Title: Analgesia:%20New%20Drugs%20Transdermal%20
1Analgesia New DrugsTransdermal Buccal
- Dr Pauline Kane
- Registrar in Palliative Medicine
- Beaumont Hospital
- 17th Sept 2009
2Overview
- Transdermal opioid patches
- Used for stable chronic pain
- Frequently cancer pain is not stable pain
- Transmucosal opioids
- Short acting opioids
- Breakthrough cancer pain
- New drugs
3Indications for Transdermal Opioid Patch
- Indication Chronic pain
- Cannot take oral medications
- Nausea, Vomiting
- Mucositis
- Mouth ulcers
- Dysphagia
- Difficulty taking tablets
- Poor compliance
- Cognitive impairment
- Elderly
4Transdermal route
- Avoidance of hepatic first pass metabolism
- Continuous pain relief
- Improves patient compliance with treatment
- Constant drug delivery providing a more stable
plasma concentration without peaks - Ease of administration despite nausea, vomiting
and difficulties swallowing - Absorption independent of food or fluid intake
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6Transdermal Patches
- Fentanyl patch
- Durogesic
- Matrifen
- Replace patch every 72 hours
7Why fentanyl?
- Fentanyl citrate
- Absorbed easily through skin
- Low risk for skin irritation
- 100 times more potent than morphine
- Less constipating
- Less nausea and vomiting
8Using Fentanyl Patch
- Apply patch to dry, flat, non-hairy skin on torso
or upper arm - Press firmly in place with the hand for 30
seconds to ensure good contact - Replace patch every 72 hours
- Rotate patch sites
- Avoid same site for several days
- Wait 24 hours before evaluating pain relief
9Fentanyl transdermal patch
10Matrix Patch
11Fentanyl Patch
12Fentanyl transdermal patch
- Equivalence chart Lasts 72 hours
Fentanyl transdermal patch Morphine oral equivalent in 24 hours
12mcg/hr 45mg oral morphine in 24 hours
25mcg/hr 90mg oral morphine in 24 hours
50mcg/hr 180mg oral morphine in 24 hours
75mcg/hr 270mg oral morphine in 24 hours
100mcg/hr 360mg oral morphine in 24 hours
13Other users of fentanyl patches
14Buprenorphine Transdermal Patch
- Butrans lower strength opioid patch
- Replace patch every 7 days
- Transtec higher strength opioid patch
- Replace patch every 3 days
15Butrans Transdermal Patch
- Indication
- Moderate pain unresponsive to non-opioid
analgesics - Apply to dry, non-hairy skin on torso or upper
arm - Replace patch every 7 days
- Rotate patch site
- Avoid using same area for 3 weeks
- Level of pain relief should not be assessed until
patch is on for 3 days
16Buprenorphine transdermal patchEquivalence
chart Lasts 7 days
Buprenorphine transdermal patch Butrans Morphine oral equivalent in 24 hours
5mcg/hr 7mg oral morphine in 24 hours
10mcg/hr 14mg oral morphine in 24 hours
15mcg/hr 21mg oral morphine in 24 hours
20mcg/hr 28mg oral morphine in 24 hours
17Transtec transdermal patch
- Indication
- Moderate to severe pain
- Severe pain unresponsive to non-opioid analgesics
- Apply patch every 3 days
- Rotate patches
- Avoid same area for at least 6 days
- Only evaluate pain relief after patch is on for
at least 24 hours
18Buprenorphine transdermal patchEquivalence
chartLasts 72 hours/3 days
Buprenorphine transdermal patch Transtec Morphine oral equivalent in 24 hours
35mcg/hr 30-60mg oral morphine in 24 hours
52.5mcg/hr 60-90mg oral morphine in 24 hours
70mcg/hr 90-120mg oral morphine in 24 hours
19Buprenorphine transdermal patch
- Rates of absorption increase if skin is warm and
dilated - Safe to use in patients with renal impairment
- Not removed in haemodialysis
- Smaller starting doses are advised in hepatic
impairment highly protein bound drug - More persistent erythema than with fentanyl
patches - Can cause pruritus
20Transdermal Opioid Patches
- Important to remember that the patches contain a
significant dose of morphine - In patients who are opioid naïve
- Commence at lowest dose
- Remember buprenorphine 5mcg/hr patch morphine
7mg/24 hours orally - Remember fentanyl 12mcg/hr patch morphine
40mg/24 hours orally - Important to check daily that patch is still in
place
21Cautionary Use of Opioid Transdermal Patches
- COPD or other medical conditions predisposing to
respiratory depression eg. Myasthenia gravis - Elderly
- Cachetic
- Debilitated
- Susceptibility to hypercapnia CO2 retention
- Raised intracranial pressure
- Impaired consciousness
- Coma
- Brain tumour
- Caution in bradyarrhythmias
22Precautions
- Lack of appreciation that fentanyl is a strong
opioid analgesic - Inappropriate use for short-term, intermittent or
post-operative pain in opioid naive patients - Lack of patient education re safe use, storage
disposal - Lack of awareness of signs of overdose
- Lack of awareness of increased absorption of
opioid if skin under patch becomes vasodilated
eg. Febrile patients, or by an external heat
source eg. Electric blankets, sauna
23Breakthrough Cancer Pain
- Incident pain predictable
- Voluntary onset with activity such as walking
- Involuntary onset with activity such as
coughing - Procedural onset related to intervention such
as - wound dressing
- Spontaneous pain - unpredictable
24Breakthrough Cancer Pain
- Rapid onset
- Short duration
- 1 min to 2-3 hours
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26Fentanyl for breakthrough pain
- Indication Patient has been on long acting
opioid medication of the following strength for
chronic cancer pain for at least a week - Oral morphine 60mg/day
- Transdermal fentanyl 25mcg/hr
- Oxycodone 30mg/day
- Oral hydromorphone 6mg/day
- An equianalgesic dose of another opioid
- Can commence on short acting opioid for
breakthrough pain
27Buccal Fentanyl Actiq
- First transmucosal fentanyl preparation
- Lozenge on a stick
- Fentanyl in hard sweet matrix
- Lozenge placed inside cheek and moved constantly
up and down, and changed at intervals to other
cheek - Aim to consume lozenge in 15 mins
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29Transmucosal routes
- Buccal
- Effentora
- Place tablet in upper portion of buccal cavity
above upper rear molar between cheek and gum - Less permeable
- 75 is actually swallowed, reducing
bioavailability - Prolonged contact with mucosa and lozenge
problematic if inflamed mucosa
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32Transmucosal routes
- Sublingual
- Abstral
- Place tablet under tongue
- Rapid absorption
- Highly vascularised under the tongue
- Highly permeable
- High bioavailability
33TransmucosalNasal route
- Nose has surface area of 150-180cm2
- Continuous mucus in nose limits drug uptake to
about 15mins - Rhinitis does not affect it
- Convenient to use in those with nausea, vomiting,
dry mouth syndrome or mucositis - Nasalfent
- Not reimbursed on GMS
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35Directions for Use
- Wait 4 hours between doses
- No food/drink while tablet in mouth
- Tablet disintegration takes 15-30 mins
36Buccal and Sublingual Medication
- Do not suck/chew/swallow as this decreases plasma
concentration - Xerostomia drink water prior to tablet
placement - Mouth ulcers
- Mucositis
37Transmucosal fentanyl citrate
- 25 of dose is absorbed rapidly into systemic
circulation - Pain relief in 5-10 mins
- Remainder is swallowed or absorbed more slowly
- This is subject to hepatic first pass metabolism
- Only 1/3 of this amount is available
systemically, 25 of the total dose
38Fentanyl for Breakthrough Pain
- Use with caution
- Highly addictive
- Irish Medicines Board have 6 recorded cases of
addiction to Actiq - Only use for breakthrough pain caused by cancer
39Conclusion
- Transdermal patches
- Indication
- Chronic pain poorly controlled on non-opioid
analgesics - Start on lowest dose in opioid naïve patients
- Transmucosal route
- Indication
- Only used for breakthrough pain secondary to
cancer - Highly addictive
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