| Literature DB >> 26969472 |
Charlotte Kohberg1, Charlotte Uggerhøj Andersen2, Elisabeth Bendstrup1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is the most common among the idiopathic interstitial pneumonias and has the worst prognosis, with a median survival of 3-5 years. The most common symptom in IPF is dyspnea, impacting on the patient's quality of life and life expectancy. Morphine in the treatment of dyspnea has been investigated but with conflicting results. This review aims to clarify the role of opioids in the treatment of dyspnea in patients with IPF.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; chronic obstructive lung disease; dyspnea; interstitial lung disease; morphine; opioid; review
Year: 2016 PMID: 26969472 PMCID: PMC4788766 DOI: 10.3402/ecrj.v3.30629
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Clin Respir J ISSN: 2001-8525
Characteristics of studies investigating the effect of morphine on dyspnea
| Reference | Study type | Study group | Drug, dose, and route of administration | Equivalent oral morphine dose | Measures: primary outcome (secondary outcome) | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Johnson et al., British Med. J. 1983 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | 17 COPD patients and one with pulmonary fibrosis. | Oral 15 mg dihydrocodeine t.i.d. for 1 week and on alternate days for 1 week (i.e. treatment for 2 weeks). | 3 mg | 100 mm VAS score for dyspnea; daily and during treadmill test | Reduced dyspnea both weekly and on alternate days ( |
| Eiser et al., Eur Respir J 1991 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | 18 COPD patients. | Oral linctus of diamorphine 2.5 mg or 5 mg as 5 ml for 2 weeks each. | 10 or 20 mg | 100 mm VAS scale for dyspnea; daily and at 6MWT and treadmill walk on study day | No significant difference in dyspnea at home or related to exercise tests. |
| Second study | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study | 10 COPD patients. | Oral linctus of diamorphine 7.5 mg. | 30 mg | 100 mm VAS scale for dyspnea at 6MWT (spirometry, blood gases, plasma level of morphine, distance at 6MWT). | No statistical significance in changes, but trend for both dyspnea and walking distance to improve on morphine. |
| Light et al., Chest 1996 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | Seven COPD patients. | Oral solution of morphine 30 mg alone, 30 mg morphine and 25 mg MP or 30 mg morphine and 10 mg MPC. | 30 mg | Modified Borg score for dyspnea during the last 30 sec of every power output at the cycle ergometer test. | Improved dyspnea with MP treatment (except at VO2max), not with M alone. |
| Second study | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | Nine COPD patients. | Oral solution of 25 mg promethazine (P) or 30 mg morphine and 25 mg promethazine (MP). | 30 mg | No significant difference in dyspnea. | |
| Poole et al., Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 1998 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study | 16 COPD patients. | Oral sustained-release morphine sulfate 10 mg tablets – titrated from 10 mg once a day to maximally 20 mg twice a day for 6 weeks. | 20 mg×2 | Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (QRQ) subscale for dyspnea at rest both at home twice daily and at study center in the beginning and end of each 6-week treatment period | No significant improvement in dyspnea. Distance at 6MWT decreased during morphine treatment, but increased during placebo. |
| Abernethy et al., British Med. J 2003 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | 38 COPD patients, 10 not specified. | Oral sustained-release morphine sulfate q.d. 20 mg for 4 days. | 5 mg | 100 mm VAS scale for dyspnea in the evening at rest | Reduced dyspnea in the morning ( |
| Currow et al., J. of Pain and Symptom Management 2011 ( | Open-label, Phase II dose increment study followed by Phase IV effectiveness and safety study | 83 outpatients (54% with COPD, 12% with ILD, the rest with different diagnoses). 52 joined the Phase IV study. | Oral morphine: initially 10 mg daily raised to maximally 30 mg daily for non-responders for 3 months if no side effects. | 10–30 mg | 100 mm VAS scale for dyspnea twice daily at rest (quality of life, number of dose changes, dose at 3 months, side effects). | Reduced dyspnea in both phases. Benefit maintained for >3 months for one-third of patients. |
| Allen et al., Pall. Med. 2005 ( | Non-randomized, open case study | 11 IPF patients. | Subcutaneously injected q.d. 2.5/5 mg diamorphine (5 mg for patients >60 kg). | 10 or 20 mg | 100 mm VAS score for dyspnea at rest (HR, BP, RF, sat-O2). | Reduced dyspnea ( |
| Young et al., Thorax 1989 ( | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study | 11 patients (2 IPF, 9 COPD). | Nebulized 5 mg of morphine (1 g/ml). | 5 mg | No dyspnea score used. Dyspnea only recorded as a limiting symptom at cycle ergometer test (spirometry). | Dyspnea maintained to be the limiting symptom in all three tests. |
| Harris-Eze et al., Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. 1995 ( | Randomized double-blinded, placebo-controlled study | Six ILD patients (Three IPF). | Nebulized morphine 2.5 mg and 5.0 mg. | 2.5 or 5 mg | Modified Borg scale for dyspnea at end exercise after cycle ergometer test (HR, ECG, sat-O2, inspiratory and expiratory volumes, expired O2, and CO2). | No significant differences in any of the measured variables including dyspnea. |
| Masood et al., Thorax 1995 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study | 12 COPD patients. | Combinations of nebulization and i.v. treatment in five regimens: 1) placebo, 2) nebulized morphine 10 mg, 3) nebulized morphine 25 mg, 4) i.v. morphine 1.0 mg, and 5) i.v. morphine 2.5 mg. With 2 + 3 i.v. placebo and with 4 + 5 nebulized placebo was given. | 10 or 25 mg, | 100 mm VAS scale for dyspnea at rest and during cycle ergometer test (oxygen consumption (VO2), carbon dioxide production (VCO2), FEV1, VC, PEFR, and sat-O2. HR, RR, BP, exercise endurance, symptom limitation, and plasma morphine level.) | No significant change in dyspnea. |
| Leung et al., Thorax 1996 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study | Nine COPD patients and one ILD patient. | Nebulized morphine 5 mg (1 g/ml). | 5 mg | Modified Borg score for dyspnea every minute during exercise on cycle ergometer (sat-O2, RR, MV, and ECG, dose of nebulized morphine). | No significant difference in dyspnea or power output. |
| Jankelson et al., Eur. Respir. J. 1997 ( | Randomized double-blinded, placebo-controlled, crossover study | 16 COPD patients. | Nebulized morphine sulfate 20 or 40 mg. | 20 or 40 mg | Modified Borg score for dyspnea at 6MWT | No significant change in dyspnea or other parameters. |
| Noseda et al., Eur. Respir. J. 1997 ( | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled crossover study | 17 patients (11 COPD, 1 cancer, 1 IPF, 1 heart disease). | Nebulized morphine given in four settings: morphine 10 mg×2 (with and without O2), morphine 20 mg with oxygen or saline with oxygen. Oxygen was given 3 out of 4 days. | 10 or 20 mg | Bipolar (−100%, +100%) VAS scale for dyspnea at rest (sat-O2, RR). | No significant difference in dyspnea. No difference in response to 10 mg morphine given with/without oxygen. |
| Jensen et al., J. Pain Symp. Man. 2012 ( | Single center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study | 12 COPD patients. | Nebulized fentanyl citrate 50 mcg (single dosage). | 5 mg | Dyspnea intensity at isotime during exercise and EET (PFT, cardiorespiratory, and breathing pattern parameters measured at rest, isotime, and at end of exercise). | No significant change in dyspnea intensity. Significantly increased exercise endurance time. |
The studies by Eiser and Light each consisted of two different studies and they were therefore evaluated separately.
COPD: chronic obstructive lung disease; t.i.d.: three times a day; VAS: visual analog score; FEV1: forced expiratory volume in 1 sec; FVC: forced vital capacity; PEFR: peak expiratory flow rate; 6MWT: 6-min walk test; MP: promethazine; MPC: prochlorperazine; HR: heart rate; RR: respiratory rate; VO2max: maximal oxygen consumption; VE: minute ventilation; VCO2max: maximal CO2 production; VT: tidal volume; sat-O2: arterial oxygen saturation; q.d.: once daily; BP: blood pressure; ILD: interstitial lung disease; IPF: idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; RF: respiratory frequency; ECG: electrocardiogram; i.v.; intravenous; PFT: pulmonary function test; SE: standard error.