Haematology & Oncology Nursing Guide

GCC Edition
Haematology Basics

🩸Blood Cell Types & Functions

Erythrocytes (RBC)

  • Carry oxygen via haemoglobin
  • Lifespan: ~120 days
  • Produced in bone marrow (erythropoiesis)
  • Regulated by erythropoietin (EPO) from kidneys

Leucocytes (WBC)

  • Neutrophils 55–70% — bacterial defence
  • Lymphocytes 20–40% — viral/adaptive immunity
  • Monocytes 2–8% — phagocytosis
  • Eosinophils 1–4% — allergic/parasitic
  • Basophils 0.5–1% — inflammatory

Platelets (Thrombocytes)

  • Primary haemostasis plug formation
  • Lifespan: 8–10 days
  • Produced by megakaryocytes
  • Regulated by thrombopoietin

📊CBC Interpretation — GCC Lab Reference Ranges

ParameterMale NormalFemale NormalCritical ValueClinical Significance
WBC (×10⁹/L)4.5–11.04.5–11.0<2.0 or >30↑ infection/leukaemia; ↓ bone marrow suppression
Neutrophils (×10⁹/L)1.8–7.71.8–7.7<0.5 severe neutropeniaANC <1.0 = neutropenia; <0.5 = profound
RBC (×10¹²/L)4.5–5.93.8–5.2<2.0↓ anaemia; ↑ polycythaemia
Haemoglobin (g/dL)13.5–17.511.5–15.5<7.0 or >20Transfuse if <7 (symptomatic) or <8 (cardiac)
Haematocrit (%)41–5336–46<20%Reflects RBC mass; used for transfusion decisions
MCV (fL)80–10080–100<80 microcytic (iron/thal); >100 macrocytic (B12/folate)
Platelets (×10⁹/L)150–400150–400<20 spontaneous bleed risk<50 invasive procedures; <10 prophylactic transfusion
Reticulocytes (%)0.5–2.50.5–2.5↑ haemolysis/recovery; ↓ aplasia
GCC Note: Slight variation exists between Saudi, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar labs. Always use the laboratory's own reference range. Haemoglobin thresholds for transfusion may be adjusted for sickle cell patients (target Hgb 9–10 g/dL in chronic transfusion programmes).

🧪Coagulation Studies

TestNormal RangePathwayClinical Implication
PT (Prothrombin Time)11–13.5 secondsExtrinsic (VII, X, V, II, I)↑ warfarin, liver disease, Vit K deficiency
INR0.8–1.2 (therapeutic 2–3)Standardised PT ratio>1.5 bleeding risk; monitor warfarin therapy
APTT (aPTT)25–35 secondsIntrinsic (XII, XI, IX, VIII)↑ heparin, haemophilia A/B, DIC
Fibrinogen2.0–4.0 g/LFinal common pathway↓ DIC, liver failure; ↑ acute phase reaction
D-Dimer<0.5 mg/L FEUFibrin degradation↑ DVT/PE, DIC, sepsis, malignancy
Thrombin Time14–19 secondsFibrinogen → fibrin conversion↑ heparin, fibrinogen abnormality
Bleeding Time2–9 minutesPlatelet function↑ platelet dysfunction, VWD
DIC Alert: Disseminated intravascular coagulation = ↓Platelets + ↑PT + ↑APTT + ↓Fibrinogen + ↑D-Dimer. Report immediately to haematologist. Common in sepsis, obstetric emergencies, and haematological malignancies.

🔬Peripheral Blood Film Interpretation

Abnormal Red Cell Morphology

  • Sickle cells — sickle cell disease (common in GCC)
  • Target cells — thalassaemia, iron deficiency
  • Schistocytes — microangiopathic haemolysis, TTP, HUS
  • Spherocytes — hereditary spherocytosis, AIHA
  • Hypochromic microcytes — iron deficiency, thalassaemia
  • Macro-ovalocytes — megaloblastic anaemia

Abnormal WBC Findings

  • Blast cells — acute leukaemia (EMERGENCY)
  • Hypersegmented neutrophils — megaloblastic anaemia
  • Auer rods — AML (pathognomonic)
  • Smear cells — CLL (prolymphocytes)
  • Reed-Sternberg cells — Hodgkin lymphoma (biopsy)
  • Left shift — infection/stress granulopoiesis
Oncology Nursing

💊Chemotherapy Classifications

Mechanism: Cross-link DNA strands, preventing replication. Cell-cycle non-specific.

DrugCommon UseKey Side EffectsNursing Points
CyclophosphamideLymphoma, breast, CLLHaemorrhagic cystitis, myelosuppression, alopecia, SIADHMesna prophylaxis, high fluid intake, urine monitoring
IfosfamideSarcoma, germ cellNeurotoxicity (encephalopathy), haemorrhagic cystitisMesna mandatory, monitor neuro status, methylene blue for encephalopathy
MelphalanMultiple myeloma (high-dose for SCT)Severe mucositis, pancytopeniaIce chips during infusion (reduces mucositis)
ChlorambucilCLL, indolent lymphomaMyelosuppression, secondary malignancyOral: compliance monitoring, CBC weekly
BusulfanCML, BMT conditioningVOD/SOS, pulmonary fibrosis, seizuresAnticonvulsant prophylaxis, LFT monitoring
CarboplatinOvarian, lung, head & neckThrombocytopenia, nausea, nephrotoxicity (less than cisplatin)AUC-based dosing, pre-hydration less required than cisplatin
CisplatinTesticular, lung, bladder, ovarianNephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, neuropathy, severe nauseaAggressive pre/post-hydration (1–2L), check creatinine, audiometry

Mechanism: Mimic natural metabolites, interfere with nucleic acid synthesis. S-phase specific.

DrugCommon UseKey Side EffectsNursing Points
Methotrexate (high-dose)ALL, lymphoma, osteosarcomaMucositis, nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, myelosuppressionLeucovorin rescue timing critical, urine alkalinisation (pH >7), hydration 3L/m²/day
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU)Colorectal, gastric, breastMucositis, diarrhoea, hand-foot syndrome, cardiotoxicityDPYD mutation screening (GCC populations), continuous infusion monitoring
Cytarabine (Ara-C)AML, ALL, lymphomaCerebellar toxicity (high-dose), conjunctivitis, myelosuppressionSteroid eye drops (high-dose regimens), neuro assessment
GemcitabinePancreatic, lung, breast, bladderMyelosuppression, flu-like syndrome, pulmonary toxicityGive over 30 min (longer infusions increase toxicity), paracetamol pre-medication
6-MercaptopurineALL maintenanceHepatotoxicity, myelosuppressionTPMT/NUDT15 testing before starting, avoid allopurinol (or reduce dose 75%)
Azacitidine/DecitabineMDS, AML (hypomethylating)Injection site reactions, myelosuppression, nauseaSubcutaneous preparation, rotate sites, cytopenia monitoring

Mechanism: Stabilise microtubules, preventing cell division. M-phase specific.

DrugCommon UseKey Side EffectsNursing Points
PaclitaxelBreast, ovarian, lung, gastricPeripheral neuropathy, alopecia, myelosuppression, hypersensitivityPremedicate: dexamethasone + H1 + H2 antagonist; non-PVC/non-DEHP tubing; 3-hour infusion
DocetaxelBreast, prostate, gastric, lungFluid retention, nail changes, neuropathy, febrile neutropeniaDexamethasone 3 days (reduces fluid retention), baseline weight daily
Nab-paclitaxelBreast, pancreatic, NSCLCNeuropathy (dose-limiting), myelosuppressionNo premedication required (no Cremophor), shorter infusion 30 min
CabazitaxelProstate (post-docetaxel)Febrile neutropenia (HIGH risk), diarrhoeaPrimary G-CSF prophylaxis mandatory, monitor closely

Mechanism: Intercalate DNA, inhibit topoisomerase II, generate free radicals. Cell-cycle non-specific.

DrugLifetime Cumulative Dose LimitKey Side EffectsNursing Points
Doxorubicin450–550 mg/m²Cardiotoxicity, myelosuppression, alopecia, vesicantEcho before and during treatment, strict vesicant protocol, red urine (warn patient)
Daunorubicin400–600 mg/m²Cardiotoxicity, myelosuppression, alopeciaCardiac monitoring, vesicant protocol
Epirubicin900 mg/m²Cardiotoxicity (less than doxorubicin), myelosuppressionHigher cumulative limit; still requires ECHO monitoring
Mitoxantrone140 mg/m²Cardiotoxicity, myelosuppression, blue-green urine/scleraLVEF monitoring, blue discolouration warning to patient
Idarubicin93 mg/m²Cardiotoxicity, severe myelosuppressionOral formulation available; vesicant protocol for IV
Vesicant Extravasation Protocol: STOP infusion immediately. Aspirate residual drug. Do NOT flush. Apply cold pack (anthracyclines) or warm pack (vinca alkaloids). Administer dexrazoxane (Savene) for anthracycline extravasation within 6 hours. Document and report. Refer to plastic surgery if tissue necrosis suspected.
DrugClassCommon UseKey ToxicityNursing Note
VincristineVinca alkaloidALL, lymphomaPeripheral neuropathy (dose-limiting), constipation, SIADH, vesicantNEVER intrathecal (FATAL). Stool softeners prophylactically.
VinblastineVinca alkaloidHodgkin, testicular, bladderMyelosuppression, neuropathy, vesicantStrict vesicant protocol, warm compress for extravasation
EtoposideTopoisomerase II inhibitorLung, testicular, lymphoma, AMLMyelosuppression, secondary leukaemia, hypotensionSlow infusion rate, monitor BP during IV, secondary AML risk counselling
IrinotecanTopoisomerase I inhibitorColorectal, gastricEarly/late diarrhoea, myelosuppression, cholinergic syndromeAtropine for early diarrhoea/cholinergic, loperamide for late diarrhoea
BortezomibProteasome inhibitorMultiple myeloma, lymphomaPeripheral neuropathy, thrombocytopenia, herpes zoster reactivationSubcutaneous preferred (less neuropathy), acyclovir/valacyclovir prophylaxis
RituximabAnti-CD20 monoclonal antibodyB-cell lymphoma, CLL, autoimmuneInfusion reactions (1st dose), hepatitis B reactivation, PML (rare)HBsAg/HBcAb screening mandatory, pre-medication, 1st dose slow rate with monitoring

⚠️CTCAE Toxicity Grading

GradeDefinitionGeneral Action
Grade 1Mild; asymptomatic or mild symptoms; no interventionMonitor, patient education, supportive care
Grade 2Moderate; minimal intervention required; limiting instrumental ADLsDose reduction consideration, medical management
Grade 3Severe; limiting self-care ADLs; hospitalisation likelyHold chemotherapy, hospitalise, aggressive management
Grade 4Life-threatening; urgent intervention requiredPermanently discontinue or hold pending review; ICU level care
Grade 5Death related to adverse eventIncident reporting, root cause analysis

Common Toxicity Grading Details

ToxicityG1G2G3G4
Neutropenia (ANC ×10⁹/L)<LLN–1.5<1.5–1.0<1.0–0.5<0.5
Thrombocytopenia (×10⁹/L)<LLN–75<75–50<50–25<25
Anaemia (Hgb g/dL)<LLN–10.0<10.0–8.0<8.0 (transfusion)Life-threatening
NauseaLoss of appetite, normal intakeDecreased oral intakeInadequate oral caloric/fluid intake
Diarrhoea<4 stools/day over baseline4–6 stools/day>7 stools/day or hospitalisationLife-threatening
Peripheral neuropathyAsymptomatic; mild symptomsModerate symptoms, limiting ADLsSevere limiting self-care ADLsLife-threatening
MucositisAsymptomatic, minimal lesionsModerate pain, altered diet (soft)Severe pain, unable to adequately eatLife-threatening

🧤Safe Chemotherapy Handling

PPE Requirements (NIOSH Standards)

  • Double chemotherapy-tested gloves (change every 30 min or if torn)
  • NIOSH-approved respirator (if aerosolisation risk)
  • Protective gown — closed front, long sleeves, low permeability
  • Goggles/face shield if splash risk
  • Remove PPE before leaving preparation area
  • Wash hands before and after glove use

Spill Management Kit

  • Two pairs chemotherapy gloves
  • Chemotherapy gown and goggles
  • Absorbent pads and towels
  • Sealable plastic waste bags (yellow cytotoxic)
  • Sodium hypochlorite 1% solution
  • Spill sign/barrier tape
  • Incident report form

Waste Disposal (GCC Protocols)

  • Yellow cytotoxic bags for drug waste
  • Purple-lidded sharps containers for needles
  • Patient urine/vomit: hazardous for 48–72h post-chemo
  • Flush toilet twice with lid closed
  • Incineration required for cytotoxic waste
  • Segregation per MOH/DOH facility waste policy

Exposure / Pregnancy Policy

  • Report all skin/eye exposures immediately
  • Flush skin with soap/water × 15 min; eyes × 15 min saline
  • Pregnant nurses — risk assessment, possible redeployment
  • Breastfeeding nurses — discuss with occupational health
  • Document all exposures in HISD/incident system

CTCAE Toxicity Grader Tool

Bone Marrow Transplant (HSCT)

🔄Types of HSCT

Autologous SCT

  • Patient's own stem cells collected, stored, re-infused
  • No GVHD risk; no graft-versus-tumour effect
  • Used in: Multiple myeloma, lymphoma, germ cell tumours
  • Mobilisation: G-CSF ± plerixafor
  • Conditioning: Myeloablative (e.g., BEAM, Melphalan 200)
  • Engraftment typically Day +10–14

Allogeneic SCT

  • Stem cells from HLA-matched donor
  • Types: Sibling, matched unrelated (MUD), haploidentical, cord blood
  • GVHD risk; graft-versus-leukaemia effect beneficial
  • Used in: AML, ALL, MDS, aplastic anaemia, haemoglobinopathies
  • Conditioning: Myeloablative or reduced intensity (RIC)
  • Engraftment typically Day +14–21 (MUD may be later)
GCC Context: High consanguinity rates in GCC populations increase availability of HLA-identical sibling donors but also increase risk of rare genetic disorders requiring transplant. King Faisal Specialist Hospital (Riyadh) and King Abdullah Medical City are major allogeneic SCT centres. UAE patients are commonly referred to Burjeel and Sheikh Khalifa Medical City.

📅Engraftment Timeline & Monitoring

Phase / DayExpected EventsNursing Priority
Pre-conditioning (D-7 to D-1)High-dose chemotherapy ± TBI; immunosuppression beginsIV access, baseline assessment, education, anti-emetics
Day 0Stem cell infusion (2–6 hours)Vital signs every 15 min, DMSO odour warning (garlic smell), anaphylaxis readiness
D+1 to D+7 (Aplastic Phase)Profound pancytopenia; mucositis peak; infection risk highestNeutropenic precautions, pain assessment (mucositis), TPN if needed, strict I&O
D+7 to D+14Early engraftment signs (rising WBC)Daily CBC, watch for engraftment syndrome (fever, rash, pulmonary infiltrates)
D+14 to D+30Engraftment confirmation (ANC >0.5×10⁹/L ×3 days)Transition from TPN, oral medications, early GVHD surveillance
D+30 to D+100Acute GVHD window; CMV reactivation risk; PCP riskChimerism studies, GVHD assessment, CMV PCR weekly, PCP prophylaxis
D+100 onwardsChronic GVHD; secondary infection; late effectsEye/skin/GI assessment, immunisation schedule review, long-term follow-up

🎯GVHD Grading & Management

Acute GVHD — Glucksberg Grading

OrganStage 1Stage 2Stage 3Stage 4
Skin (rash %BSA)<25%25–50%>50% generalisedBullae, desquamation
Gut (diarrhoea mL/day)500–1000 mL1000–1500 mL>1500 mL or painIleus, haemorrhage
Liver (bilirubin µmol/L)34–5151–102102–255>255
Overall GradeOrgan InvolvementFirst-Line Treatment
Grade ISkin Stage 1–2 onlyTopical steroids; observe
Grade IISkin + Gut/Liver Stage 1Methylprednisolone 1–2 mg/kg/day
Grade IIISkin Stage 3 + Gut/Liver Stage 2–3Methylprednisolone 2 mg/kg/day; consider second-line
Grade IVStage 4 any organHigh-dose steroids; ruxolitinib (steroid-refractory); ICU consult

Mucositis Management Protocol

WHO Mucositis Grading

  • G0 No mucositis
  • G1 Soreness/erythema only
  • G2 Erythema, ulcers, can eat solid food
  • G3 Ulcers — liquid diet only
  • G4 Unable to eat/drink (alimentation required)

Nursing Interventions

  • Oral assessments every 8 hours (NCI OMAS tool)
  • Chlorhexidine 0.12% / saline rinses 4–6 hourly
  • Magic mouthwash (lidocaine + antacid + diphenhydramine)
  • Palifermin (KGF) — pre-conditioning for high-risk regimens
  • Low-level laser therapy (LLLT) where available
  • PCA opioids for severe pain (Grade 3–4)
  • TPN initiation criteria: <60% oral intake >48h
  • Ice chips during melphalan infusion (cryotherapy)

🛡️Neutropenic Precautions in BMT Setting

Environmental Controls

  • HEPA-filtered positive pressure rooms (≥12 air changes/hour)
  • No fresh flowers or plants
  • No fresh fruits/vegetables (low-microbial diet)
  • Dedicated equipment (thermometer, BP cuff, stethoscope)
  • Visitors: hand hygiene, no ill contacts, limit numbers

Infection Prophylaxis Regimen

  • Bacterial: Fluoroquinolone (levofloxacin/ciprofloxacin)
  • Fungal: Fluconazole (non-myeloablative) or posaconazole/micafungin (myeloablative/allo-SCT)
  • Viral (HSV/VZV): Acyclovir/valacyclovir
  • CMV: PCR-guided pre-emptive therapy (ganciclovir/valganciclovir)
  • PCP: Co-trimoxazole from engraftment (or pentamidine if sulfa allergy)
Neutropenic Sepsis

🌡️Definition & Recognition

Neutropenic Sepsis = ONCOLOGICAL EMERGENCY. Target: IV antibiotics within 60 minutes of presentation. Mortality rises 7% for each hour of delay.

Definition

  • ANC <0.5×10⁹/L (or <1.0 with expected fall to <0.5)
  • Temperature ≥38.3°C single reading, OR ≥38.0°C sustained ×1 hour
  • Or suspected infection with haemodynamic instability
  • Some patients may be afebrile (steroids, elderly)

Immediate Nursing Actions (60-minute Bundle)

  • 0–5 min: Notify physician/registrar IMMEDIATELY
  • 0–15 min: Blood cultures ×2 sets (peripheral + central if CVC)
  • 0–20 min: IV access, bloods (CBC, CMP, LFT, CRP, procalcitonin)
  • 0–30 min: CXR, urine C&S, any other relevant cultures
  • 0–60 min: First dose IV antibiotic ADMINISTERED
  • Ongoing: IV fluids (30 mL/kg if hypotensive), strict I&O

📏MASCC Risk Stratification Score

FeatureScore
Burden of illness: no or mild symptoms5
Burden of illness: moderate symptoms3
No hypotension (SBP >90 mmHg)5
No COPD4
Solid tumour or haematological without previous fungal infection4
No dehydration requiring parenteral fluids3
Outpatient status at onset of fever3
Age <60 years2
Interpretation:
Score ≥21 LOW RISK — consider oral antibiotics + close outpatient follow-up (ciprofloxacin + amoxicillin-clavulanate)
Score <21 HIGH RISK — hospitalise, IV broad-spectrum antibiotics (piperacillin-tazobactam or meropenem ± vancomycin)

💉Antibiotic Escalation Protocol

ScenarioFirst-Line AgentEscalation
Low-risk febrile neutropeniaCiprofloxacin 750mg BD PO + Amoxicillin-clavulanate 875/125mg BD POAdmit + IV if not tolerating oral or worsening
High-risk, no MRSA concernPiperacillin-tazobactam 4.5g TDS–QDS IVAdd vancomycin if CVC suspected/skin infection/haemodynamic instability
High-risk, penicillin allergyMeropenem 1g TDS IVAztreonam + vancomycin if carbapenem concern
Persistent fever 72–96hAdd empirical antifungal therapyLiposomal amphotericin B or caspofungin + CT chest/sinuses
Suspected VRE/MRSAVancomycin/teicoplaninDaptomycin or linezolid if vancomycin resistant
Documented gram-negative bacteraemiaMeropenem (confirm sensitivities)Colistin if carbapenem-resistant (KPC/NDM) — discuss with ID

🍄Fungal Prophylaxis & Management

Prophylaxis Indications

  • AML induction/consolidation: Posaconazole 300mg OD (preferred)
  • Allo-SCT: Fluconazole (low risk) or posaconazole/micafungin
  • Prolonged neutropenia >7 days: antifungal prophylaxis mandatory
  • High-dose steroids: Fluconazole at minimum

Invasive Aspergillosis Markers

  • Galactomannan (serum/BAL) — sensitivity 71% in haematology
  • Beta-D-glucan — broad fungal marker (not Mucor)
  • HRCT chest: halo sign, air crescent sign, nodules with ground glass
  • Treatment: Voriconazole (first-line) or isavuconazole
  • GCC Note: Mucormycosis — higher incidence in GCC diabetic patients; requires liposomal amphotericin B + surgical debridement

💊Colony-Stimulating Factors (G-CSF)

AgentDoseIndicationTimingNotes
Filgrastim (G-CSF)5 mcg/kg/day SCPost-chemo neutropenia, stem cell mobilisation24–72h post-chemo; stop when ANC >10×10⁹/L after nadirBone pain common (loratadine effective), spleen rupture risk (rare)
Pegfilgrastim6mg SC single doseHigh-risk regimens (primary prophylaxis)24–72h post-chemo (NOT within 14 days of next cycle)Once per cycle; auto-injector available; same side effects as filgrastim
Lenograstim150 mcg/m²/day SCPost-chemo neutropeniaAs per filgrastimAvailable in some GCC countries; glycosylated form
Primary G-CSF Prophylaxis Indications (ASCO/ESMO): Febrile neutropenia risk ≥20% (e.g., BEACOPP, TAC, dose-dense regimens, cabazitaxel). Risk 10–20%: consider if additional risk factors (age >65, poor PS, prior chemotherapy/RT, open wounds, renal/hepatic dysfunction).

Neutropenic Sepsis Risk Calculator (MASCC-Based)

Blood Disorders — GCC Focus

🌙Sickle Cell Disease (Common in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE)

GCC Prevalence: Sickle cell trait/disease is among the most common genetic disorders in GCC. Carrier rates: 2–17% in Saudi Arabia (Eastern Province highest); 3–5% in Bahrain; significant numbers in UAE, Oman. National newborn screening programmes exist in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

Vaso-Occlusive Crisis (VOC) Management Protocol

StepInterventionDetail
1. Rapid AssessmentPain score (NRS 0–10), O₂ saturation, temperatureBaseline CBC, reticulocytes, type & screen, LFTs, urinalysis
2. Analgesia (within 30 min)Strong opioid IV/PO based on pain scoreMorphine 0.1 mg/kg IV or patient's usual breakthrough dose; PCA for ongoing pain
3. Hydration1–1.5× maintenance rate IV fluidsNormal saline or D5W 0.45% NaCl; avoid hypotonic fluids; oral hydration if tolerated
4. OxygenOnly if SpO₂ <95% or acute chestRoutine oxygen not indicated without hypoxia
5. AdjunctsNSAIDs (ketorolac), heat packs, anxiolyticsAvoid cold (triggers sickling); incentive spirometry
6. ReassessEvery 30–60 minutesPain score reassessment; titrate analgesia

Acute Chest Syndrome (ACS) — EMERGENCY

Signs: New pulmonary infiltrate + fever/chest pain/cough/hypoxia in sickle cell patient. Most common cause of SCD mortality.
Management: Simple or exchange transfusion (target HbS <30%), broad-spectrum antibiotics (cover atypicals: azithromycin), incentive spirometry, O₂, consider ICU.

Exchange Transfusion Indications

  • Acute stroke or TIA
  • Acute chest syndrome with rapid deterioration (SpO₂ <90% despite O₂)
  • Multi-organ failure
  • Priapism >4 hours not responding to hydration
  • Pre-operative preparation (high-risk surgery)
  • Target: HbS <30%, Hgb 10 g/dL (avoid Hgb >11 — hyperviscosity risk)

🔴Thalassaemia (Thalassaemia Belt — GCC Countries)

GCC Context: Beta-thalassaemia major prevalent across GCC "thalassaemia belt." Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait all have pre-marital screening programmes. Qatar has achieved significant reduction in new cases through prevention.

Transfusion-Dependent Thalassaemia (TDT)

  • Transfusion every 2–4 weeks to maintain pre-transfusion Hgb 9–10 g/dL
  • Use leucodepleted, ABO/Rh/Kell matched packed RBCs
  • Extended phenotyping (Duffy, Kidd, Kell, Lewis) to reduce alloimmunisation
  • Transfusion rate: 10–15 mL/kg over 3–4 hours
  • Monitor for febrile non-haemolytic reactions (commonest)
  • Haemosiderosis monitoring: ferritin, MRI T2* heart/liver

Iron Chelation Therapy

  • Deferoxamine (DFO): SC/IV 20–40 mg/kg/day × 5–7 nights/week; ototoxicity/retinal monitoring
  • Deferasirox (DFX): Oral 20–40 mg/kg/day; renal/hepatic monitoring monthly; once daily
  • Deferiprone (DFP): Oral 75–100 mg/kg/day TDS; agranulocytosis risk — weekly CBC
  • Target ferritin <1000 µg/L; MRI T2* heart >20ms (safe)
  • Curative option: Allogeneic SCT (best outcomes in young, well-chelated patients)

🩺Haemophilia Management

TypeDeficient FactorInheritanceTreatmentTarget Levels
Haemophilia AFactor VIIIX-linked recessive (males)Factor VIII concentrate or recombinant FVIII; emicizumab (subcutaneous, prophylaxis)Prophylaxis target: trough >1% (mild); bleed: 50–100%
Haemophilia BFactor IXX-linked recessive (males)Factor IX concentrate or recombinant FIX; fitusiran (SQ prophylaxis)Similar to Haemophilia A
VWDVon Willebrand FactorAutosomal dominant/recessiveDesmopressin (Type 1); VWF concentrate (Type 2/3)VWF activity >50% for procedures
Joint Bleed (Haemarthrosis): Treat within 2 hours (home therapy preferred). RICE: Rest, Ice (indirect), Compression, Elevation. Physiotherapy after factor replacement — avoid aspirin/NSAIDs. Document target joints.

🔵ITP (Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura)

Management by Platelet Count

  • Plt >30 × 10⁹/L (asymptomatic): Observe, avoid NSAIDs/aspirin
  • Plt 10–30 with bleeding: Prednisolone 1 mg/kg/day × 4 weeks + IVIG 1 g/kg × 1–2 days
  • Plt <10 or severe bleeding: IVIG + IV methylprednisolone + platelet transfusion (if life-threatening bleed)
  • Chronic/refractory: Rituximab, thrombopoietin receptor agonists (eltrombopag, romiplostim), splenectomy

Nursing Priorities

  • Bleeding precautions: soft toothbrush, electric razor, avoid IM injections
  • Fall prevention protocol when Plt <20
  • No rectal temperature, no suppositories if Plt <50
  • Neurological assessment: intracranial haemorrhage risk (headache = emergency)
  • Education: avoid contact sports, report bruising/petechiae worsening
  • Pre-splenectomy vaccines: pneumococcal, meningococcal, Hib (2 weeks prior)

🧬GCC Genetic Counselling Context

High consanguinity rates (25–60% of marriages in GCC countries are between first or second cousins) significantly increase the prevalence of autosomal recessive haematological disorders: sickle cell disease, thalassaemia major, Glanzmann thrombasthenia, congenital factor deficiencies, and rare enzyme deficiencies (G6PD — prevalent in GCC, especially during Ramadan/fava bean consumption).
ProgrammeCountryScope
Pre-marital Screening ProgrammeSaudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, OmanSickle cell, thalassaemia; couples counselled if both carriers
Newborn ScreeningSaudi Arabia (national), UAE, BahrainHaemoglobinopathies, PKU, hypothyroidism, G6PD
Genetic Counselling ServicesKing Faisal Specialist, Sheikh Khalifa MC, KFSH&RCComprehensive hereditary haematology workup
G6PD Deficiency: Common in GCC (5–25% in some regions). Avoid: dapsone, primaquine, rasburicase, fava beans, mothballs, high-dose aspirin. Triggers haemolytic crisis. Screen before rasburicase administration.
GCC Context

🏥Key GCC Haematology & Oncology Centres

CentreCountrySpeciality FocusKey Services
King Faisal Specialist Hospital & Research Centre (KFSH&RC)Saudi Arabia (Riyadh, Jeddah)Bone marrow transplant, rare haematology, paediatric oncologyFull SCT programme (allo/auto), gene therapy trials, CAR-T
King Abdulaziz Medical City (KAMC)Saudi Arabia (Riyadh, Jeddah)Comprehensive cancer care, haematologyAdult/paediatric haem-oncology, radiation oncology
Dubai Cancer Centre / SKMCUAE (Dubai)Adult oncology, haematologyMultidisciplinary oncology, clinical trials
NMC Oncology CentreUAE (Abu Dhabi, Dubai)Adult oncology, haematology, bone marrow transplantSCT programme, comprehensive haematology
Burjeel Cancer InstituteUAE (Abu Dhabi)Comprehensive cancer centreAllogeneic SCT, CAR-T cell therapy, clinical trials
Sheikh Khalifa Medical City (SKMC)UAE (Abu Dhabi)Tertiary haematology, genetic diseasesThalassaemia programme, haemophilia centre
National Center for Cancer Care (NCCC) — Ibn SinaKuwaitNational oncology referral centreAdult/paediatric oncology, haematology
Salmaniya Medical Complex / King HamadBahrainSickle cell, thalassaemia, haematologyNational sickle cell programme, SCT referrals
National Center for Cancer Care & Research (NCCCR)Qatar (Doha)Comprehensive oncologyAdult/paediatric oncology, haematology, BMT
Royal Hospital / SQUHOman (Muscat)Haematology, oncologyOman national sickle cell/thalassaemia programme

🗺️GCC-Prevalent Haematological Conditions

Sickle Cell Disease Distribution

  • Saudi Arabia: Eastern Province highest prevalence (up to 17% trait); national programme since 1988
  • Bahrain: 2–3% disease prevalence; oldest SCD programme in GCC
  • Oman: Dhofar region high prevalence; active SCT cure programme
  • Kuwait/UAE: Significant expatriate and national SCD population

Thalassaemia Burden

  • Qatar: Carrier rate ~4%; aggressive prenatal testing has reduced new births
  • UAE: Beta-thal carrier rate ~3–4%; comprehensive screening
  • Kuwait: ~4% carrier rate; dedicated thalassaemia centres
  • All GCC: pre-marital mandatory testing for haemoglobinopathies

Common Haematological Malignancies (GCC)

  • NHL (Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma) — most common lymphoma
  • Hodgkin Lymphoma — relatively higher in young adults (EBV association)
  • AML — rising incidence; linked to occupational exposures
  • Multiple Myeloma — increasing with ageing GCC population
  • CLL — less common than Western populations (genetic differences)

G6PD Deficiency

  • Prevalence: 5–25% in GCC males (X-linked)
  • Screen before: rasburicase, primaquine, dapsone
  • Ramadan risk: some herbal medicines trigger haemolysis
  • Neonatal jaundice — common presentation in GCC NICUs

🌙Ramadan Considerations for Oncology Patients

Clinical Note: Fasting during Ramadan is a deeply significant religious obligation for Muslim patients. Nurses must approach this with cultural sensitivity while ensuring patient safety. Many fatally ill patients are exempt from fasting per Islamic law (shariah rukhsa), but patients may still choose to fast.

Chemotherapy Scheduling

  • Discuss Ramadan plans at start of each treatment cycle
  • Pre-hydration for cisplatin — may be scheduled at Iftar/Suhoor times
  • Oral chemotherapy: Take at Iftar (breaks fast) or Suhoor if once-daily
  • Anti-emetics: Schedule around non-fasting hours
  • Avoid new myelosuppressive regimens without hydration support during fasting hours
  • Consider delaying non-urgent chemotherapy cycles if patient insists on fasting

Medication & Monitoring Considerations

  • Oral medications: Religious scholars permit medications that treat illness (not nourishment) — discuss with patient's religious advisor if needed
  • Eye drops, nasal sprays, injections (SC/IM): generally permissible during fasting
  • IV hydration: breaks fast — discuss with patient
  • Monitor for dehydration, electrolyte imbalance, hypoglycaemia (especially steroid-containing regimens)
  • Blood draws: permitted during fasting
  • Involve hospital chaplain/imam for spiritual support

Neutropenic Patients During Ramadan

  • Neutropenic patients (ANC <1.0) — strongly advise against fasting
  • Dehydration significantly increases infection risk
  • Provide written documentation for patient explaining medical exemption
  • Ensure antibiotic prophylaxis schedule maintained regardless of fasting

Transfusion During Ramadan

  • Blood transfusion: generally considered to break the fast (majority ruling)
  • Schedule elective transfusions for night-time (Iftar–Suhoor window) if possible
  • Emergency transfusions: proceed without delay regardless of fasting status
  • Discuss patient preferences in advance; document shared decision-making

💊Drug Procurement & Formulary Notes

IssueGCC ContextNursing Action
Drug availability variationFormularies differ between Saudi (SFDA), UAE (DOH/DHA), Kuwait (MOH), etc. Some agents (e.g., posaconazole IV, carfilzomib, venetoclax) may have limited availability or require special importVerify formulary availability before patient education; know alternative protocols
Generic substitutionActive ingredient equivalence — verify bioequivalence for narrow therapeutic index drugs (MTX, cyclosporine)Do not substitute without pharmacist/physician approval for narrow TI drugs
Cold chain maintenanceGCC climate (extreme heat) — critical for biologic agents (rituximab, trastuzumab, biosimilars)Verify cold chain documentation at receipt; do not administer if cold chain breach suspected
BiosimilarsIncreasingly used in GCC for G-CSF (filgrastim biosimilars), rituximab, trastuzumabNot interchangeable without prescriber authorisation in most GCC facilities; document brand name used
Opioid regulationsStrict controlled drug regulations across all GCC countries; import restrictions; documentation requirements stringentDetailed controlled drug register entries; dual nurse sign-off for all opioid administration
Herbal medicinesBlack seed (Nigella sativa), camel milk, traditional remedies widely used by GCC patientsScreen all patients for herbal/traditional medicine use; interactions with warfarin, immunosuppressants, and P450-metabolised drugs
Practice Questions (MCQ)
Q1. A patient with AML receiving induction chemotherapy develops a temperature of 38.4°C. ANC is 0.28×10⁹/L. What is the maximum time target for first antibiotic dose administration?
The international standard (ASCO, ESMO, NICE) is IV antibiotic administration within 60 minutes of presentation with febrile neutropenia. Mortality increases by approximately 7% for each hour of delay. Neutropenic sepsis is a medical emergency requiring the same urgency as septic shock.
Q2. You are preparing to administer high-dose cytarabine (Ara-C) to a patient with AML. Which nursing intervention is specifically required for this regimen?
High-dose cytarabine can cause chemical conjunctivitis and corneal toxicity. Prophylactic steroid eye drops (e.g., dexamethasone 0.1% or prednisolone drops) are administered during and 24–48 hours after each high-dose cytarabine infusion to prevent this complication. Ice chips (cryotherapy) are used for melphalan, Mesna is used with cyclophosphamide/ifosfamide, and pre-hydration is for cisplatin.
Q3. A sickle cell patient presents with fever, chest pain, new pulmonary infiltrate on CXR, and SpO₂ of 88%. What is the priority intervention?
This patient has Acute Chest Syndrome (ACS) — the leading cause of death in sickle cell disease. SpO₂ <90% with new infiltrate requires urgent exchange transfusion (target HbS <30%), broad-spectrum antibiotics covering atypical organisms, supplemental oxygen, and ICU-level care. Hydroxyurea is a long-term preventive therapy and has no role in acute management. Reassessment alone is inadequate — this is a life-threatening emergency.
Q4. A patient on oral deferiprone (Ferriprox) for thalassaemia iron overload reports feeling unwell. Which urgent investigation is mandatory?
Deferiprone (L1/Ferriprox) carries a risk of agranulocytosis — a life-threatening drop in neutrophils (ANC <0.5×10⁹/L). Weekly CBC is mandatory for all patients on deferiprone. Any patient on deferiprone who reports feeling unwell, has fever, or signs of infection requires urgent CBC. If agranulocytosis is confirmed, deferiprone must be stopped immediately. Audiometry is a monitoring requirement for deferoxamine, not deferiprone.
Q5. A patient develops anthracycline extravasation from a peripheral cannula. What is the CORRECT sequence of immediate actions?
For anthracycline extravasation: STOP infusion immediately, aspirate residual drug through existing cannula (do not remove yet), do NOT flush (avoids spreading drug), apply cold pack (cold constricts vessels and reduces tissue uptake), and administer dexrazoxane (Savene) within 6 hours — this is the only approved antidote for anthracycline extravasation. DMSO is used for some other vesicants (mitomycin C). Warm compresses are for vinca alkaloids. Hyaluronidase is for vinca alkaloid extravasation.
Q6. A post-allogeneic SCT patient on Day +25 develops severe watery diarrhoea (>2000 mL/day), rising bilirubin (150 µmol/L), and a maculopapular rash covering 60% BSA. What is the most likely diagnosis and overall GVHD grade?
This patient has multi-organ acute GVHD: skin Stage 3 (>50% BSA rash), gut Stage 3–4 (>1500 mL diarrhoea/day), liver Stage 2–3 (bilirubin 102–255 µmol/L). This maps to overall Grade III–IV, requiring high-dose methylprednisolone (2 mg/kg/day). Ruxolitinib (a JAK1/2 inhibitor) is approved for steroid-refractory acute GVHD. C. diff should be excluded but the overall picture is GVHD given timing (Day+25 in allo-SCT window).
Q7. Which statement about MASCC score is CORRECT?
MASCC score ≥21 = LOW RISK for serious complications — suitable for oral antibiotics and close outpatient follow-up (ciprofloxacin + amoxicillin-clavulanate). Score <21 = HIGH RISK requiring hospitalisation and IV broad-spectrum antibiotics. Outpatient status at onset of fever adds 3 points (not inpatient status). Age <60 adds 2 points. Maximum score is 26.
Q8. A GCC nurse preparing rituximab for a patient with DLBCL performs pre-administration checks. Which of the following is the MOST critical pre-rituximab screening test?
Rituximab causes profound B-cell depletion and is associated with potentially fatal Hepatitis B reactivation — even in patients with resolved infection (HBsAg-negative but HBcAb-positive). Pre-treatment HBsAg and HBcAb screening is mandatory before any anti-CD20 therapy. Patients with HBcAb positivity require antiviral prophylaxis (entecavir or tenofovir) before and during rituximab treatment. TPMT/NUDT15 is for 6-mercaptopurine; G6PD is for rasburicase; HIV viral load is a separate consideration.
Q9. A thalassaemia major patient is prescribed deferasirox tablets. The nurse notices the patient is also taking a proton pump inhibitor (PPI). What is the clinical significance?
Aluminium/magnesium-containing antacids (not PPIs) significantly reduce deferasirox absorption and should not be taken simultaneously. PPIs do not have a clinically significant interaction with deferasirox. However, it is critical to verify which deferasirox formulation is being used — the dispersible tablet (Exjade) has different bioavailability from the film-coated tablet (Jadenu), and they are NOT dose-equivalent. Real nephrotoxicity monitoring is required with deferasirox (monthly creatinine, proteinuria), but co-administration with PPIs alone is not contraindicated.
Q10. A Muslim patient with AML is about to receive their second cycle of induction chemotherapy during Ramadan and insists on fasting. What is the BEST nursing approach?
Cultural and religious sensitivity is fundamental to GCC nursing practice. The correct approach is shared decision-making: explain that AML induction chemotherapy requires adequate hydration (especially for tumour lysis syndrome prevention), that neutropenic patients face increased infection risk with dehydration, and that Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) generally permits breaking the fast for seriously ill patients. Involve the hospital imam/chaplain to support the patient's spiritual needs. Document the conversation, risks discussed, and the patient's autonomous decision. Never refuse care — offer modified scheduling (e.g., hydration at Iftar/Suhoor) as a compromise where clinically safe.