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Guide — Oncology

Chemotherapy Nursing Considerations

Chemotherapy targets rapidly dividing cells — which means it affects both cancer cells and normal tissues with high turnover. This guide covers chemotherapy principles, cell cycle phases, major drug classes, systemic toxicities, safe handling requirements, extravasation management, and patient education priorities.

13 min read · Oncology

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Chemotherapy administration requires specialized oncology nursing training, institutional protocols, and Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) certification. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Chemotherapy Principles

Chemotherapy drugs are cytotoxic agents that disrupt cell division. Because they target any rapidly dividing cell — not only cancer cells — normal tissues with high proliferative rates are susceptible: bone marrow, GI mucosa, hair follicles, and gonads.

Drugs are classified as cell-cycle specific (act on cells in a specific phase of the cycle — most effective when cells are actively dividing and when given as continuous infusions) or cell-cycle non-specific (can kill cells in any phase, including G0 resting cells — dose-dependent).

Cell Cycle Overview

PhaseActivityDrug Classes That Act Here
G0Resting phase — cells not actively dividingCell-cycle non-specific agents (alkylating, nitrosoureas)
G1Cell growth; protein and RNA synthesisCorticosteroids, asparaginase
SDNA synthesis and replicationAntimetabolites (methotrexate, 5-FU, cytarabine)
G2Final preparation for division; repair checkBleomycin, topoisomerase II inhibitors
MMitosis — cell physically dividesVinca alkaloids (vincristine, vinblastine), taxanes (paclitaxel, docetaxel)

Major Drug Classes

ClassMechanismExamplesKey Toxicity
Alkylating agentsCross-link DNA strands — prevent replicationCyclophosphamide, cisplatin, carmustineBone marrow suppression, hemorrhagic cystitis (cyclophosphamide), nephrotoxicity (cisplatin)
AntimetabolitesInterfere with DNA/RNA synthesis by mimicking normal metabolitesMethotrexate, 5-fluorouracil, cytarabine, gemcitabineMucositis, bone marrow suppression, hepatotoxicity (methotrexate)
AnthracyclinesIntercalate DNA; inhibit topoisomerase II; generate free radicalsDoxorubicin, daunorubicin, epirubicinCardiotoxicity (cumulative — dilated cardiomyopathy), alopecia, bone marrow suppression
Vinca alkaloidsBind tubulin — prevent spindle formation; arrest mitosisVincristine, vinblastine, vinorelbinePeripheral neuropathy (vincristine), myelosuppression (vinblastine)
TaxanesStabilize microtubules — prevent depolymerization; arrest mitosisPaclitaxel, docetaxelPeripheral neuropathy, hypersensitivity reactions, myelosuppression, alopecia
Topoisomerase inhibitorsInhibit enzymes that manage DNA supercoiling during replicationEtoposide, irinotecan, topotecanBone marrow suppression, diarrhea (irinotecan — 'early' and 'late')
Platinum compoundsForm DNA adducts — cross-link DNA strandsCisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatinNephrotoxicity (cisplatin), peripheral neuropathy (oxaliplatin — cold-sensitive), ototoxicity

Hematologic Toxicities — Nadir Timing

Nadir = the lowest point of blood counts after chemotherapy administration. Timing varies by drug — most reach nadir 7–14 days post-treatment. The nadir is the highest-risk period for infection, bleeding, and fatigue.

Neutropenia

Nadir: 7–14 days Recovery: 21–28 days

Infection risk — ANC <500 = febrile neutropenia emergency

Anemia

Nadir: 10–14 days Recovery: slower (RBC lifespan ~120 days)

Fatigue, dyspnea, tachycardia — may require transfusion or erythropoietin

Thrombocytopenia

Nadir: 8–14 days Recovery: 21 days

Bleeding risk — platelets <10,000 = transfusion threshold; <50,000 = bleeding precautions

Other Major Toxicities

ToxicityKey DrugsNursing Considerations
Nausea/VomitingMost cytotoxic agents — highly emetogenic: cisplatin, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicinPremedicate with antiemetics (ondansetron, dexamethasone, NK1 antagonists). Assess oral intake, hydration, weight. Small frequent meals.
MucositisAntimetabolites (methotrexate, 5-FU), anthracyclinesOral assessment with each contact. Saline rinses. Avoid harsh mouthwashes. Soft diet. Monitor for oral infections (Candida, HSV).
AlopeciaAnthracyclines, taxanes, alkylating agentsWarn patients it is expected and temporary. Hair typically regrows 3–6 months after treatment ends. Scalp cooling may reduce severity with some regimens.
CardiotoxicityDoxorubicin, trastuzumabCumulative lifetime dose limit for doxorubicin (550 mg/m²). Baseline and periodic ECHO or MUGA scan. Monitor for HF symptoms: dyspnea, edema, fatigue.
Peripheral neuropathyVincristine, taxanes, platinum compounds (oxaliplatin)Assess for numbness, tingling, weakness in hands/feet. Oxaliplatin: cold-induced — warn against touching cold objects. Fall risk assessment.
NephrotoxicityCisplatin, methotrexatePre-hydrate aggressively (cisplatin requires 1–2 L NS before/after). Monitor BUN, creatinine, urine output. Avoid NSAIDs. Leucovorin rescue for high-dose methotrexate.
Hemorrhagic cystitisCyclophosphamide, ifosfamideAdequate hydration, frequent voiding, mesna (uroprotectant). Monitor urine for hematuria.

Safe Handling of Chemotherapy (Hazardous Drugs)

Hazardous Drug Exposure Risks

Chemotherapy agents are classified as hazardous drugs — occupational exposure causes mutagenicity, carcinogenicity, teratogenicity, and organ toxicity in healthcare workers. PPE and institutional NIOSH protocols are mandatory.

  • !PPE required: chemotherapy gloves (double glove), chemotherapy gown (non-absorbent, closed front), eye protection, mask (in certain settings)
  • !Preparation in certified biological safety cabinet (BSC) by pharmacy
  • !Use Luer-Lock connections — never open-system tubing for chemo infusions
  • !Spill management: chemotherapy spill kit, seal area, double-bag waste, document
  • !Disposal: all contaminated supplies in yellow chemotherapy waste containers
  • !Pregnant nurses should not handle hazardous drugs — request reassignment per institutional policy
  • !Wash hands before gloving and after removing gloves

Extravasation — Vesicant vs. Irritant

Vesicant (most dangerous)

Causes severe tissue necrosis, ulceration, and permanent injury if extravasated. Examples: doxorubicin, vincristine, mechlorethamine, mitomycin.

If extravasation suspected:

  1. 1.Stop infusion IMMEDIATELY
  2. 2.Leave needle/catheter in place
  3. 3.Aspirate residual drug
  4. 4.Apply warm or cold per drug protocol
  5. 5.Administer antidote if available (e.g., dexrazoxane for anthracyclines)
  6. 6.Notify provider and document

Irritant (less severe)

Causes pain, burning, and inflammation at the infusion site without tissue necrosis. Examples: 5-fluorouracil, etoposide, carboplatin, dacarbazine.

Prevention focus:

  • Assess IV site before each chemotherapy infusion
  • Verify blood return before and during infusion
  • Monitor for pain, swelling, redness, or leakage throughout infusion
  • Use central venous access for repeated vesicant administration

NCLEX Pearls — Chemotherapy

Nadir = lowest blood count — occurs 7–14 days after chemo. Highest risk for infection and bleeding.
Fever >38°C (100.4°F) + ANC <500 = febrile neutropenia = EMERGENCY — call provider immediately
Doxorubicin: cumulative cardiotoxicity — lifetime dose limit. Monitor with ECHO/MUGA.
Cisplatin: nephrotoxicity — pre-hydrate aggressively, monitor BUN/creatinine, urine output
Vincristine: peripheral neuropathy (NOT bone marrow suppression — unusual among chemo drugs)
Extravasation of vesicant: STOP infusion, leave IV in place, aspirate, apply treatment per drug, call provider
Hazardous drug: double gloves, chemo gown, BSC preparation — pregnant nurses: reassignment
Antimetabolites act in S phase; vinca alkaloids and taxanes act in M phase
Patient education: neutropenia precautions, fever reporting, bleeding precautions, mucositis mouth care

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Oncology Nursing Society (ONS) · National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) · American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →