Treatment for a recurrence or for metastases
If your pancreatic cancer comes back, it can be in the pancreas or it can spread somewhere else, like the liver or the lungs. Your...
When pancreatic cancer can’t be cured or when the disease becomes more advanced, you may need specialist help to deal with the symptoms. Here people with pancreatic cancer talk about their symptoms and treatment when their cancer was advanced. Pain is the main problem they discuss.
Pain management includes chemotherapy or radiotherapy, the use of painkillers (analgesics), and anaesthetic blocks. People may try to control pain in other ways too, for example, hot water bottle, massage or a Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulator (TENS) machine. TENS machines deliver small electrical pulses to the body via electrodes placed on the skin.
Bob said that chemotherapy had helped his pain so he no longer needed analgesics. Another man had stopped using painkillers after taking apricot seeds (against his doctor’s advice, see ‘Diet and other lifestyle changes‘).
Some had taken time to find the right dose of painkiller to relieve the pain. As the pain got worse over time, they had to increase the dose or change to a different drug or method of pain control. Some were managing with anti-inflammatory drugs (e.g. ibuprofen) or paracetamol alone or combined with codeine. Other people had moved on to morphine.
Living with pain caused depression and anxiety for Ann. Pain stopped her sleeping and made it hard to focus. She was glad that her doctors had her pain under control most of the time. When Ann felt ill, hot baths and hot-water bottles made her feel better. Talking to other people helped distract her.
Donna’s cancer couldn’t be treated and it spread to her liver. She decided not to have chemotherapy. She had a lot of pain in her abdomen (tummy) and it got worse as time went by. At first she sucked a ‘lollipop stick’ containing a strong painkiller called fentanyl. Gradually she needed more pain relief so started injections of morphine. She also found that a TENS machine helped.
Lesley had pain in her side from secondary tumours in her liver. Her symptoms were well controlled with slow release morphine tablets and anti-inflammatory tablets.
David had severe back pain for 15-20 minutes at a time. The Macmillan nurses helped him manage the pain. David visited the local hospice which he said was ‘a wonderful place’. There he discussed how doctors and nurses would manage his symptoms as he came closer to death. He also talked to the staff about where he might like to die.
Adrian also had severe pain. For a while he had a fentanyl skin patch for pain relief. He also took oxycodone during the night if necessary. Oxycodone is a strong, opiate painkiller that can be taken as a liquid or a tablet. Gradually Adrian had to take more and more oxycodone, which led to side effects such as constipation. He decided to have a percutaneous coeliac nerve block, an injection into part of the tummy that can stop pain in the upper abdomen (tummy. He was also prescribed antidepressants, which lifted his mood and helped him sleep.
We spoke to people whose family member had died from pancreatic cancer. Some found the local Marie Curie, Macmillan Cancer Support, or hospice nurses, incredibly helpful. They had arranged care and helped manage pain. John said that nurses from The Ellenor Foundation hospice charity were great when his wife was dying.
When Hugh’s mother was dying, her pain was quite well controlled. She had a syringe driver (sometimes called a pump), a small portable, battery-powered machine containing a syringe with morphine. The syringe driver gives you a small dose of morphine at a constant rate. Hugh remembered that one day the syringe driver’s battery ran out. This was a problem for a short time. Other than this, his mother’s last weeks weren’t too painful at all. New models of syringe driver warn people when the battery is running low.
Others we spoke to told us that their family member’s pain hadn’t been well controlled. Saba, for example, felt that the ‘system’ had let the family down. Doctors found it hard to manage her mother’s pain because if her mother had enough morphine to control the pain she became ‘delirious’. Saba’s mother had to go to hospital because of pain and breathlessness. She hated being there and felt humiliated when a male nurse had to help with her personal care.
Susan’s mother also had a lot of pain, especially at night. Her doctors couldn’t find the right dose of morphine because when she hallucinated on higher doses. The morphine also made Susan’s mother very constipated. The district nurse helped with enemas.
Simon said communication was bad between his GP, the local palliative care team, and his wife’s oncologist. He and his wife Karen didn’t know about all the services that they could have used. Simon wished that Karen had more help with her nausea and vomiting. Sometimes a doctor had to drain fluid from Karen’s abdomen to make her more comfortable. Karen seemed unwilling to take pain medication.
Pain, vomiting, fluid retention, and symptoms associated with jaundice, seemed to bother people most as they neared the end of their lives. Other problems included breathlessness, indigestion, bloating, lack of appetite, weight loss, bed sores, incontinence and depression (see ‘Symptoms of more advanced disease‘).
We spoke to a consultant who said that a GP and the palliative care team should be involved early in the disease, and that they should make sure symptoms are well controlled day-day. Several people told us they had regular home visits to see what palliative care they needed and to deal with pain control.
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