| Literature DB >> 26952011 |
Zhenhua Huang1, Lining Liang2, Lingyu Li3,4, Miao Xu5, Xiang Li6, Hao Sun7, Songwei He8, Lilong Lin9, Yixin Zhang10, Yancheng Song11, Man Yang12, Yuling Luo13, Horace H Loh14, Ping-Yee Law15, Dayong Zheng16, Hui Zheng17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pain management has been considered as significant contributor to broad quality-of-life improvement for cancer patients. Modulating serum cholesterol levels affects analgesia abilities of opioids, important pain killer for cancer patients, in mice system. Thus the correlation between opioids usages and cholesterol levels were investigated in human patients with lung cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26952011 PMCID: PMC4782347 DOI: 10.1186/s12944-016-0212-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 3.876
Fig. 1There is correlation between BMI and serum cholesterol level. a The distribution of ages of current 282 patients. The percentages of patients in each age range were plotted. b The distribution of serum total cholesterol levels of current 282 patients. The percentages of patients in each cholesterol range were plotted. c-d The correlation between serum cholesterol levels (y-axis) and ages (x-axis) was calculated with Pearson test in female (a) and male (b). e-f The correlation between BMIs (y-axis) and ages (x-axis) was calculated with Pearson test in female (c) and male (d). g-h The correlation between BMIs (y-axis) and serum cholesterol levels (x-axis) was calculated with Pearson test in female (e) and male (f)
Fig. 2Low cholesterol patients are more likely to require higher doses of opioids. a-b Patients were classified into three groups, low, medium and high cholesterol groups, depending on serum total cholesterol levels. The average of serum total cholesterol levels and patients number were listed below x-axis. There were significant differences between high and low cholesterol groups in both female (a) and male (b). (c-f) The final doses of morphine and fentanyl used for patients were converted into oxycodone doses, and were plotted with serum cholesterol level (c-d) and age (e-f). Data for female and male were plotted in (c & e) and (d & f)
Percentages of patients not respond to initial dose with different opioid administration
| 78 female patients | |||
| Fentanyl | Morphine | Oxycodone | |
| Low chol | 5 (15) | 1 (2) | 5 (11) |
| Medium chol | 0 (13) | 0 (4) | 2 (8) |
| High chol | 0 (13) | 0 (7) | 0 (5) |
| Sum | 5 (41) | 1 (13) | 7 (24) |
| 204 male patients | |||
| Low chol | 11 (32) | 2 (10) | 18 (29) |
| Medium chol | 0 (27) | 1 (4) | 10 (28) |
| High chol | 1 (35)** | 1 (8) | 6 (31)* |
| Sum | 20 (94) | 4 (22) | 34 (78) |
Patients were classified into three groups, low, medium and high cholesterol groups, depending on their serum total cholesterol levels. Patients in each group were further divided into three sub-groups depending which opioid they were administrated. The numbers of overall patients and patients who did not respond to initial doses and required higher doses of opioids were provided. Fisher’s exact test was used to do statistical analysis between low cholesterol group with other two groups
The information for three opioids used for dose conversion
| Fentanyl | Morphine sulfate | Oxycodone hydrochloride | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Formula | Transdermal patch | Controlled-release tablets | Controlled-release tablets |
| Minimal dose | 25 μg/h per patch | 10 mg per tablet | 5 mg per tablet |
| Initial dose | 25 μg/h | 30 mg/day | 10 mg/day |
| Initial dose converted to oxycodone | 10 mg/day | 10 mg/day | Not necessary |
| Initial dose equivalent to oxycodone | 7.5 ~ 20 mg/day | 10 ~ 20 mg/day | Not necessary |
Basing on the NCCN guidelines and previous reports, doses of morphine and fentanyl in were converted to equivalent doses of oxycodone