Opioid Calculations: Asking The Right Questions To Find The
Transcription
Opioid Calculations: Asking The Right Questions To Find The
Opioid Calculations: Asking the Right questions to Find the Best Answers Cheryl K Genord, R.Ph. Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Pain Management Objectives • Understand the five step process to switch a patient from one opioid to another opioid. • Describe different types of break-through pain and recommend an opioid regimen to treat these pains. • Determine an appropriate strategy to change an opioid regimen, including both the regularly scheduled and rescue opioids. 2 Case Study • Patient is taking Oxycontin 60mg tid want to convert to Morphine extended release. • Oxycodone 20mg = Morphine 30 mg po Medication IV Eq PO • Oxycodone 60mg = Eq Morphine 10 30 Morphine 90 mg po 3 Codeine - 200 Fentanyl 0.1 - Hydrocodone - 30 Hydromorpho ne 1.5 7.5 Oxycodone - 20 Simple Calculations • Is that all there is to Opioid Conversions • If there was this would be a pretty short presentation • Where Calculations meets Art 4 Five Step Approach Step 1 Globally assess the patient Step 2 Determine total daily dose of current opioids McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. 5 Step 3 Decide which opioid analgesic will be used and calculate a proper dose Step 4 Individualize dosage based on info from Step 1 Step 5 Patient follow up and reassessment Step 1 • Don’t jump to calculator, assess first! P • Precipitating and Palliating Q • Quality R • Region S • Severity T • Temporal U • You 6 McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. Precipitating and palliating • What brings on or worsens the pain • What relieves the pain – Pharmacologic • What was the response • Any side effects – Non-Pharmacologic • What Medications have been tried to treat the pain 7 Quality • Pain description in patients own words – Stabbing, shooting, throbbing, aching, gnawing 8 Region and radiation • Where is the Pain? • Does the pain move anywhere? 9 Severity • Rating Scale – Pain right now, worse, best, average, one hour after you take the medication. 10 Temporal • Is the pain constant? • Does the pain come and go – how many times a day • How long does it last? 11 U - You • How does the pain affect your life? • Your ability to sleep, your appetite, your ability to ambulate 12 Step 2 Determine daily usage • Time to play Sherlock Holmes • Important to I spy with my little eye • Whole Truth and Nothing But the Truth 13 Step 3 – Decide which opioid will be used and calculate new dose • Decide which opioid to switch to: – Renal Function – Potential for drug interactions – Patient Specific Factors • • • • Patient ability to swallow or apply a transdermal system Nature of pain Patient’s previous history of response Safety concerns – Formulary, financial limitations – Availability of dosage • Get those Calculators ready! WAAAAAAIT 14 Basics of opioid Metabolism • Production of both inactive and active metabolism • Opioids differ in how they are metabolized • People differ in how they metabolize opioids • Extensive first-pass in liver – Phase 1 (modification reactions) • CYP enzymes (3A4, 2D6) – Phase 2 (conjugation reactions) • Glucuronidation 15 metabolic Pathways Opioid Phase 1 Phase 2 Metabolites* Morphine - glucuronidation M3G, M6G Codeine CYP2D6 glucuronidation C6G, morphine Hydrocodone CYP2D6 - hydromorphone - glucuronidation H3G Oxycodone CYP2D6, CYP3A4 - oxymorphone, noroxycodone Methadone CYP3A4, CYP2B6 - - Fentanyl CYP3A4 - - Hydromorphone 16 Clinical Implications • Most opioids metabolized by CYP enzymes – Substantial drug interaction potential • Cannot predict patient response – Need to individualize therapy – Opioid trials for tolerability/analgesic assessment • Confounding medical conditions – Hepatic/renal impairment – Accumulation of active metabolites and increased ADE’s 17 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624. 18 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624. 19 Morphine • Morphine M3G (55%) and M6G (10%) • Morphine not altered significantly in renal insufficiently, but metabolites will accumulate • M6G 2-4x more potent than morphine, with higher levels in CNS • M3G lacks analgesic properties but has neuroexcitatory effects • Effects of M6G and M3G magnified in kidney disease • Avoid use in renal dysfunction, especially hemodialysis • Bioavailability increased in cirrhotics • Monitor response in hepatic dysfunction – Suggest increasing dosing interval 20 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624 Johnson SJ. Pain Treatment Topics. June 2007 Codeine • Codeine (prodrug) C6G (81%) and morphine (10%) • All compounds renally excreted and can accumulate • CYP2D6 poor/rapid metabolizers do not respond well to codeine – Poor: no conversion into morphine (no analgesia) – Rapid: too much conversion (intoxication) • Chronic codeine dosing is proposed to accumulate to toxic levels in ⅔ of HD patients • Avoid codeine in patients with renal dysfunction, on dialysis, or with severe hepatic dysfunction 21 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624 Johnson SJ. Pain Treatment Topics. June 2007 Hydrocodone/Hydromorphone • Hydrocodone (prodrug) metabolized into hydromorphone via 2D6 – Poor metabolizers experience little analgesia • Hydromorphone H3G (37%) • H3G no analgesic properties but can cause neuroexcitation (≈M3G) • Renally excreted/accumulate in dysfunction • Water soluble, small VD, low molecular weight – Re-dosing after HD may be appropriate • Avoid hydrocodone in hepatic failure 22 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624 Johnson SJ. Pain Treatment Topics. June 2007 Oxycodone • Oxycodone noroxycodone (3A4) and oxymorphone (2D6) • Primary effects governed by parent drug • Renal impairment increases concentration of oxycodone by 50% • High efficiency dialyzers enhance plasma clearance by 48% • Re-dosing after HD may be appropriate • Dose reductions 30-50% in severe hepatic impairment 23 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624 Johnson SJ. Pain Treatment Topics. June 2007 Methadone/Fentanyl • • • • Fully synthetic, structurally unrelated to morphine Do not produce active metabolites Inactive metabolites by (3A4) Exerts both analgesic and toxic effects through parent compound – Methadone acts also on NMDA receptors • Fentanyl affected more by hepatic blood flow than impairment – Can be used in hepatic dysfunction • Avoid methadone in severe hepatic failure – Risk of accumulation • Minimal, if any, adjustments for renal dysfunction 24 Smith HS. Mayo Clin Proc. July 2009;84(7):613-624 Johnson SJ. Pain Treatment Topics. June 2007 Step 3 – Decide which opioid will be used and calculate new dose • It is time to get those Calculators ready! • Look back at least 24 hours and obtain average daily dose of all opioids • Convert all opioids to equivalent units using the Equianalgesic Dosing Table • Using knowledge of drug therapy selection and patient specific factors, switch it up! – Renal/Hepatic impairment – Drug Interaction – Patient specific factors • Determine what to use – Long acting and/or short acting or both 25 McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. Titrating opioid Regimens with Around the clock and rescue Types of Breakthrough Pain • Spontaneous –no precipitation stimulus – occurs without warning and is acutely severe. (neuropathic) – Immediate release opioids plus co-analgesics • Incident pain – volitional – Patient precipitated movement – Immediate release opioids on as needed basis prophylactically – Rescue dose = 10%-15& of daily dose q4hprn • Incident pain – nonvolitional – Sneezing, bladder spasm, coughing – Immediate release opioids on as needed basis – Rescue dose = 10%-15% of daily dose q4hprn • End of Dose – Pain that recures before the next schedulce dose – Increase dose and/or frequency in ATC opioid McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. 26 Conversion Examples • Morphine 20mg IV: – ____ mg PO morphine • Oxycodone 60mg PO: – ____ mg PO hydrocodone • Hydromorphone 2.25mg IV: – ____ mg IV fentanyl • Hydrocodone 30mg PO: – ____ mg IV morphine 27 Medication IV Eq PO Eq Morphine 10 30 Codeine - 200 Fentanyl 0.1 - Hydrocodone - 30 Hydromorphone 1.5 7.5 Oxycodone - 20 Fentanyl Patch Conversion Drug • USA Daily Dosage PO MS 60-134 135-224 225-314 315-404 IV MS 10-22 23-37 38-52 53-67 PO Oxy 30-67 68-112 113-157 158-202 PO HM 8-17 18-28 29-39 40-51 IV HM 1.5-3.4 3.5-5.6 5.7-7.9 8-10 Fentanyl 25 mcg/h Drug • CAN 28 50 mcg/h 75 mcg/h 100 mcg/h Daily Dosage PO MS 60-134 135-224 225-314 315-404 IV MS 20-44 45-60 61-75 76-90 PO Oxy 30-67 68-112 113-157 158-202 PO HM 8-16 17-28 29-39 40-51 IV HM 4-8.4 8.5-14.4 14.5-19.5 19.6-25.5 Fentanyl Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc; Oct 2011 25 mcg/h 50 mcg/h 75 mcg/h 100 mcg/h What about Chronic pain conversions • Hydromorphone – Conversion ratio of parenteral hydromorphone to oral hydromorphone of 1:2 • Morphine – Conversion ratio of pareteral morpine to oral morphine of 1:3 29 Step 4 Individualize dosage • After calculations, time to individualize! • Three options: – No change, increase, decrease • Things to consider (from “PQRSTU”) – – – – – – Type of pain (cancer, acute, chronic, neuropathic) Age of patient Location/status of patient Worsening or improving Incomplete cross tolerance (0-50%) Breakthrough needs (10-15% of total per dose) • More art than science • Divide total dose for the new dosing interval 30 McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. Incomplete Cross Tolerance • Tolerance – continued exposure to a drug reduces its effectiveness. • When switching opioid – see increase in opioid sensitivity • When converting from one opioid to another –reduce the calculated dose by 25-50% 31 What to do increase, decrease or keep the dose the same • Increase the calculated dose – Severe cancer pain in hospital • Same as calculated dose – Did not switch to a different opioid – Old opioid has not been used for more than one week • Decrease the calculated doses – Cross Tolerance – Elderly patient – Going home 32 Pop Quiz - Individualize dosage 72 yo w/osteoarthritis & difficulty swallowing – Hydrocodone/APAP tablets to elixir 27 yo POD2 s/p ACL reconstruction – Fentanyl IV to hydrocodone/APAP 55 yo w/ evolving metastatic breast cancer – MS-IR to long acting oxycodone 94 yo, ECF resident w/ chronic back pain – Oxycodone to hydromorphone 63 yo w/ shoulder pain, developed rash – MS-IR to oxycodone 33 Step 5 Reassess • Reassess pain with a patient monitoring plan • Fine tune the total daily dose – Adjustments in both short and long acting Subjective Parameters Objective Parameters Monitoring for therapeutic effectiveness -Pain rating -Performance of ADLs, sleep, ambulate -Sleeping longer -ambulating further -Limiting use of rescue opioids Monitoring for potential toxicity -Complaints of constipation, nausea, sedation, confusion, hives -Level of arousal/sedation -Respiratory rate -Pinpoint pupils -Bowel movement frequency 34 McPherson ML. ASHP Bethesda, MD. 2010. Acute Pain • What Stronger? – Percocet (Oxycodone) 5/325 2 tab – Norco (Hydrocodone) 5/325 2 tab – Morphine 3 mg IV – Hydromorphone 0.5 mg 35 Genord’s Opioid Analgesic Potency Classes 36 Chronic Pain/Longer term Acute Pain/Acute on Chronic Pain • Time to use what we learnt 37 Case 1 • DG is a 62yo man recently diagnosed with colon caner admitted for surgical resection of the lesion. Post op he was given hydromorphone 1-2 mg IV q4h. – Day 1 hydromorphone 12 mg IV – Day 2 hydromorphone 11mg IV – Day 3 hydromorphone 8 mg IV • He reports his pain as 3 after taking hydromorphone. • On day 4 he is preparing for discharge. CR has a history of itching with oxycodone and morphine. Oral Hydromorphone has been effective in the past. • What oral opioid regimen should be tried prior to discharge. 38 Case 1 • Step 1 Assess – DG has used less on day 2 than day 1. – Good pain control with hydromorphone – Pain is consistent with normal post op course. – He has used po hydromorphone in the past and it has been effective. • Step 2 Total Daily Dose – 24 hours day 2 – Hydromorphone 8mg IV. (TDD) 39 Case 1 • Step 3 Determine new opioid and calculate new dose – Morphine and Oxycodone makes pt itch so transition to po hydromorphone – Calculate equianalgesic dose X mg TDD oral HM 7.5 mg oral HM ________________ = _______________ 8 mg IV HM 1.5 mg IV HM X = 40 mg • Step 4 – Individualize – Well controlled – no need to increase – Pain is getting better every day expect reduce dose requirement each day. – No need to decrease dose for incomplete cross tolerance – Hydromorphone is available in 2,4,and 8mg tab. Dosed as q4h – 4 mg q4h (24 mg TDD) 40 Case 2 • LP is a 68 yo man with end-stage lung cancer. He is receiving MS Contin 120mg Q12h as well as Percocet 5/325 1-2 q4h prn. LP tells you that when he experiences unanticipated unprovoked pain he takes 2 Percocet tab about 4 times per day. This pain occurs at different times during the day and is achy and throbbing in nature. The Percocets are not effective (PS 8 down to 6). LP is growing weaker and is now experiencing shortness of breath occasionally as well • What would you recommend? 41 Case 2 • Step1 – Patient is having spontaneous/incidental pain that does not seem to be neuropathic in nature. – Pain does not seem to be end of dose pain – Percocet 2 tablets has been used for this pain. • Step 2 – Morphine 240mg/day – Percocet 40mg/day 42 Case 2 • Step 3 Determine new opioid and calculate new dose Breakthrough pain – 10%-15% total daily dose – 24-32mg of Morphine = 16-24 mg of Oxycodone Percocet is too low at 10mg dose. • Step 4 – Individualize – Before looking at increasing long-acting need to get breakthrough dose appropriate • Morphine 30mg IR – If patient becomes weaker could switch to oral solution – too weak to swallow concentrated solution could be instilled in the buccal cavity 43 Questions 44