| Literature DB >> 33808534 |
Karen Moody1, Mohammad Baig1, Veronica Carullo2.
Abstract
Terminal cancer pain remains one of the most distressing aspects of pediatric oncology practice. Opioids are the cornerstone of cancer pain management at end-of-life and fortunately, most pain at end-of-life can be managed successfully. This article presents a practical step-by-step approach to alleviating pediatric terminal cancer pain, which can be delivered across settings.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; child; end-of-life; terminal pain
Year: 2021 PMID: 33808534 PMCID: PMC8003275 DOI: 10.3390/children8030239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Initiation of methadone.
| IV Morphine to PO Morphine = 1:3 |
| IV Hydromorphone to PO Hydromorphone = 1:5 |
| PO Hydromorphone to PO Morphine = 1:4 |
| IV Hydromorphone to IV Morphine = 1:5 |
| PO Oxycodone to PO Morphine = 2:3 |
| IV Fentanyl to IV Morphine = 0.1–0.2 mg:10 mg |
Initial PCA (patient-controlled analgesia) dosing.
| Opioid | Demand Dose (PCA) | Lock-Out Time (Minutes) | Clinician Bolus Dose | Basal Rate (Continuous Infusion) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morphine (mg) | 0.025 mg/kg (max 2 mg) | 10–30 min | 0.05–0.1 mg/kg (max 2 mg) | 0 |
| Hydromorphone (mg) | 0.005 mg/kg (max 0.3 mg) | 10–30 min | 0.01–0.02 mg/kg (max 1 mg) | 0 |
| Fentanyl (mcg) * | 0.25 mcg/kg/dose (max 25 mcg) | 10–30 min | 0.5–1 mcg/kg/dose (max 50 mcg) | 0 |
* Example: The 12 h total morphine demand dose is 24 mg, calculate continuous dose as 20/12 = 2 mg/h then 2 × 0.5 (50%) = 1 mg/h basal rate. Then adjust the PCA dose to 1× the basal rate, in this case, 1 mg every 10 min.