环磷酰胺
医学
癌症
环境卫生
肿瘤科
重症监护医学
内科学
化疗
作者
Yuko Noda,Yuhki Koga,Kenichiro Yamamura,Junko Miyata,Yuko Hamada,Shouichi Ohga
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.ijheh.2024.114402
摘要
The exposure of family caregivers to anticancer drugs for pediatric patients with malignancy is a potential health risk that needs to be minimized. We monitored the amount of cyclophosphamide (CPM) that had adhered to the undershirts of patients and the personal protective equipment (PPE) of family caregivers as well as the caregivers' urine levels of CPM within the first three days after the first and second courses of high-dose CPM therapy. Liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) detected >0.03 ng/ml of CPM in 26% (23/88) of urine samples from 8 of 11 (72.7%) patients' family caregivers, with a peak of 0.7 ng/ml from 24 to 48 h after administration. Since urine CPM concentrations in family caregivers varied after the first and second courses, the exposure risk factors were analyzed by scoring the PPE-wearing time index (caring minutes × PPE points from wearing masks, gloves, and/or gowns) and CPM adhesion of PPE items with the caring patterns of diaper change, washing body care, oral care, eating assistance, emotional support, and co-sleeping. The closest association was observed for CPM adhesion between oral care gloves and undershirts (correlation coefficient 0.67, p = 0.001). The mixed-effect model analysis indicated only a significant correlation between the PPE-wearing time index and emotional care (playing, cuddling, and physical contact) (p = 0.016). These results suggest that prolonged emotional support results in poor PPE protection, which increases the risk of exposure in family caregivers. Strict PPE care within 48 h after high-dose CPM controls the exposure to high-risk anticancer drugs in caregivers of pediatric patients.
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