Title: Rational Use of Opioids: Intraoperative
1Rational Use of Opioids Intraoperative
Postoperative
- Larry Saidman
- Steve Shafer
2- Actual Orders Written at Stanford June 16, 2005
3Case 1
- 40 y.o. 81 kg ASA PS2 male
- Anterior cervical discectomy
- 3 hour anesthetic with sevoflurane, N2O
- Intraoperative
- Midazolam 4 mg
- Fentanyl 500 mg
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) 1 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 2-4 mg q 5 min to 30 mg
- Fentanyl 25-50 mg q 5 min to 500mg
- Meperidine 5-10 mg q 5 min to 50mg
- Naloxone 0.1 mg for RRlt6
4Case 2
- 52 y.o. 128 kg ASA PS2 male
- Scalp advancement
- 4 hour anesthetic with isoflurane, N2O
- Intraoperative
- Midazolam 2mg
- Fentanyl 600 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 2-4 mg q 5 min to 10mg
- in first 90 minutes patient was drowsy and
received nothing
5Case 3
- 81 y.o. 80 kg ASA PS2 male
- Lumbar decompression
- 3 hour anesthetic with N20 and propofol infusion
at 75-100 mg/kg/min - Intraoperative
- fentanyl 250 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 1mg q 5 min to 12 mg
- Fentanyl 25-50 mg q 5 min to 150 mg
- Meperidine 12.5 mg q 5 min to 25mg for shivering
6Summary of Three Cases
- Case 1 40 YO 81 kg
- MS 0.375 mg/kg, fent 7.5 mcg/kg
- Case 2 52 YO 128 kg
- MS 0.08 mg/kg
- Case 3 81 YO 80 kg
- MS 0.15 mg/kg, fent 2 mcg/kg
7Dont tell me what to do!
- Recognizing the variety of practices among the
large number of anesthesiologists at Stanford and
not implying that there is/are best practice(s)
among the anesthesiologists at Stanford I ask Dr
Shafer to address the following questions
8Questions
- Given the variations in age, weight, and surgical
procedures, does the variation in postoperative
opioid prescriptions make clinical or PK/PD
sense? - Does the PK/PD of morphine make it the best (or
even a good) opioid for treatment of acute
post-op pain? - Based on known PK/PD of opioids, what opioid
(including remifentanil) might be better used
intra-operatively for breakthrough autonomic
stimulation as well as in anticipation of
postoperative pain?
9Disclosure
- Ive consulted with Janssen (transdermal
fentanyl), Cygnus (transdermal fentanyl),
Anaquest (transdermal fentanyl), Alza
(transdermal fentanyl), Anesta (oral transmucosal
fentanyl), Glaxo (remifentanil), Abbott
(remifentanil), Delex (inhaled liposomal
fentanyl), and Durect (chronic sufentanil) - FDA Anesthesia Advisory Panel for Oxycontin
(oxycodone) and Pallidone (hydromorphone)
10Dont tell me what to do!
- OK, I wont tell you what to do, but you are
lousy at treating post operative pain. - You are in good company. We all do poorly here.
- 70-80 of patients have moderate to severe
postoperative pain - Svensson et al. Assessment of pain experiences
after elective surgery. J Pain Symptom Manage
2000 20 193-201. - Fundamental problem, we dont have an adequately
safe and efficacious analgesic - The dose of opioid in every patient is limited by
toxicity.
11Dont tell me what to do!
Flood and Daniel Anesthesiology 2004
12Morphine
- Endogenous ligand
- Slow rise to peak effect
- Absolute peak analgesic effect is at 90 minutes
after bolus injection! - Active metabolite
- Morphine-6-glucuronide is unlikely to contribute
to analgesic effects at standard OR doses. Will
contribute to effects with chronic dosing - Especially in renal failure
- Not as full efficacy as fentanyl series of opioids
13Morphine Pharmacokinetics
14Morphine Pharmacokinetics
15Morphine Onset
16Simulation of MorphineTime Course
Dahan et al. Anesthesiology. 20041011201-9.
17Fentanyl
- Pharmacologically clean
- 100 efficacious (in contrast to morphine)
- The first of the fentanyl series (obviously)
- Available in transdermal, submucosal, sublingual,
and (soon) inhaled forms. - Free!
18Morphine vs. Fentanyl PK
19Morphine vs. Fentanyl PK
20Morphine vs. Fentanyl Onset
21Hydromorphone
- A rapid onset morphine
- No histamine release
- About 8 fold more potent than morphine
- No active metabolite
- Good choice for PCA, post-op analgesia
22Comparative Hydromorphone PK
23Comparative Hydromorphone PK
24Comparative Onset of Hydromorphone
25Sufentanil
- 10 fold more potent than fentanyl
- Slightly slower onset
- More rapid recovery
- Very clean pharmacologically
26Comparative Onset of Sufentanil
27Meperidine
- Bad Drug! No role in the management of pain
- Toxic metabolite
- Normeperidine ? seizures
- Renally excreted
- Negative inotrope
- Causes tachycardia (anticholinergic)
- Complex interactions
- MAO syndrome when combined with MAO inhibitors
- Useful for shivering, perhaps as a local
anesthetic
28Comparative Onset of Meperidine
29Alfentanil
- Less potent than fentanyl
- Much more rapid onset (including more rapid onset
of rigidity and respiratory depression) - Much more evenascent effect with a single bolus
- With brief infusions will be almost
indistinguishable from fentanyl, except for
potency
30Remifentanil
- Similar potency to fentanyl
- Pharmacokinetics are in a class by themselves
(ester metabolism) - Reduce the dose by about 2/3s in the elderly
- No pharmacokinetic interactions
- Onset is similar to alfentanil
31Comparative Onset ofAlfentanil and Remifentanil
32Methadone
- Longest terminal half-life (about 1 day)
- May accumulate during titration to steady state
- Supplied as a racemic mixture
- L methadone is an opioid agonist
- D methadone is an NMDA antagonist
- Underutilized in anesthesia practice
33Comparative Onset of Methadone
34Fundamental PK/PD Parameters
35Comparative Opioid PK
36Context Sensitive Half Time
3750 Effect Site Decrement Time
38Equivalent doses at 10 minto 50 ?g fentanyl
39Intraoperative potency100 ?g/hour fentanyl at 2
hours
m
Sufentanil
20
g/hr
m
g/kg/min
Remifentanil
0.1
Morphine
7
mg/hr
Methadone
5
mg/hr
Hydromorphone
4
mg/hr
40Case 1
- 40 y.o. 81 kg ASA PS2 male
- Anterior cervical discectomy
- 3 hour anesthetic with sevoflurane, N2O
- Intraoperative
- Midazolam 4 mg
- Fentanyl 500 mg
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) 1 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 2-4 mg q 5 min to 30 mg
- Fentanyl 25-50 mg q 5 min to 500mg
- Meperidine 5-10 mg q 5 min to 50mg
- Naloxone 0.1 mg for RRlt6
41Case 1
42Case 1
43Case 1
44Case 1
- 40 y.o. 81 kg ASA PS2 male
- Anterior cervical discectomy
- 3 hour anesthetic with sevoflurane, N2O
- Intraoperative
- Midazolam 4 mg
- Fentanyl 500 mg
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) 1 mg
- Post op orders
- ? Do whatever the hell you want
- ? Give naloxone if you screw up
45Case 2
- 52 y.o. 128 kg ASA PS2 male
- Scalp advancement
- 4 hour anesthetic with isoflurane, N2O
- Intraoperative
- Midazolam 2mg
- Fentanyl 600 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 2-4 mg q 5 min to 10mg
- in first 90 minutes patient was drowsy and
received nothing
46Case 2
47Case 3
- 81 y.o. 80 kg ASA PS2 male
- Lumbar decompression
- 3 hour anesthetic with N20 and propofol infusion
at 75-100 mg/kg/min - Intraoperative
- fentanyl 250 mg
- Post op orders
- Morphine 1mg q 5 min to 12 mg
- Fentanyl 25-50 mg q 5 min to 150 mg
- Meperidine 12.5 mg q 5 min to 25 mg for
shivering
48Case 3
49Case 3
50Interindividual Variability 1
Woodhouse and Mather Anaesthesia 52949-955, 1997
51Interindividual Variability 2
Flood and Daniel, Anesthesiology 2004
52Interindividual Variability 3
Nieuwenhuijs et al, Anesthesiology 2003,98312-22
53Recommendation 1
- Just use fentanyl for post-op analgesia
- 25 mg q 5 min
- Max of 250 in young patients, 150 in elderly
- 3-5 minute peak onset provides rapid relief, but
no so rapid that the patient stops breathing - Rapid peak makes it easy to titrate
- Nurses are familiar with it
- Logical choice for PCA
- Free
- If you cant get the patient comfortable with
fentanyl, you wont succeed with another opioid - possible exception of methadone
54Recommendation 2
- Hydromorphone 1 mg q 5-10 min
- Max of 10 mg in young patients, 6 mg in elderly
- 5-10 minute peak onset provides rapid relief, but
no so rapid that the patient stops breathing - Still easy to titrate
- Nurses are familiar with it
- Also a logical choice for PCA
- Inexpensive
55Recommendation 2
56Opioids cant do it all
- Differences in ventilatory control with sleep
- PACU nurses understand this better than
anesthesiologists - Local anesthetics should be first line of
analgesic therapy - Many drugs show analgesic synergy with opioids
- Clonidine, dexmedetomidine (a2 agonists)
- Ketamine / magnesium (NMDA antagonists)
- NSAIDs (COX antagonists)
- Nicotine?
57Recommendation 3
- If severe post-op pain is expected
- Methadone 5-15 mg 1 hour before the end of the
case - Ketamine 10-20 mg 30-60 min before the end of the
case - Magnesium 1 gm 30-60 min before the end of the
case - Ketorolac 30 mg 30 min before the end of the case
- Post-Op
- Fentanyl 25 mg q 5 min to max 250 or
- Hydromorphone 1 mg q 5 to max 10
58Recommendation 4
- Listen to your PACU nurses
- Infinitely more experience than you have
titrating opioids to pain - Recognize changes in ventilatory drive between
awake and asleep states - Know to start with bigger dose, more frequent
dosing, and then move to smaller doses, less
frequent dosing - Know when pain is out of proportion to surgery
59Power corrupts,PowerPoint corrupts absolutely
Edward Tufte, PhD