| Literature DB >> 28117754 |
Mary Mallappallil1, Jacob Sabu2, Eli A Friedman3, Moro Salifu4.
Abstract
Evidence suggests a link between opioid use and kidney disease. This review summarizes the known renal manifestations of opioid use including its role in acute and chronic kidney injury. Both the direct and indirect effects of the drug, and the context which leads to the development of renal failure, are explored. While commonly used safely for pain control and anesthesia in those with kidney disease, the concerns with respect to side effects and toxicity of opioids are addressed. This is especially relevant with the worldwide increase in the use of opioids for medical and recreational use.Entities:
Keywords: opioids; pharmacokinetics; renal failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28117754 PMCID: PMC5297852 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18010223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Classes of common opioids and relative strength compared to oral morphine 10 mg.
| Type of Opioid | Dose in Milligrams |
|---|---|
| I. Exogenous | - |
| A. Natural | - |
| Morphine | 10 |
| Morphine esters | - |
| Morphine diacetate also called heroin | 2.5 |
| B. Semi-synthetic | - |
| Hydromorphone | 7.5 |
| Hydrocodone | 10 |
| Oxycodone | 6.5 |
| Oxymorphone | 10 |
| Buprenorphine (partial agonist) | 0.4 |
| C. Synthetic | - |
| Fentanyl (Intramuscular/Intravenous) | 0.1 |
| Meperidine (pethidine) | 300 |
| Levorphanol | 1.25 |
| Methodone | 2.5 |
| Dextropropoxyphene | 130 |
| Tramadol (also blocks reuptake of monoamines) | 200 |
| II. Endogenous | - |
| About 20 identified: includes endorphins, enkephalins, dynorphins, endomorphins | - |
Opioids can be classified as natural or synthetic, exogenous or endogenous and are based on receptor binding ability. (See Table 2 for categories opioid receptor binders).
Categories of opioid receptor binders.
| Have no ceiling effect for analgesia. |
| Example: morphine and fentanyl |
| Partial agonists are those drugs that have with lower efficacy to bind to the mu receptor. |
| Mixed agonist-antagonists are those drugs that have agonist effects at one opioid receptor and antagonist effects at another. |
| These are made to be less addictive. |
| Drugs in this category have a ceiling effect for analgesia. |
| Example: buprenorphine |
| Compete for the mu receptor and block it; they are used to reverse opioid effects especially in the setting of respiratory depression. This effect may not last long and repeat treatments may be needed to keep opioids from competing andbinding to the vacant receptor. |
| Example: naloxone |
Figure 1Mechanism of opioid-related kidney failure: pre-renal, acute tubular necrosis and post-renal failure. GFR: glomerular filtration rate; MAP: mean arterial pressure; OPR: opioid peptide receptors; RAAS: renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system; ATN: acute tubular necrosis. Red arrows show the final pathway to acute kidney injury.
Class effects of opioids.
| Anti-Diuretic Hormone (ADH) | Opioids Decrease ADH Effect |
|---|---|
| Diuretics | When added to diuretics, opioids lead to increased diuretic effect/toxicity. |
| Anti-cholinergics | In general opioids present a 2%–20% risk of urinary retention, with increased risk if benign prostatic hypertrophy is present. Risk is further increased if anti-cholinergics are used. |
| β-blockers | If combined with β-blockers, bradycardia can be enhanced. |
| Blood Pressure | Enhance parasympathetic effect and oppose noradrenergic effect: Opioids can lead to a clinical decrease in blood pressure. |
| Non-dihydropyridine Calcium channel blockers | If combined with non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers, bradycardia can be enhanced. |
| Constipation | Due to decreased acetylcholine release in the gut from opioids. |
| Central nervous system (CNS) depressants (alcohol/benzodiazepenes etc.) | Opioids interact with other CNS depressants for additive effect. |
| Desmopressin | Opioids can enhance the effect of desmopressin. |
| Magnesium sulphate | With magnesium sulphate CNS depression can be increased. |
| Sodium polystyrene sulfonate | Use with caution in the setting of hyperkalemia with renal failure; (with constipation caution is needed regarding use of potassium resin exchangers in the gut). |
Opioids and use in chronic kidney disease (CKD). In general, with CKD use opioids with caution; with decreased renal function, dose and timing interval may need to be adjusted. This is particularly true for agents that are used for chronic pain where a steady state has been reached with distribution of drug and metabolites into various compartments (versus limited use peri-operatively or for anesthesia). While opioids are used safely in CKD for both pain control and anesthesia, it is the chronic use of opioids and the level of CKD that alter the pharmacokinetics of the drugs and causes metabolites to accumulate that lead to unwanted side effects. With CKD, it is important to note that the non-renal clearance of medications is altered with variations in the phases of drug metabolism. In addition, it is with chronic use that accumulation and steady-state distribution of drugs, intermediate compounds and metabolites in various compartment occur, which may result in unwanted side effects. HD: hemodialysis; Vd: volume of distribution. Molecular weight (MW) in daltons; in general, small molecules that are less than 500 daltons, with a small Vd and are not protein bound may be removed easily with HD.
| Drug | Use in End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) and Chronic Kidney Disease |
|---|---|
| Morphine | ESRD: Use with caution and start with small doses as metabolites accumulate and may have delayed respiratory depression; pruritus may be difficult to control. Up to 47% can be removed with HD despite being protein bound (MW 668 dalton; 35% protein bound, Vd = 1–6 L/kg). |
| CKD: Starting oral dose is 25%–50%; start low dose and titrate slowly with longer dosing intervals as metabolites may accumulate with a delayed effect of respiratory depression. | |
| Drug interactions: nimodipine augments morphine’s analgesic effect via unknown mechanisms. May need small doses of morphine when using nimodipine. | |
| Diamorphine (Heroin/morpine diacetate) | Not medically used in USA as quickly addictive. |
| ESRD: Use with caution due to accumulation of metabolites (MW 369; not protein bound; easily crosses into brain; pro-drug converted to morphine and metabolites). | |
| CKD: Use with caution due to accumulation of metabolites. | |
| Codeine | ESRD: Significant accumulation of metabolites ; start at 50% of dose with increased interval of dosing and carefully titrate (MW 299; Vd = 2.6 L/kg; 90% excreted by kidneys). |
| CKD: GFR < 50 mL/min: start at 75% dose with increased interval and carefully titrate due to accumulation of metabolites. | |
| Tramadol | ESRD: As it is dialyzed out administer on day of HD; increased interval of dosing to 12 h may be needed (MW 263; Vd 2.6–2.9 L/kg; 20% protein bound). |
| CKD: For GFR < 30 mL/min, increase dosing interval to 12 h; avoid the use of extended release; for GFR > 30 m/min, use with caution. | |
| Can have symptoms of urinary frequency and urinary tract infection; metabolized in liver, metabolites excreted via kidney. | |
| Oxymorphone | ESRD: No clear data of use (MW 301; Vd 3 L/kg). |
| CKD: eGFR > 50 mL/min reduce starting dose 50% and increase dosing frequency for titration; bioavailability increases with CKD. | |
| Thromobtic thrombocytopenic purpura and acute kidney injury (AKI) noted when the tablets are crushed and intravenously administered as in injection with drug abusers. | |
| Hydromorphone | ESRD: Limited information with fluctuating levels may be difficult to use due to removal of drug; clearance with HD 105 mL/min with change in drug level of 55% with one treatment of HD; parent drug is removed but metabolites may persist and accumulate; (MW 285; Vd 1.2 L/kg; 8%–19% protein bound). |
| Oxycodone | ESRD: Use with caution; limited information case reports (MW 315; Vd 2.6 L/kg; 45% protein bound). |
| CKD: Serum concentration increases 50% if GFR < 60 mL/min. | |
| Limited information suggests starting at one-third the usual starting dose and increasing interval between dosing as half life increases. | |
| Drug interaction: Conivaptan: could increase concentration of CYP3A4 substrate. | |
| Buprenorphine | ESRD: May be used with caution, limited information (MW 467; Vd 188–335 L/kg; 96% protein bound). Transdermal route may be satisfactory. |
| CKD: May be used with CKD. | |
| Methodone | ESRD: Dose at 75% normal dose; lipophilic and minimal clearance with HD with less than 15% change in levels); methodone clearance with HD is about 17–19 mL/min (MW 345; 85%–90% protein bound; Vd 1–8 L/kg). |
| CKD: eGFR > 10 mL/min no change in dose needed. | |
| If QTc prolonged on EKG, an alternate drug may be needed. | |
| Drug interaction: Conivaptan: could increase concentration ofCYP3A4 substrate. | |
| Fentanyl | ESRD: Transdermal patch suggested to not be used with ESRD (MW 336; lipophilic; Vd 4 L/kg). |
| CKD: Reduce dose by 50%; limited information on other forms besides transdermal route; lipophilic and protein bound; free fraction increases with acidosis. | |
| Conivaptan: Could increase concentration of the CYP3A4 substrate. |