,et al.  Existential suffering and palliative sedation: A brief commentary with a proposal for clinical guidelines , 2001, The American journal of hospice & palliative care.

[26]  A. Adunsky,et al.  High dose morphine use in the hospice setting , 1999, Cancer.

[27]  R. Portenoy,et al.  Sedation in the Management of Refractory Symptoms: Guidelines for Evaluation and Treatment , 1994, Journal of palliative care.