| Literature DB >> 18231648 |
Abstract
Despite great advances in the fields of pain management and palliative care, pain directly or indirectly associated with a cancer diagnosis remains significantly undertreated. The present paper reviews the current standard for cancer pain management and highlights new treatments and targeted interventional techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer pain management; palliative care
Year: 2008 PMID: 18231648 PMCID: PMC2216422 DOI: 10.3747/co.2008.175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Oncol ISSN: 1198-0052 Impact factor: 3.677
Summary of opioid dosing in cancer pain management
| Initial dosage of “strong opioid” in opioid-naive patient:
Fit patient: Morphine 5 mg orally every 4 hours or equivalent Frail patient: Morphine 2.5 mg orally every 4 hours or equivalent Thereafter, titrate to pain relief or unacceptable side effects. Fentanyl patches should not be prescribed for the opioid-naive patient. (If patients are on “weak opioids”—for example, Tylenol 3, combined acetaminophen–oxycodone—they are not opioid-naïve!) |
| Dosage of “strong opioid” in patients already on opioids (including “weak opioids”):
Determine starting dose of “strong opioid” by using equianalgesic table. |
| When rotating opioids, reduce the calculated dose of the new opioid by approximately 30% (incomplete cross tolerance). |
Opioid equianalgesics
| Drug | Dose | |
|---|---|---|
| Oral | Subcutaneous | |
| Codeine | 100 mg | — |
| Morphine | 10 mg | 5 mg |
| Oxycodone | 5 mg | — |
| Hydromorphone | 2 mg | 1 mg |
Common opioid side effects and suggested management strategies
| Side effect | Management strategy |
|---|---|
| Nausea | Haloperidol 0.5 mg as needed |
| Prochlorperazine 10 mg as needed | |
| Sedation | Educate and reassure as to transient nature of effect |
| For persistent sedation, decrease dose, rotate opioid, or consider stimulant (methylphenidate) | |
| Constipation | Stool softener (docusate), |
| Urinary retention | Decrease dose or rotate opioid |
| Pruritus | Antihistamine |
| Consider rotation to synthetic opioid | |
| Opioid toxicity(respiratory depression, | Decrease opioid dose |
| Consider opioid rotation | |
| Maximize adjuvant analgesics | |
| Reserve use of naloxone for diagnostic purposes and in setting of severe toxicity only | |
| Rule out sepsis, hypercalcemia, or other metabolic disturbances that may have predisposed |
Fear of respiratory depression is a common barrier to aggressive pain managment. Although respiratory depression is a serious side effect, it is quite rare in patients whose opioids have been appropriately titrated. Tolerance with regard to respiratory depression follows downregulation of the μ 2 agonist receptor subtype. Downregulation occurs rapidly when opioid dosing is routine.
Suggested titration of gabapentin in setting of neuropathic pain
| Day 1 | Initiate 300 mg at half strength for 3 days |
| Day 4 | Increase to 300 mg twice daily for 3 days |
| Day 7 | Increase to 300 mg three times daily |
| Subsequent days | Continue to titrate based on response to a maximum of 3600 mg daily |
In setting of normal creatinine clearance.
Clinically significant drug–drug interactions with methadone
| Clinically significant CYP3A4 inducers (that is, they lower methadone concentration) | Amprenavir, efavirenz, nelfinavir, nevirapine, phenobarbital, phenytoin, rifampin, ritonavir |
| Possibly clinically significant CYP3A4 inducers | Carbamazepine, chronic ethanol |
| Clinically significant CYP3A4 inhibitors (that is, they increase methadone concentration) | Benzodiazepines, ciprofloxacin, ethanol, fluconazole |
| Possibly clinically significant CYP3A4 inhibitors | Cimetidine, fluoxetine, omeprazole, quinidine, paroxetine |
Common locations along the sympathetic chain amenable to neurolysis
| Sympathetic ganglia | Pain syndrome |
|---|---|
| Cervicothoracic (stellate) ganglion | Neuropathic pain from head and neck cancers, post-mastectomy pain, superior sulcus syndrome |
| Celiac plexus | Upper abdominal or back pain associated with cancer of the esophagus, pancreas, liver, or stomach |
| Lumbar ganglia | Flank pain or lower abdominal pain from urologic cancers |
| Superior hypogastric plexus | Lower pelvic pain from colon, rectal, or gynecologic cancers |
| Ganglion impar | Perineal and rectal pain from anal or rectal cancer |