pediatric oncology leslie meador, rn, bsn, cpon staff rn iii children’s mercy hospital

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PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital Children’s Mercy Hospital

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Page 1: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

PEDIATRIC PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGYONCOLOGYPEDIATRIC PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGYONCOLOGY

Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPONLeslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPONStaff RN IIIStaff RN III

Children’s Mercy HospitalChildren’s Mercy Hospital

Page 2: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

What is cancer?• Normal cells grow and divide, then

eventually die. • Cancer occurs when the body is

unable to regulate cell growth, leading to an overgrowth of abnormal cells.

Page 3: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Cell development

Page 4: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

What is cancer?Cell development

Healthy growth Unhealthy growth

Normal cells Tumor cells

Benign Malignant

Page 5: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Benign v. Malignant• Benign: overgrowth of cells that

are NOT cancerous• Malignant: overgrowth of cells that

ARE cancerous

Page 6: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Pediatric Oncology Facts

• In the U.S., cancer remains responsible for more deaths from one year through adolescence than any other disease; more deaths than asthma, diabetes, cystic fibrosis and AIDS combined.

• Each year in the U.S., approximately 12,500 children and adolescents are diagnosed with cancer. That’s the equivalent of two average size classrooms diagnosed each school day.

Page 7: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Pediatric Oncology Facts

• In the early 1950s, less than 10 percent of childhood cancer patients could be cured.

• Today, nearly 80% of children diagnosed with cancer become long-term survivors and the majority of them are considered cured.

Page 8: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Pediatric Oncology Facts

• Most common childhood cancers:-leukemia (blood) -brain and nervous system-the lymphatic system (lymphoma)

-kidneys (Wilm’s tumor) -bones (osteosarcoma & Ewing’s

sarcoma)-muscles (rhabdomyosarcoma)

Page 9: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Pediatric v. AdultCharacteristic Pediatric Adult

Frequency Rare: <1% of all cancers

Common: >99% of all cancers

Primary sites Involves TISSUE

Involves ORGANS

Pathogenesis Genetic alterations

Environment & lifestyle

Page 10: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Pediatric v. AdultCharacteristic Pediatric Adult

Screening/Early detection

Small percentage; screening tests are generally not applicable

Many can be detected by adhering to screening guidelines

Manifestations at diagnosis

Metastatic disease ~80%

Local or regional disease

Treatment Follows protocols as standard

Doesn’t always follow a protocol

Prognosis

70-90% cure (depending on tumor & stage)

<60% cure (depending on tumor & stage)

Page 11: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Means of diagnosis• Well child check-ups (physical

assessment & review of symptoms)• Blood tests• Radiology exams (x-rays, CT, MRI)• Pathology (biopsy of mass)• Diagnostic procedures

-Bone marrow aspirate-Bone marrow biopsy-Lumbar puncture

Page 12: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Bone Marrow Aspiration

Page 13: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Methods for treatment• Depends of type and stage of

malignancy• Includes the following:

-Chemotherapy -Radiation

-Surgical resection-Stem cell transplantation

Page 14: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Chemotherapy• Chemotherapy can be delivered by the

bloodstream to reach cancer cells all over the body, or it can be administered directly to specific cancer sites.

• Chemotherapy can be given through various methods:

-intravenously (IV) -intrathecally (IT) -intramuscularly (IM) -subcutaneously (SQ) -orally (PO).

Page 15: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Chemotherapy• Works by interfering with the

ability of cancer cells to divide and reproduce themselves.

• Attacks all rapidly dividing cells.

Page 16: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Rapidly dividing cells:• Hair• Skin• Nails• Blood cells

-Red blood cells-White blood cells-Platelets

Page 17: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Three blood lines• Red blood cells:

-carry oxygen to surrounding tissues

• White blood cells:White blood cells:-fight off infection-fight off infection

• Platelets:Platelets:-help to prevent excessive -help to prevent excessive

bleeding; assists in clot formationbleeding; assists in clot formation

Page 18: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Complications of chemotherapy

• Anemia (low RBC)• Thrombocytopenia (low platelet)• Neutropenia (low WBC)• INFECTION• Hair loss• Mouth sores (mucositis)• Nausea, vomiting & diarrhea• Organ toxicities

Page 19: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

WHAT DOES CANCER LOOK

LIKE?

Page 20: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Normal WBC on smear

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

A. Banded Neutrophil B. Lymphocyte

C. Monocyte D. Segmented Neutrophil

E. Eosinophil F. Basophil

G. Platelet H: Red blood cell

Page 21: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia on smear

Page 22: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Osteosarcoma

Distal Femur Humerus

Page 23: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Osteosarcoma

Page 24: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Brain tumor

Page 25: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

Brain tumor

Page 26: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

The Faces of Childhood Cancer

• The Faces of Childhood Cancer

Page 27: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

WHY this profession?• LOVE KIDS!!!!!!• Hem/Onc - Increased acuity than med/surg

units mentally challenging each day; pathophysiology is complex in this population

• Opportunity to INVEST in PEOPLE• Develop long-term relations with patients• See effects of my efforts over time• End of life care• Working 3 days/week = Full time!!!

Page 28: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

What is my day like?• 12 hour shifts; 7am – 7pm• Nurse: patient ratio = 1:3 max• Manage care for each assigned patient, which may

include, but not limited to: medication administration, IVF, chemo (monitoring/managing side effects), blood products, procedures (including sedation) for BMA & LP, bone marrow transplant infusions, monoclonal antibodies, ng placement/feeds, IV access, obtaining & monitoring labs, coordinating with other disciplines (PT/OT, speech therapy, radiology, OR) … being PROACTIVE in patient care, focusing on management while preventing further issues/complications.

Page 29: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

And the numbers are …• Starting salary: $21.49/hr (CMH in top

5% salary for RN’s in KC area)• Shift differentials: 10% evening (3-

11:30pm), 15% nights (7p-7a), 10% weekend

• Specialty differentials: 10% critical care, 5% OR, SDS, PACU, $1.00/hr for approved specialty certifications

• Up to $3000/year educational assistance

Page 30: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

References• Hooke, M., Kline, N., O’Neill, J., Norville,

R., Wilson, K. (2004). (Essentials of Pediatric Oncology: A Core Curriculum ( 2nd ed.) (pp 2-12,57). Glenview, IL: Association of Pediatric Oncology Nurses

• http://www.cancer.org• http://www.childsdoc.org/fall2000/

braintumors.asp• http://www.curesearch.org/

Page 31: PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY Leslie Meador, RN, BSN, CPON Staff RN III Children’s Mercy Hospital

References cont.• ghr.nlm.nih.gov/.../ basics/MitosisMeiosis.jpg• http://www.med.harvard.edu/JPNM/TF96_97/N

ov4/WriteUp.html• http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/HE

MEHTML/HEMEIDX.html• http://www-medlib.med.utah.edu/WebPath/BO

NEHTML/BONE001.html

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