Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?

BackgroundCancer chemotherapy is a treatment that systematically kills cancer cells but causes expected side effects, known as chemotherapy-induced toxicities. These toxicities are managed with supportive care medications. This study aimed to determine the prescription patterns of supportive care me...

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Main Authors: Deogratias M. Katabalo, Melina Abraham, Benson R. Kidenya, Antony Liwa, Kristin Schroeder
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Oncology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fonc.2025.1444565/full
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author Deogratias M. Katabalo
Deogratias M. Katabalo
Melina Abraham
Benson R. Kidenya
Antony Liwa
Kristin Schroeder
Kristin Schroeder
author_facet Deogratias M. Katabalo
Deogratias M. Katabalo
Melina Abraham
Benson R. Kidenya
Antony Liwa
Kristin Schroeder
Kristin Schroeder
author_sort Deogratias M. Katabalo
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundCancer chemotherapy is a treatment that systematically kills cancer cells but causes expected side effects, known as chemotherapy-induced toxicities. These toxicities are managed with supportive care medications. This study aimed to determine the prescription patterns of supportive care medications in children receiving chemotherapy at a major referral hospital in Tanzania.MethodologyA hospital-based descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted at Bugando Medical Centre (BMC). The study analyzed 104 prescription slips of pediatric cancer patients receiving chemotherapy and qualitatively assessed national guidelines and disease-specific protocols used in guiding treatment. Data were cleaned in Microsoft Excel, analyzed using STATA version 15, and presented as frequencies, percentages, and narrative summaries.ResultsOndansetron (84.6%) and pre-hydration normal saline (20.2%) were the most prescribed pre-chemotherapy supportive care medications. Similarly, oral ondansetron (80.8%) and post-hydration normal saline (22.1%) were the most prescribed post-chemotherapy medications. Few prescriptions included a combination of antiemetics, fluids, and proton pump inhibitors for regimens with multiple chemotherapeutic agents. National cancer treatment guidelines lacked detailed sections on supportive care medications, leaving prescribing decisions to clinicians, while Burkitt’s lymphoma and nephroblastoma protocols offered more detailed guidance.ConclusionAntiemetics and hydration fluids dominated supportive care prescriptions. Significant gaps were identified in the inclusion of supportive care in national guidelines, with reliance on disease-specific protocols. These findings highlight the need for standardized, evidence-based supportive care guidelines tailored to resource-limited settings.
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spelling doaj-art-e63239c81980442b8a35cc451cedf6e22025-08-20T02:15:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Oncology2234-943X2025-02-011510.3389/fonc.2025.14445651444565Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?Deogratias M. Katabalo0Deogratias M. Katabalo1Melina Abraham2Benson R. Kidenya3Antony Liwa4Kristin Schroeder5Kristin Schroeder6Department of Pharmaceutics and Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences, Mwanza, TanzaniaDepartment of Oncology, Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, TanzaniaDepartment of Pharmaceutics and Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences, Mwanza, TanzaniaDepartment of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences, Mwanza, TanzaniaDepartment of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Catholic University of Health and Allied Sciences, Mwanza, TanzaniaDepartment of Oncology, Bugando Medical Centre, Mwanza, TanzaniaDuke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, NC, United StatesBackgroundCancer chemotherapy is a treatment that systematically kills cancer cells but causes expected side effects, known as chemotherapy-induced toxicities. These toxicities are managed with supportive care medications. This study aimed to determine the prescription patterns of supportive care medications in children receiving chemotherapy at a major referral hospital in Tanzania.MethodologyA hospital-based descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted at Bugando Medical Centre (BMC). The study analyzed 104 prescription slips of pediatric cancer patients receiving chemotherapy and qualitatively assessed national guidelines and disease-specific protocols used in guiding treatment. Data were cleaned in Microsoft Excel, analyzed using STATA version 15, and presented as frequencies, percentages, and narrative summaries.ResultsOndansetron (84.6%) and pre-hydration normal saline (20.2%) were the most prescribed pre-chemotherapy supportive care medications. Similarly, oral ondansetron (80.8%) and post-hydration normal saline (22.1%) were the most prescribed post-chemotherapy medications. Few prescriptions included a combination of antiemetics, fluids, and proton pump inhibitors for regimens with multiple chemotherapeutic agents. National cancer treatment guidelines lacked detailed sections on supportive care medications, leaving prescribing decisions to clinicians, while Burkitt’s lymphoma and nephroblastoma protocols offered more detailed guidance.ConclusionAntiemetics and hydration fluids dominated supportive care prescriptions. Significant gaps were identified in the inclusion of supportive care in national guidelines, with reliance on disease-specific protocols. These findings highlight the need for standardized, evidence-based supportive care guidelines tailored to resource-limited settings.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fonc.2025.1444565/fullprescription patternspediatricssupportive care medicationschemotherapy-induced toxicitiesTanzania
spellingShingle Deogratias M. Katabalo
Deogratias M. Katabalo
Melina Abraham
Benson R. Kidenya
Antony Liwa
Kristin Schroeder
Kristin Schroeder
Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
Frontiers in Oncology
prescription patterns
pediatrics
supportive care medications
chemotherapy-induced toxicities
Tanzania
title Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
title_full Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
title_fullStr Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
title_full_unstemmed Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
title_short Prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in Tanzania: where are we in managing chemotherapy-induced toxicities?
title_sort prescription patterns of supportive care medications among children receiving chemotherapy treatments at a major referral hospital in tanzania where are we in managing chemotherapy induced toxicities
topic prescription patterns
pediatrics
supportive care medications
chemotherapy-induced toxicities
Tanzania
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fonc.2025.1444565/full
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