Dyspnoea in Palliative Care

Last updated by Peer reviewed by Dr Krishna Vakharia
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See also the related separate article Breathlessness.

Dyspnoea is the distressing awareness of the process of breathing - either the frequency or the effort involved. It is very frightening and is one of the most common symptoms in palliative care.[2] It is extremely common with advancing disease, particularly late stages of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), chronic heart failure, asthma, cancer, and neurological or muscular disease, and is also common in end-stage kidney disease and acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS).[3]

Dyspnoea is common in people with cancer in general, but it is more common and severe in people with primary lung cancers (affecting 90% of those with advanced lung cancer.

Palliative care has been defined as 'an approach that improves the quality of life of individuals and their families facing the problems associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual'.[4] See separate article Palliative Care.

The drive to breathe and the stimulus for dyspnoea is quite complex and multifactorial:

  • The main driving force of blood gases is pCO2 rather than pO2 (the exception being in COPD) although significant hypoxia can augment the hypercapnic drive.
  • Mechanical stimuli such as pulmonary stretch and proprioceptive input from the chest wall and diaphragm are also important.
  • Proprioception in the lungs and chest wall provide additional stimulus.
  • Pyrexia stimulates the thalamus and can cause tachypnoea.
  • Emotions (anxiety, fear, anger, etc) and arousal state also modulate breathing.

It is important to distinguish potentially reversible causes from those which are fixed and irreversible.

Causes of dyspnoea
Potentially reversible or partially reversible with further treatmentInfection
Bronchoconstriction
Pleural or pericardial effusion
Pneumothorax
Pulmonary embolism
Cardiac failure/dysrhythmia/anaemia
Panic or psychological disorder
Superior vena cava obstruction
Lymphangitis
Ascites
IrreversibleProgression of disease (eg, malignant infiltration, fibrosis, congestion) leading to diminished lung function
Progression of neurological or muscular disease preventing adequate ventilation

Dyspnoea is subjective and, especially in these circumstances, may correlate poorly with objective assessment of lung function including blood gas analysis and airways obstruction. It involves perception of breathlessness and a person's reaction to it, and anxiety may contribute significantly. There is no universally accepted measure of breathlessness in palliative care patients and several scales are in use, most looking at the functional impact of the breathlessness.[5] Self-rating scales may be helpful in assessment and monitoring of response to treatment.[1]

History

Should include information about:

  • Previous or pre-existing conditions (comorbidities may exacerbate symptoms).
  • Recent treatments - eg, radiotherapy.
  • Recent medication changes.

Questions regarding the breathlessness should include:

  • Rapidity of onset (insidious and relentless vs sudden) and time course (acute or chronic, intermittent).
  • Associated symptoms - eg, cough, haemoptysis, stridor, wheeze, pain, fatigue.
  • Relationship to exercise.
  • Precipitating factors - eg, posture, exertion, pollen, emotion.
  • Impact on simple daily activities - eg, talking, washing, toileting, dressing, sleeping.
  • Role of carers.
  • Episodes of panic or anxiety.
  • Impact on quality of life and any mood disturbance.
  • Any known relieving factors.

Examination

Including:

  • Assess effort and efficacy of breathing (eg, depth of breathing, use of accessory muscles of respiration, expectoration of secretions).
  • Observe the patient at rest and, where appropriate, walking or undertaking a small task.
  • Assessment of degree of anxiety. Chest breathing (as opposed to abdominal breathing, with use of the diaphragm) may indicate anxiety.
  • Cardiac status (heart rate, rhythm, cardiac murmurs, signs of cardiac failure).
  • Clinical signs of infection, effusion, anaemia or cyanosis.
  • Examination of the respiratory system based on known disease, looking for signs of stridor and progressive disease.

Investigations

Avoid unnecessary investigation: consider the stage of disease, risk-to-benefit ratio and the wishes of the patient and their family. In primary care, investigations which may be done for non-acute breathlessness include:[1]

  • CXR.
  • Spirometry.
  • ECG to exclude arrhythmia.
  • FBC to exclude anaemia.
  • Pulse oximetry.

Management should start with optimising the treatment of any underlying causes of breathlessness, especially bronchoconstriction.

Non-pharmacological treatments should then be considered, in particular, positioning and breathing techniques, mobility aids, and muscle strengthening. Simple aids, such as a hand-held fan, are also important.

For pharmacological treatments, the European Respiratory Society and American Thoracic Society have both concluded that, beyond oxygen and opioids, there is no robust evidence for other pharmacologic agents.

  • Oxygen has a clear and accepted role for patients with hypoxia. However, in patients with mild or non-hypoxaemic breathlessness, the benefit derived from oxygen is similar to medical air, and there are limitations to its use (eg, safety and cost).
  • Although opioids can reduce breathlessness, their effects are modest or small, and the optimal dosing, titration, and potential issues arising from long-term use (eg, safety, tolerance, dependence, misuse) remain to be determined.
  • The evidence from Cochrane reviews does not support a role for benzodiazepines, except as second- or third-line treatment if opioids fail, because there is no overall evidence of benefit and some evidence of possible harms.

General

  • Try to address breathlessness as soon as distress becomes apparent rather than waiting until it is well-established. Endeavour to establish a cause or causes of the dyspnoea.
  • Anxiety inevitably accompanies the symptom and can be alleviated by explaining the current situation and management options. Explore ongoing fears (fears of suffocation, choking, dying in sleep are common). Someone should stay with an acutely distressed patient to give reassurance and possibly distraction. If left alone, a call bell should be available.
  • Useful strategies include:
    • Positioning - the most comfortable position is usually sitting upright with support.
    • Keeping the room cool.
    • Moving air from a fan (hand-held or stationary) or open window helps provide psychological relief.
    • Teaching and use of breathing exercises and relaxation methods. Breathing retraining, taught by physiotherapists or clinical nurse specialists.
    • Encourage modification of lifestyle in reducing non-essential activities, whilst trying to maintain mobility and independence as far as possible.
    • Encourage exertion to the point of breathlessness to build tolerance and maintain fitness - this will vary considerably between individuals. Pulmonary rehabilitation appears to be well-tolerated and to provide symptomatic relief in many patients with severe COPD. It is increasingly being used in a palliative setting.[8]
    • Dietary modifications with small frequent drinks and meals being best tolerated. Patients with cancer or end-stage respiratory disease are frequently cachectic and advice from a dietician may be helpful.
    • Mouth breathing dries the mouth and oxygen will be very dry unless it has been humidified, so attention to oral hygiene is important.
    • Complementary therapies such as aromatherapy, hypnosis and acupuncture may be helpful to some patients but the evidence base is weak.[9]
  • A Cochrane Review concluded that there was evidence that chest wall vibration, neuro-electrical muscle stimulation, breathing retraining and walking aids were effective non-pharmacological interventions for relieving breathlessness in advanced stages of disease. There was mixed evidence for acupressure and acupuncture, and insufficient evidence for relaxation techniques, counselling and psychotherapy.[10]

Medical interventions

Physical interventions may help to relieve or even reverse the cause of the dyspnoea. The degree of intervention desired by the patient will vary and management decisions should be made with them and their families. Discussing possible eventualities can help patients make important, informed decisions about their future care such as the need for emergency hospital admissions, use of artificial ventilation and aggressive treatment of infections.

Primary care
Treatment of reversible or partially reversible causes of dyspnoea. For example:

  • Optimising treatment of asthma, COPD, heart failure.
  • Infections will aggravate dyspnoea and treatment of the infection will improve matters where the patient is not strictly terminal.

Secondary care
Refer to secondary care, where appropriate, for:

  • Blood transfusion - anaemia can exacerbate dyspnoea on exertion, and blood transfusion can be justified on this basis. One study looking at practice in six British hospices found that patients received blood transfusions in about 6% of all hospice admissions.[11]
  • Treatment of the underlying disease - for example:
    • Pleural effusion tapping - for recurrent effusion, pleurodesis is often effective, but it is a painful procedure. Some centres are pioneering the use of implantable access devices for recurrent tapping.[12]
    • Tapping ascites can relieve pressure on the diaphragm and improve ventilation.
    • Superior vena cava (SVC) obstruction can arise from compression of the SVC by mediastinal tumour. In three quarters of cases it is from primary lung tumours but intraluminal thrombosis may also occur. There is dyspnoea and gross venous congestion and oedema of the head, neck and upper limbs. High-dose steroids with radiotherapy or chemotherapy may help. Dilatation, stenting and anticoagulants may also be tried.
    • Tumour may impinge on the trachea or bronchus, causing collapse of a segment or of a complete lung. Treatments include steroids, external radiotherapy, chemotherapy (for small-cell cancer of the lung) and endobronchial treatments such as laser, radiotherapy, stenting, cryotherapy and balloon dilatation.
  • Emergencies such as pulmonary embolism and pneumothorax may justify admission to hospital for active treatment.

Drugs

In some situations, physical interventions may not be possible. This is especially true of neuromuscular disease. Nonetheless, medication (including oxygen) may be useful in reducing symptoms.

Opiates
Reticence about the use of morphine for palliation of dyspnoea is common, especially in non-malignant disease (COPD in particular), for fear of causing respiratory depression. Oral and parenteral opiates are widely accepted as providing good symptom relief, and the risk of significant respiratory depression appears to be negligible.[13, 14]

  • Oral morphine is widely used to manage dyspnoea, although the mechanism of action is not fully understood. The anxiolytic and antitussive effects of diamorphine make it ideal for lung cancer.
  • Expert opinion is that oral morphine can be used safely for the management of dyspnoea, even with COPD, if the patient is started on a low dose, and it is titrated according to response and side-effects. Patients not already receiving morphine should start at doses of 5 mg 4-hourly/prn. For those already on morphine, whether for pain or dyspnoea, the overall dose may need to be increased by 30% to 50%.
  • When the oral route is no longer available, administration by continuous subcutaneous infusion is acceptable. It may be combined with a benzodiazepine. The use of nebulised opiates is not recommended.
  • In extreme dyspnoea and distress, intravenous or subcutaneous diamorphine is often used for more rapid relief than by the oral route.
  • Consider concomitant use of anti-emetics and laxatives where required.

Anxiolytics
There is as much reason to be cautious about respiratory depression with benzodiazepines as with opiates but they are commonly used to treat dyspnoea in palliative care. There is no evidence for a beneficial effect of benzodiazepines for the relief of dyspnoea associated with cancer or COPD.[2] However, guidelines continue to recommend their use for reducing anxiety associated with breathlessness, as they reduce the hypoxic or hypercapnic ventilatory responses, and the emotional response to dyspnoea.

Diazepam, lorazepam and midazolam are most frequently used. Selection is dependent on the stage of terminal disease, the severity of anxiety, and the desired onset of action. Lorazepam can be given sublingually (0.5 mg 4-6 hourly); midazolam is usually used subcutaneously (5-20 mg over 24 hours).

Tricyclic antidepressants and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be helpful, especially for panic attacks.

Oxygen therapy
The role of oxygen therapy for palliation of dyspnoea is unclear, and there is as yet no convincing evidence of benefit.[15, 16]

  • Currently recommendations suggest oxygen should be used only where the patient is shown to be hypoxic.
  • A person's need for oxygen therapy should be clinically assessed including potential risks from the oxygen use (for example, a smoker in the household). A trial of short-burst oxygen therapy may be initiated in primary care, preferably after discussion with a specialist, and should be tailored to a person's needs. Short-burst oxygen therapy should be initiated at 2 L/minute for an initial duration of treatment of between 15 and 30 minutes (although others suggest continuing until benefit is felt).
  • Either a mask or nasal cannulae may suit patient preference and comfort.

Respiratory secretions
First-line treatment is hyoscine butylbromide 20 mg subcutaneously hourly as required in the final stages of life. Glycopyrronium bromide 200 micrograms 6- to 8-hourly as required and hyoscine hydrobromide 400 micrograms 2-hourly are other options.

  • Fatigue, loss of appetite, pain, sweating, insomnia.
  • Anxiety, depression, anger, helplessness, loneliness, intimacy issues.
  • Difficulties with eating, bathing, problems with communication, reduced mobility.
  • Social isolation, change of role in the family, employment, financial.

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Further reading and references

  • Ambrosino N, Fracchia C; Strategies to relieve dyspnoea in patients with advanced chronic respiratory diseases. A narrative review. Pulmonology. 2019 Sep - Oct25(5):289-298. doi: 10.1016/j.pulmoe.2019.04.002. Epub 2019 May 22.

  • Tomomatsu H, Takenaka M, Ito M, et al; Palliative Care Intervention for End-of-life Patients with Non-cancerous Respiratory Diseases. Tokai J Exp Clin Med. 2022 Dec 2047(4):189-193.

  • Zeng YS, Wang C, Ward KE, et al; Complementary and Alternative Medicine in Hospice and Palliative Care: A Systematic Review. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2018 Nov56(5):781-794.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2018.07.016. Epub 2018 Aug 2.

  1. Palliative care - dyspnoea; NICE CKS, July 2022 (UK access only).

  2. Simon ST, Higginson IJ, Booth S, et al; Benzodiazepines for the relief of breathlessness in advanced malignant and non-malignant diseases in adults. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Oct 2010(10):CD007354. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007354.pub3.

  3. Solano JP, Gomes B, Higginson IJ; A comparison of symptom prevalence in far advanced cancer, AIDS, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and renal disease. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2006 Jan31(1):58-69.

  4. WHO Definition of Palliative Care; World Health Organization

  5. Dorman S, Byrne A, Edwards A; Which measurement scales should we use to measure breathlessness in palliative Palliat Med. 2007 Apr21(3):177-91. Epub 2007 Mar 15.

  6. Henson LA, Maddocks M, Evans C, et al; Palliative Care and the Management of Common Distressing Symptoms in Advanced Cancer: Pain, Breathlessness, Nausea and Vomiting, and Fatigue. J Clin Oncol. 2020 Mar 2038(9):905-914. doi: 10.1200/JCO.19.00470. Epub 2020 Feb 5.

  7. Crombeen AM, Lilly EJ; Management of dyspnea in palliative care. Curr Oncol. 2020 Jun27(3):142-145. doi: 10.3747/co.27.6413. Epub 2020 Jun 1.

  8. Sachs S, Weinberg RL; Pulmonary rehabilitation for dyspnea in the palliative-care setting. Curr Opin Support Palliat Care. 2009 Jun3(2):112-9.

  9. Vickers AJ, Feinstein MB, Deng GE, et al; Acupuncture for dyspnea in advanced cancer: a randomized, placebo-controlled pilot trial [ISRCTN89462491]. BMC Palliat Care. 2005 Aug 184:5.

  10. Bausewein C, Booth S, Gysels M, et al; Non-pharmacological interventions for breathlessness in advanced stages of malignant and non-malignant diseases. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2008 Apr 16(2):CD005623.

  11. Brown E, Bennett M; Survey of blood transfusion practice for palliative care patients in Yorkshire: implications for clinical care. J Palliat Med. 2007 Aug10(4):919-22.

  12. Daniel C, Kriegel I, Di Maria S, et al; Use of a pleural implantable access system for the management of malignant pleural effusion: the Institut Curie experience. Ann Thorac Surg. 2007 Oct84(4):1367-70.

  13. Mahler DA, Selecky PA, Harrod CG, et al; American College of Chest Physicians consensus statement on the management of Chest. 2010 Mar137(3):674-91.

  14. Clemens KE, Quednau I, Klaschik E; Is there a higher risk of respiratory depression in opioid-naive palliative care patients during symptomatic therapy of dyspnea with strong opioids? J Palliat Med. 2008 Mar11(2):204-16. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2007.0131.

  15. Abernethy AP, McDonald CF, Frith PA, et al; Effect of palliative oxygen versus room air in relief of breathlessness in patients with refractory dyspnoea: a double-blind, randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2010 Sep 4376(9743):784-93. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(10)61115-4.

  16. Uronis HE, Abernethy AP; Oxygen for relief of dyspnea: what is the evidence? Curr Opin Support Palliat Care. 2008 Jun2(2):89-94.

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