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Jennifer Good MD Hospice Medical Director, Home Nursing Agency Altoona, Pennsylvania Mary Mihalyo BS, PharmD, RPh Duquesne University Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania Objectives To understand the concept of “total pain” and how treating physical pain is foundational to treating total pain. To understand the difference between nociceptive and neuropathic pain and how treatment differs. To understand basic principles in starting and maintaining narcotic therapy for pain. To recognize that there are “preferred agents” for pain control in patients at the end of life based on their clinical condition and comorbidities. Mary Q. Mary Q. is a 91 year old woman referred to hospice with end stage dementia. She is nonverbal and requires assistance with all ADLs. She requires hand-feeding and is eating about 25% of her meals. She has lost 20 lbs over the past 3 months and currently weighs 90 lbs (41 kg). She has had a recent UTI which was treated in her nursing facility and has a Stage 2 decubitus ulcer. Lab evaluation is essentially normal except her creatinine is 1.0 mg/dl and albumin is 2.6 g/dl. She has been increasingly withdrawn and cries and grimaces with any cares or movement. Is Mary in pain? What should be done about it? Pain at the end of life Extremely common symptom Children: 62 – 90% have pain at the end of life1 Adults with non-cancer diagnoses: 40% have pain within days of death2 Adults with advanced cancer: 64% have pain (and 1/3 of these patients report pain as severe)3 1 American Pain Society. Guidelines for the Management of Cancer Pain in Adults and Children. Glenview IL 2003. 2 Lynn et al. Ann Intern Med 1997; 126(2): 97 – 106 3 Van Den Beuken et al. Ann of Oncol 2007; 18:1437 – 1449. Total Pain 4 Components Physical pain (usually from multiple sources) Emotional or psychic pain Social or interpersonal pain Spiritual or existential pain Three main steps to treating pain 1. Thorough assessment of all types of pain, and assessment of the risks and benefits of treatment 2. Treat each type of pain with individualized, etiology- specific interventions 3. Continuous reassessment of treatment goals (pain levels, functional status) and tolerability/adverse effects of prescribed treatments. Pain Assessment Gold standard is patient report Some patients unable to provide verbal report Children Adults with advanced dementia Patients with neurological impairment or critically ill Pain assessment tools Used in research settings to objectify responses Should use the same tool consistently Used in patient populations in whom verbal description of pain difficult Wong-Baker FACES pain scale Pain Processes Four Steps 1. Transduction (NSAIDs, Local Anesthetics & Anticonvulsants) 2. Transmission (Opioids, NMDA Antagonists) 3. Perception (Distraction, Relaxation, Imagery) 4. Modulation (Tricyclic Antidepressants, Opioids, GABA Agonists) Nociceptive Pain Pain caused by stimulation of nociceptive receptors on peripheral afferent nerves – generally 2 main types: Visceral—pain that originates in the thoracic, abdominal or pelvic viscera Somatic—activation of nociceptive receptors on body surface or musculoskeletal tissue Deep—stimulation of nociceptors in bones, ligaments, muscles. Superficial—stimulation of nociceptors in skin and superficial tissues Neuropathic Pain Pain resulting from direct injury or dysfunction of peripheral or CNS tissue. Two main types: Peripheral Central Common causes of pain at the End of Life Pain from pre-existing medical conditions Arthritis Migraines Muscle strain Neuropathy Pain related to underlying malignancy Tumor effects Paraneoplastic Bone metastases Bladder spasm Contractures/poor positioning Constipation Pressure ulcers Clearing up opioid misconceptions Opioids rarely cause significant respiratory depression Opioids rarely cause addiction in this patient population Opioids are rarely associated with significant tolerance Opioids rarely cause death Opioids rarely cause nausea that requires their discontinuation Goals of Pain and Symptom Management Improve quality of life Use of medication efficiently Minimize side effects Use appropriate routes of administration Keep medication dosage schedules simple Anticipate disease progression Give patient and care givers information and choices Master: Rules for Rational Drug Therapy Minimize number of drugs used Alternatives should be considered Start low and go slow Titrate to effect Educate patient/caregivers Review regularly Pain management “Rights” Right (Opioid) for Patient Right dose of drug Right route of administration Right time of administration (around the clock) Pain management is all about…. Age Renal function Hepatic function Etiology of pain Environment of care Ambulation status Renal Function Renal Function CrCl > 40 CrCl = 30-40 Preferred agents Oxymorphone Morphine Oxycodone Hydromorphone Methadone Oxycodone Hydromorphone Methadone CrCl = 10-30 Oxycodone Methadone CrCl < 10 Oxycodone Methadone Cockcroft Gault: CrCl (mg/min)= [(140- age) x IBW]/(SCr x 72) For women multiply by 0.85 Opioids to Avoid in Renal Failure Morphine Oxymorphone Hydromorphone Meperidine Propoxyphene Opioid Cost Comparison/Day MS Contin® 400 mg/day $20.02 Avinza® 400 mg/day $27.59 OxyContin® 320 mg/day $34.36 Duragesic® 200 mcg/hr $30.82 Methadone 40 mg/day soln $ 3.00 Methadone 40 mg/day tabs $ 0.60 Methadone 40 mg diskette $ 0.36 Why use Morphine? Morphine is WHO’s strong opioid of choice for cancer pain management Orally, no other strong opioid has a clear advantage over morphine Exception—renal failure; worry about accumulation of morphine 6-glucuronide Orally available in immediate release and long acting formulations Can also be given rectally, IV, SC, epidural, IT Pharmacokinetics of Morphine Onset of action: IV = 5 – 10 minutes SC/IM= 30 minutes PO= 1 hour Half-life : 3 – 4 hours (PO/PR/SC/IM) Steady state after 4 – 5 half lives (≈ 24 hours) Duration of effect with “immediate release” preparations – 3 – 4 hours, less with IV administration Principles Governing Morphine Use Address psychological, social and spiritual needs in addition to physical needs Use morphine when weak opioid plus NSAID are not effective Continue NSAIDs unless contraindicated Use oral route unless NPO Administer around the clock with rescue doses as needed Starting Morphine in patients with poorly controlled pain Use current opioid use as guideline (calculate equivalent morphine dose using equianalgesic tables) Decrease total equivalent oral daily morphine dose by approximately 25% - 50% to allow for incomplete cross-tolerance Divide calculated dose in half and give as SR every twelve hours Use immediate release morphine for incident or breakthrough pain Opioid Equivalents Drug Oral/Rectal (mg) IV/SC (mg) Morphine 30 10 Oxycodone 20 N/A Hydromorphone 7.5 1.5 Codeine 200 120 (IM only) Hydrocodone 30 N/A Oxymorphone 10 1 Fentanyl N/A 100 mcg John H. John H. is a 75 y/o with metastatic renal cell cancer with multiple bone metastases. His renal function is normal. His pain is poorly controlled in spite of Percocet 5/325 one to two tablets every four hours and ibuprofen. How would you transition Mr. H to morphine? Calculating Mr. H’s morphine dose: Mr. H has taken an average of 8 percocet daily over the past several days: 40 mg of oxycodone/day Using the equianalgesic table this is approximately 60 mg of morphine/day Normally, dose should be decreased approximately 25% - 50% (to be “on the safe side” and allow for incomplete cross tolerance) New dose of morphine SR 15 – 30 mg PO q12 hours Breakthrough dosing immediate release morphine 5 – 10 mg every 2 - 3 hours Titrating morphine dose for poorly controlled pain Mild to moderate pain—increase dose by 25 – 50% Moderate to severe pain—increase dose by 50 – 100% How quickly dose can be escalated depends on drug half-life: Immediate release can be safely increased every 2 – 4 hours Sustained release morphine can be safely increased every 24 hours Fentanyl (transdermal)can be safely increased every 72 hours Methadone can be safely increased every 4 – 5 days Is Oral Morphine Really Effective? Yes Median max dose is 15-20 mg Q4 hours Equivalent to 60 mg SR BID Few patients require more than 200 mg Q4 hours Equivalent to 600 mg SR BID SR tabs are equally effective as IR tabs If pain does not respond to oral morphine, SQ or IV will not work either What if Pain Seems Morphine Resistant? Unresolved spiritual or social issues? May require psychotherapy plus an anxiolytic or antidepressant Morphine poorly-responsive pain Bone Liver Neuropathic pain Crampy musculoskeletal pain Using SC or IV morphine Consider when patient no longer able to take PO Add up total 24 hour morphine dose and divide by 3— this is total 24 hour IV/SC dose Divide total 24 hour IV/SC dose by 24 in order to determine hourly dose Can also allow demand dosing for breakthrough pain—usually 50 – 100% of the hourly dose every 15 minutes John H. Mr. H’s illness has progressed considerably over the past 8 weeks. He is spending almost all his time in bed and is eating very poorly. He is now using MS Contin 100 mg q12 and uses MSIR 15 mg every 3 hours as needed (average 5 doses daily). His pain is relatively well controlled but his hospice nurse has noticed that some of his medications are missing. What do you do now? John H. Consider initiating SC morphine infusion Total oral morphine dose in 24 hours: 275 mg Equivalent IV morphine dose in 24 hours: 275 mg /3 or 91.6 mg Hourly IV dose: 91.6 mg/24 or 3.8 mg/hour Start IV morphine at 3 mg/hr Breakthrough dosing 1 mg SC q15 minutes PRN Be very careful about using continuous opioid infusions if opioid naïve. Ask “Why Not Use Morphine?” We should do all we can to use morphine! If a patient is inappropriate to receive morphine then ask “ Why Not Use Methadone?” Oxycodone should be reserved for patients who are inappropriate for morphine AND methadone Fentanyl should be reserved for patients who are NPO or those with poor environment of care If we can’t use morphine—Ask “Why not use methadone?” Methadone becomes opioid of choice if morphine is inappropriate because: No active metabolites Less N/V Less constipation NMDA receptor blockade Decreases pill burden Cost effective Advantages of methadone for pain at the end of life Lipophilicity allows for mucosal membrane absorption (oral, rectal, vaginal, sublingual) Only long acting opioid available in liquid formulation Most efficacious opioid for neuropathic pain due to its action at NMDA receptor Long half life but rapid onset of action (30 – 60 minutes) Safe in both renal and hepatic dysfunction (generally no dose reduction) Cheap Concerns about methadone Respiratory depression Arrhythmias (due to QT prolongation/torsade de pointes) Concomitant cardiac disease Concomitant use of other medications that prolong QT interval Atypical antipsychotics Antiarrhythmics Fluoroquinolone antibiotics Multiple drug interactions Conversion from other drugs is complicated Reports of deaths in community Traditional Myths Regarding Methadone It requires special licensure to prescribe and dispense methadone. FALSE! Methadone is only used in drug addiction. FALSE! Methadone is NEVER appropriate in hospice patients because: Half-life is too long Difficult to titrate Too many drug interactions Patients don’t like it FALSE! Dosing the opioid naïve patient Methadone 2.5 mg po qd hs or BID Increase total daily dose no more frequently than every 5 days Daily monitoring x initial 7 days Methadone Equianalgesic Dosing Ratio 24 Hour Oral Morphine Morphine:Methadone Ratio per 24 Hours Equivalent <30 mg/24 hrs 30 – 99 mg/24 hrs 100-299 mg/24 hrs 300-499 mg/24 hrs 500-999 mg/24 hrs >1000 mg/24 hrs 2:1 4:1 8:1 10:1 15:1 20:1 Storey P, Primer of Palliative Care 3rd ed AAHPM 2004 Methadone Conversion Protocols UK (Morley-Makin): 1. 2. 3. Stop previous opioid Start 1/10 of calculated morphine equivalent up to 30 mg every 3 hrs PRN for 5 days. On day 6 use last 48 hrs to calculate bid or tid dose. Edmonton Palliative Care (Bruera): 1. 2. 3. 4. Reduce current opioid by 1/3 each day for 3 days. Start methadone using a 10:1 conversion, dosed every 8 hrs. Replace deleted opioid with methadone, increasing the dose each day for 3 days. Use short acting opioid for BTP. Mihalyo Method Determine starting dose using Morley-Makin Method Give starting dose q12h ATC Breakthrough dose = scheduled dose q3h prn, max 2 doses per day OR Consider alternative short-acting opioid to manage BTP Adjust q12h scheduled dose on day 6 based on total amount given on day 5 Breakthrough dose =10% of 24hr dose q3hprn Suggested Guidelines for Considering Methadone Therapy Patient has: > 200mg oral morphine equivalent a day Neuropathic pain Side effects from other opioids Renal / liver failure True allergy to morphine Nursing Considerations Consult with “methadone champion” physician, nurse or pharmacist Instruct caregiver to call if pain not controlled or patient excessively sedated Call patient approximately 2 hours after 1st dose and 12 hours later Daily phone calls/visits until dose is stabilized (7-10 days) Methadone Side Effects Similar to other opioids except: Myoclonus is rare Less xerostomia Less constipation and nausea Hallucinations are uncommon Possible risk of Torsades de pointes – especially at higher doses (literature suggests that < 200 mg/d is safe) Less sedation however, sedation may be more problematic because of long half life. Methadone Advantages in Summary Long half life reduces need for frequent dosing 1 to 3 doses/day Effective for neuropathic pain Reduced opioid tolerance Fewer side effects Inexpensive Does not accumulate in renal failure Safe for morphine allergic patients Oxycodone Advantages Available in immediate release formulation (± acetaminophen) and sustained release Better in renal failure than morphine (although not as safe as methadone or fentanyl) Generally accepted by both patients and physicians Disadvantages High risk for diversion Cost No parenteral formulation Indications for oxycodone Contraindications or intolerance to morphine or methadone Renal dysfunction Fentanyl Transdermal (Duragesic®) Use lowest dose in opioid naïve patient Therapeutic levels not reached for 12 – 24 hours after patch applied, drug continues in blood stream for up to 24 hours after patch is removed Some patients may require patch every 48 hours Cachexia does not clearly impact drug absorption Useful in certain patients—renal failure, poor compliance, caregiver concerns Fentanyl Transmucosal (Actiq) Lozenge on a stick Available in 200, 400, 600, 800, 1200, 1600 mcg Only for patient receiving opioids (equivalent to 60 mg morphine daily)—not for opioid naïve Swallowed fentanyl only partially bioavailable (approx. 75% of dose) Ridiculously expensive (> $40 per 200 mcg lozenge; > $120 per 1600 mcg lozenge) Kadian® and Avinza® Kadian® Longest acting morphine preparation (q24 hour dosing) Bioequivalent with ER morphine products Morphine granules Capsules can be opened and given through PEG/NGT or sprinkled in food $$$$ Avinza® Mixture of immediate and timed released granules High doses risk fumarate toxicity Cannot use with alcohol (granules dissolve) Capsules can be opened and given through PEG/NGT $$$$ Not recommended Mixed agonist-antagonists pentazocine, butorphanol, nalbuphine, buprenorphine compete with agonists withdrawal analgesic ceiling effect high risk of psychotomimetic adverse effects with pentazocine, butorphanol Not recommended Meperidine (Demerol®) poor oral absorption normeperidine is a toxic metabolite longer half-life (6 hours), no analgesia psychotomimetic adverse effects, myoclonus, seizures if dosing q 3 h for analgesia, normeperidine builds up accumulates with renal failure Propoxyphene (Darvon® and Darvocet®) no better than placebo low efficacy at commercially available doses toxic metabolite at high doses OFF THE MARKET IN U.S. 2010 Bone/nerve compression pain NSAIDS Cox 1&2 mixed Ibuprofen (Motrin®,Advil®) Naproxen (Naprosyn®) Choline Mg Salsalycilate (Trilisate®) • Cox 2 Inhibitors Celecoxib (Celebrex®) Limited Use Corticosteroids Prednisone (Deltasone®) Dexamethasone (Decadron®) Neuropathic Pain Tricyclic Antidepressants (First line for non-stabbing pain) Desipramine (Norpramin®) Nortriptyline (Pamelor®) Doxepin (Sinequan®) Amitriptyline (Elavil®) Tricyclic Antidepressant SE’s DRUG AntiCholinergic Sedation Orthostatic Hypotension Seizures Conduction Abnormalities Amitriptyline ++++ ++++ +++ +++ +++ Desipramine ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ ++ +++ ++ ++ ++ Nortriptyline Doxipen Neuropathic Pain Anticonvulsants (First line for stabbing pain) Gabapentin (Neurontin®) 300mg TID Carbamazepine (Tegretol®) 200mg QID Divalproex Na (Depakote®) 1gm qd Mary Q. Appears to have persistent pain Age and renal function are important considerations (CrCl ≈23 ml/min by Cockcroft-Gault equation) Renal function is contraindication to NSAIDs Treatment options: Scheduled acetaminophen Methadone 2.5 mg PO qhs Fentanyl 12 mcg/hr (second line but reasonable in renal failure). Jennifer Good, MD [email protected] Mary Mihalyo, BS, PharmD [email protected]