| Literature DB >> 34950771 |
Franco Marinangeli1, Annalisa Saetta2, Antonio Lugini3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Chronic pain and breakthrough cancer pain (BTcP) have a high prevalence in all cancer types and cancer stages, combined with a significant physical, psychological, and economic burden. Despite efforts to improve appropriate management of cancer pain, a poor assessment and guilty undertreatment are still reported in many countries. The purpose of this expert opinion paper is to contribute to reduce and clarify these issues with a multidisciplinary perspective in order to share virtuous paths of care.Entities:
Keywords: breakthrough cancer pain; cancer pain; fentanyl; multidisciplinary team; rapid-onset opioids
Year: 2021 PMID: 34950771 PMCID: PMC8651060 DOI: 10.1515/med-2021-0393
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Med (Wars)
Survey questions
| In your workplace, what is the path used in the assessment of pain in cancer patient? |
| In the management of cancer pain, which drug do you use mainly? |
| In the management of cancer pain, when do you prefer the transdermal route? |
| How do you recognize episodes of BTcP? |
| Which characteristic of a rapid-onset opioid is the most important feature of your choice? |
| Do you believe it is an advantage to use the same molecule (fentanyl) to control basic pain and episodes of BTcP? |
| Do you think it is an advantage to have a ROO with different dosages compared to other drugs on the market? |
Figure 1Davies algorithm [15].
Figure 2Survey question: “In the management of cancer pain, which drug do you use mainly?.”
Data concerning Italian transmucosal fentanyl products with marketing authorisation by the Italian Medicines Agency (Giovambattista Zeppetella & Davies, 2015; Italian Medicines Agency 2020 available at http://www.agenziafarmaco.gov.it/. Accessed May 5, 2020)
| Data concerning Italian transmucosal fentanyl products with marketing authorisation | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vellofent® | Effentora® | Abstral® | Instanyl® | Pecfent® | Actiq® | |
| Fentanyl citrate sublingual tablets | Fentanyl buccal tablets | Fentanyl sublingual tablets | Fentanyl nasal spray | Fentanyl citrate nasal spray | Fentanyl citrate oral transmucosal lozenge | |
| Route of administration | Sublingual rapid release tablets | Buccal/sublingual effervescent tablets | Fast dissolving sublingual tablets | Intranasal spray solution | PecSys nasal drug delivery system | Compressed lozenge with integral oromucosal applicator |
| Absolute bioavailability compared to intravenous fentanyl (%) | About 70 | 65 (±20%) | 54 | 89 | 60 | 50 |
|
| 50–90 | 47 | 22,5–240 | 12–15 | 15–21 | 91 (20–480) |
| Onset of action (min) | 6 | 15 | 10 | 10 | 5–10 | 20–40 |
Figure 3Survey question: “Which characteristic of a rapid onset opioid is the most important feature of your choice?.”