| Literature DB >> 23900563 |
Abstract
Chronic pain is largely underdiagnosed, often undertreated, and expected to increase as the American population ages. Many patients with chronic pain require long-term treatment with analgesic medications, and pain management may involve use of prescription opioids for patients whose pain is inadequately controlled through other therapies. Yet because of the potential for abuse and addiction, many clinicians hesitate to treat their patients with pain with potentially beneficial agents. Finding the right opioid for the right patient is the first - often complicated - step. Ensuring that patients continue to properly use the medication while achieving therapeutic analgesic effects is the long-term goal. Combined with careful patient selection and ongoing monitoring, new formulations using extended-release technologies incorporating tamper-resistant features may help combat the growing risk of abuse or misuse, which will hopefully reduce individual suffering and the societal burden of chronic pain. The objective of this manuscript is to provide an update on extended-release opioids and to provide clinicians with a greater understanding of which patients might benefit from these new opioid formulations and how to integrate the recommended monitoring for abuse potential into clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: abuse prevention; chronic pain; extended release; opioid analgesics
Year: 2013 PMID: 23900563 PMCID: PMC3726523 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S38562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Figure 1Putative pharmacokinetic advantages of extended-release versus immediate-release opioids.26,33
Extended-release opioids53–66
| Opioid | Generic name | Brand name | Available doses | Dosing interval |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphine | Morphine sulfate ER capsules | Avinza | 30, 45 | Once daily |
| Morphine sulfate and naltrexone | Embeda | – | Once or twice daily | |
| HCl ER capsules | ||||
| Morphine sulfate ER capsules | Kadian | 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 100 | Once or twice daily | |
| Morphine sulfate CR tablets | MS Contin | 15, 30, 60, 100 | Every 8–12 hours | |
| Morphine sulfate SR tablets | Oramorph SR | 15, 30, 60, 100 mg | Every 8–12 hours | |
| Oxymorphone | Oxymorphone HCl ER tablets | Opana ER | 5, 10, 20, 30, 40 mg | Every 12 hours |
| Hydromorphone | Hydromorphone HCl ER tablets | Exalgo | 8 | Once daily |
| Tapentadol | Tapentadol ER oral tablets | Nucynta ER | 50, 100, 150, 200, 250 mg | Every 12 hours |
| Oxycodone | Oxycodone HCl CR tablets | OxyContin | 10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60 | Every 12 hours |
| Methadone | Methadone HCl tablets | Dolophine | 5, 10 mg | Every 8–12 hours |
| Methadose | 10 mg | |||
| Fentanyl | Fentanyl transdermal system | Duragesic | 12 | 1 patch every 72 hours |
| Buprenorphine | Buprenorphine transdermal system | Butrans | 5, 10, 20 mcg/hour | 1 patch weekly |
Notes:
Embeda is not currently being marketed in the United States
doses available only for opioid-tolerant patients
methadone is the only medication considered a long-acting opioid formulation
Schedule III agent.
Abbreviations: CR, controlled release; ER, extended release; HCl, hydrochloride; SR, sustained release.
Figure 2Factors to consider before initiating treatment with an opioid analgesic.12–14
Figure 3Ten steps of universal precautions in pain medicine.
Note: data from Gourlay et al.143