| Literature DB >> 23503653 |
Abstract
Breakthrough pain (BTP) is a transitory pain that occurs despite the use of long-term, around-the-clock analgesia. It is highly prevalent in certain populations and places a significant burden on patients, their families, caregivers, and health-care systems. Despite its prevalence and impact, BTP is sometimes unrecognized and often undertreated. Various formulations of fentanyl - a rapid-onset opioid with short duration of action - are available for the management of BTP. The efficacy of formulations using transmucosal, transbuccal, sublingual, and intranasal administration routes has been demonstrated for BTP treatment in clinical trials. However, a lack of head-to-head trials evaluating their relative efficacy makes it challenging for physicians to reach informed decisions on the most efficacious intervention for individual patients. In the absence of clear data on the relative efficacy of fentanyl formulations, prescribing decisions need to be based on physician understanding and experience and product cost and availability, taking into account the individual patient's needs, the ability of the patient or caregivers to administer medication, and the patient's wishes. This review evaluates current pharmacologic methods of alleviating BTP and discusses factors that should be considered when selecting the most appropriate formulation for individual patients. With the range of fentanyl formulations available, it is now possible to successfully address BTP in the majority of patients.Entities:
Keywords: breakthrough pain; fentanyl; pain; rapid-onset opioid
Year: 2013 PMID: 23503653 PMCID: PMC3594916 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S40745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Key pharmacokinetic parameters for approved formulations of fentanyl for breakthrough pain22,28–30,32,33
| Agent | Available strengths | Absolute bioavailability | Fraction absorbed transmucosally | Tmax | Cmax | AUC0–inf | t½ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate (ACTIQ®) | 200 μg | 50% compared to intravenous fentanyl | 25% though buccal mucosa | 20–40 minutes (range 20–80 minutes) for doses from 200 μg to 1600 μg | 0.39–2.51 ng/mL for doses from 200 μg to 1600 μg | 102 ng-minute/mL for 200 μg to 1026 ng-minute/mL for 1600 μg (AUC0–1440) | 193–386 minutes for doses from 200 μg to 1600 μg (mean) |
| Fentanyl buccal tablets (FENTORA®) | 100 μg | 65% | 48% though buccal mucosa | 35–45 minutes (range 20–181 minutes) for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 0.25–1.59 ng/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 0.98–9.05 ng-hour/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 2.63–11.70 hours for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg |
| Fentanyl buccal soluble film (ONSOLIS®) | 200 μg | 71% | 51% though buccal mucosa | 60 minutes (range 45–240 minutes) for 800 μg dose | 0.38–2.19 ng/mL for doses from 200 μg to 1200 μg | 3.46–20.43 ng-hour/mL for doses from 200 μg to 1200 μg | ~14 hours (terminal |
| Sublingual fentanyl tablet (ABSTRAL®) | 100 μg | 54% | N/A | 30–60 minutes (range 16–240 minutes) for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 0.187–1.42 ng/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 0.974–8.95 ng-hour/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 5.02–10.1 hours for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg |
| Sublingual fentanyl spray (SUBSYS™) | 100 μg | 76% | N/A | 0.69–1.25 hours (range 0.08–4.00 hours) for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 0.20–1.61 ng/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 1.25–10.38 ng-hour/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 5.25–11.99 hours for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg |
| Intranasal fentanyl spray (Instanyl®) | 50 μg | 89% | Not relevant | 12–15 minutes for doses from 50 μg to 200 μg | 0.35–1.2 ng/mL for doses from 50 μg to 200 μg | N/A | Elimination |
| Fentanyl pectin nasal spray (Lazanda®) | 100 μg | N/A PI states that bioavailability is 20% higher than oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate | N/A | 0.33–0.35 hours for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 351.5–2844.0 pg/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 2460.5–17,272 ng-hour/mL for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg | 15–24.9 hours for doses from 100 μg to 800 μg |
Notes: aUnless otherwise stated; bparameters based on arterial sampling.
Abbreviations: AUC0_Inf, area under the plasma concentration-time curve from time zero to infinity; Cmax, maximum plasma drug concentration; N/A, not available; PI, prescribing information; t½, half-life; Tmax, time taken to reach Cmax
Potential advantages and disadvantages of different routes for available breakthrough pain treatments (adapted from Nicholson and Agarwala75 and product prescribing information)22,28–30,32,33
| The mucosally absorbed dose (25%) bypasses hepatic first-pass metabolism Rapid onset of action | Relatively low surface area for absorption | Farrar et al | |
| The mucosally absorbed dose (48% with buccal tablets; 51% with soluble film) bypasses hepatic first-pass metabolism | Lower permeability via buccal membrane compared with sublingual membrane | Portenoy et al (FENTORA®) | |
| The mucosally absorbed dose bypasses hepatic first-pass metabolism | May be difficult for patients with dry mouth/mucositis | Rauck et al (ABSTRAL®) | |
| The systemically absorbed dose bypasses hepatic first-pass metabolism | Patients may require training in the correct administration technique for intranasal sprays | Kress et al (Instanyl®) |
Note: aACTIQ is not indicated for use in pediatric patients.