* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download R1300-5204_Eric_Widera
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Initiating Therapy, Modifying Dosing, and Discontinuing Use of ER/LA Opioid Analgesics Unit 2 Eric Widera, M.D. Objectives • Access federal and state regulations. • Select correct dose when initiating therapy. • Convert from IR to ER/LA opioids and from one ER/LA to another. • Define warning signs of respiratory depression. • Discuss need for tapering doses before discontinuing and ER/LA opioid. • Describe when and how to supplement ER/LA opioids with IR analgesics, opioids, and nonopioids Comply w/ current federal & state laws & regulations that govern the use of opioid therapy for pain - Federal • Code of Federal Regulations, Title 21 Section 1306: rules governing the issuance & filling prescriptions pursuant to section 309 of the Act (21 USC 829) - www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/21cfr/cfr/2106cfrt.htm • United States Code (USC) - Controlled Substances Act, Title 21, Section 829: prescriptions - www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov/21cfr/21usc/829.htm - State • Database of state statutes, regulations, & policies for pain management - www.medscape.com/resource/pain/opioid-policies - www.painpolicy.wisc.edu/database-statutes-regulations-otherpolicies-pain-management www.medscape.com/resource/pain/opioid-policies#CA Case: Wilma 73 Year Old Female Case: Wilma • Advanced colon cancer − w/ peritoneal & liver metastases • Presents w/ increasing abdominal pain −Wakes frequently at night in severe pain • Regimen: oxycodone IR 5 mg q6h + 1 at bedtime −She has some resistance to opioids • Morphine means she’s about to “die” & methadone is for “addicts” • Does not like to take a lot of pills Short Acting vs Long Acting? Modified-release or long half-life drugs (extended release ER/ long-acting LA) • Chronic pain • Improved treatment adherence • Possibility of - less pain fluctuation - better sleep • Poor evidence that long term opioid therapy improves pain or function Von Korff M, Kolodny A, Deyo RA, Chou R. Long-term opioid therapy reconsidered. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(5):325. Benefits of Short-acting immediaterelease (IR) opioids • Acute pain • Breakthrough pain • Dose finding • Ability to crush or give as a liquid • Those who are not yet “tolerant” to opioids Case: Wilma • Regimen: −Oxycodone IR 5 mg q6h −Oxycodone IR 5mg at bedtime • She has some resistance to opioids • Morphine means she’s about to “die” & methadone is for “addicts” • Does not like to take a lot of pills • Consider rotating to a ER/LA opioid: fewer pills & may allow her to sleep through the night −Her total current oxycodone dose is 25 mg/d • She is NOT opioid tolerant Initiating a ER/LA Opioid in an OpioidTolerant Patient • Patients considered opioid tolerant are those who are taking at least - 60 mg oral morphine/day For 1 week - 25 mcg transdermal fentanyl/hour or longer - 30 mg oral oxycodone/day - 8 mg oral hydromorphone/day - 25 mg oral oxymorphone/day - An equianalgesic dose of another opioid Picking A Pain Medication and Dosage • Clinician experience • Patient experience • Patient’s health status • Formulation availability, cost and third-party coverage • Know when and how to supplement ER/LA opioids with immediate release analgesics (opioid and non-opioid) Extended Release Oral Opioids • Common Oral Preparations available: - Morphine (MS Contin), Oxycodone (Oxycontin), Methadone • Steady-state • Titration Extended Release Oral Opioids • Common Oral Preparations available: - Morphine (MS Contin), Oxycodone (Oxycontin), Methadone • Steady-state • Titration • A Word on Crushing A Word On Methadone Deaths reported to poison centers per 10,000 single substance exposures A Word on Transdermal Fentanyl • No analgesic effect for 12-24 hrs • Steady state only after 72 hr • Do not use for initial dose titration • Fentanyl levels decay with half-life of 17 hrs after removal of a patch • Need “Breakthrough” medication How Much Pain Medication to Rotate to for Wilma? The Good and Bad of Conversion Tables Drug PO IV Morphine Hydrocodone Oxycodone Hydromorphone Fentanyl* Methadone * 2:1 rule for patch (50 mg PO morphine approx 25 mcg/hr TD fentanyl) The Good and Bad of Conversion Tables Drug PO IV Morphine 30 mg 10 mg Hydrocodone 30 mg -- Oxycodone 20 mg -- Hydromorphone 7.5 mg 1.5 mg Fentanyl* Dosing Chart* 0.1 mg (100 mcg) Methadone see dosing guide * 2:1 rule for patch (50 mg PO morphine approx 25 mcg/hr TD fentanyl) Oral to Parenteral Conversion Ratios J Pain Symptom Manage 2009;38:409e 417 Equianalgesic Dose Ratio Ranges for Opioid Rotation to Morphine J Pain Symptom Manage 2009;38:409e 417 Mu-Opioid Receptors & Incomplete Cross-Tolerance • Mu opioids bind to mu receptors Drug 2 MOR-1D MOR-1C MOR-1B1 MOR-1A Drug 1 MOR-1 - Mu opioids produce subtly different pharmacologic response based on distinct activation profiles of mu receptor subtypes • May help explain - Inter-patient variability in response to mu opioids - Incomplete cross-tolerance among mu opioids Potency • Many mu-receptor subtypes Mu-opioid receptor subtype Limitations of Conversion Tables • Single-dose potency studies using a specific route, conducted in patients w/ limited opioid exposure • Did not consider − Chronic dosing − High opioid doses − Other routes − Different pain types − Comorbidities or organ dysfunction − Gender, ethnicity, advanced age, or concomitant medications − Direction of switch from 1 opioid to another − Interpatient variability in pharmacologic response to opioids − Incomplete cross-tolerance among mu opioids Fine PG, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:418-25. Knotkova H, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:426 -39. Shaheen PE, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:409-17. Webster LR, et al. Pain Med. 2012;13:562-70. Reasons for Opioid Rotation • Poor opioid responsiveness − Dose titration yields intolerable/unmanageable AEs − Poor analgesic efficacy despite dose titration • Other potential reasons − Patient desire or need to try a new formulation − Cost or insurance issues − Adherence issues − Concern about abuse or diversion − Change in clinical status requires an opioid w/ different PK − Problematic drug-drug interactions Fine PG, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:418-25. Knotkova H, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:426-39. Cruciani R, et al. Oncology. 2005;19:1-4. Guidelines for Opioid Rotation • Calculate equianalgesic dose of new opioid from EDT • Reduce calculated equianalgesic dose by 25%-50%* −Select % reduction based on clinical judgment • Closer to 50% reduction if patient is − Receiving a relatively high dose of current opioid regimen − Not Caucasian − Elderly or medically frail • Closer to 25% reduction if patient − Does not have these characteristics − Is switching to a different administration route of same drug Fine PG, et al. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2009;38:418-25. Opioid Rotation for Wilma Convert Wilma’s Oxycodone to MS Contin Opioid Rotation for Wilma Convert Wilma’s Oxycodone to MS Contin #1 Add up total opioids used in 24 hours: 5 mg oxycodone x 5 = 25mg/24hrs #2 Convert to New Opioid 25 mg PO Oxycodone x 30 mg PO Morphine 20 mg PO Oxycodone 37.5 mg PO Morphine/24hrs #3 Divide new 24 hour drug dose by number of times to be given per day MS Contin: 37.5 mg/2 for q12h dose ~> 19 mg MsContin PO q12h #4 Account for residual drug in system, cross-tolerance, patient factors by taking 25-50% off = Opiate Side Effects: Sedation • Distinguish sedation from exhaustion • Resolves over 2-5 days after achieving steady state • Obtain patient and family goals • If drowsiness continues − Alternate opiate or route may help − May need to reduce dose ER/LA Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression • Respiratory depression more likely to occur −In elderly, cachectic, or debilitated patients—may have altered pharmacokinetics or altered clearance • ER/LA opioids contraindicated in patients w/ respiratory depression or conditions that increase risk of life-threatening respiratory depression −If given concomitantly w/ other drugs that depress respiration ER/LA Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression • Reduce the risk of respiratory depression −Proper dosing & titration are essential −Do not overestimate the dose when converting patients from another opioid product • Can result in fatal O/D w/ first dose −Instruct patients to swallow tablets/capsules whole • Dose from cut, crushed, dissolved, or chewed tablets/capsules may be fatal, particularly in opioidnaïve individuals Continuing or Increasing Dosing • Therapy should be goal-directed • Monitor: • pain intensity • functional status • progress toward therapy goals • adverse effects • adherence with prescribed pharmacologic and ancillary treatment Titrating dosages • Titration should be based on efficacy and tolerability. • If uncontrolled after 24 hrs and using at least 3 breakthrough medications increase: − Mild to moderate pain: 25-50% of total dose − Moderate to severe pain: 50-100% of total dose − Or increase by total dose of rescue medication over the last 24hrs Implement appropriate exit strategies to safely discontinue ER/LA opioids • Patient is not improving and may have opioid- resistant pain • Some patients experience improvement in function and pain control when chronic opioids are stopped • Patient may have a new problem and may need substance abuse treatment • Be clear that you will continue to work on pain management using non-opioid therapy • Taper patient slowly to prevent opioid withdrawal Case 2: Mrs F • Mrs F has been taking methadone for back pain but has required escalating doses during the last 3 months without any noted pain relief. • Since her pain is not opioid-responsive, you would like to taper her off methadone and try another approach. She is currently taking methadone 40 mg TID and there is no acute need to taper her rapidly, so a slow taper as follows is reasonable. Suggested Tapering Regimens for Long-Acting Agents • Methadone − Decrease dose by 20%-50% per day to 30 mg/day, then… − Decrease by 5 mg/day every 3-5 days to 10 mg/day, then... − Decrease by 2.5 mg/day every 3-5 days. • Morphine CR (controlled-release) − Decrease dose by 20%-50% per day to 45 mg/day, then… − Decrease by 15 mg/day every 2-5 days. • Oxycodone CR (controlled-release) − Decrease by 20%-50% per day to 30 mg/day, then − Decrease by 10 mg/day every 2-5 days USVA (U.S. Veterans Affairs Administration). Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of Opioid Therapy for Chronic Pain. 2003; Appendix Y: 52-53. Mrs F’s Taper • Start with 10 mg methadone tablets: − Week 1: 30 mg TID − Week 2: 20 mg TID − Week 3: 15 mg TID − Week 4: 10 mg TID − Week 5: 10 mg qam, 5 mg qnoon, 10 mg qpm − Week 6: 5 mg qam, 5 mg qnoon, 5 mg qpm − Week 7: 5 mg qam, 5 mg qnoon, 5 mg qpm • Switch to 5mg methadone tablets… − Week 8: 5 mg qam, 2.5 mg qnoon, 5 mg qpm − Week 9: 2.5 mg qpm, 2.5 mg qnoon, 5 mg qpm − Week 10: 2.5 mg TID − Week 11: 2.5 mg BID − Week 12: 2.5 mg Daily • Then discontinue