Title: OPIOID TREATMENT GUIDELINES
1OPIOID TREATMENT GUIDELINES
- For chronic non cancer pain
2Acknowledgment
- Dr Helen Kerr, SMO, ATODS, Brisbane
3Clinical Guidelines for the use of Chronic Opoid
Therapy(COT) in Chronic NonCancer Pain (CNCP)
- Journal of pain Vol 10, no.2 Feb 2009pp113-130
- American Academy of Pain Medicine Opioids
Guidelines Panel - Roger Chou, Gilbert J Fanciullo, Perry G. Fine,
Jeremy A. Adler, Jane C. Ballantyne, Pamela
Davies, Marilee I Donovan, David A Fishbain,
Katey M Foley, Jeffrey Fudin, Aaron M. Gilson,
Alexander Kelter, Alexander Mauskop, Patrick G
OConnor, Steven D Passik, Gavril W Pasternak,
Russell K. Portenoy, Ben A. Rich, Richard G.
Roberts, Knox H. Todd, and Christine Miaskowski
for The American Pain Society - Research conducted at the Oregon Evidence based
Practice Centre with funding from The American
Pain Society (APS)
4PANEL OF EXPERTS
- Oregon Evidence-based Practice Centre
- Department of Anesthsiology, Pain Management
Centre Massachusetts - Pain Research Centre, Utah
- Palliative Care Beth Israel/Memorial
Sloan-Kettering - Physiological Nursing, University of San
Francisco - Seattle Cancer Care Alliance/Wisconsin
- School of Medicine Miami/Yale
- Albany College of Pharmacy Health Sciences
- Epidemiology Prevention for Injury Control,
California - New York Headache Centre
- Division of Bioethics, University of California
5DEVELOPMENT OF GUIDELINES
- 21 EXPERTS
- PANEL MEMBERS HAVE TO DISCLOSE CONFLICTS OF
INTEREST - 8034 ABSTRACTS
- AT LEAST 2/3 MAJORITY FOR RECOMMENDATIONS TO PASS
6CHRONIC PAIN
- Defined as pain that persists beyond normal
tissue healing time and is assumed to be 3 months
7OPIOID USE IN PAIN
- Acute pain
- Chronic pain related to active cancer
-
- Pain in Terminal cancer or any end of life
condition
8CHRONIC NON CANCER PAIN (CNCP)
- Back pain
- OA
- Fibromyalgia
- Headache
- CNCP is a leading cause of disability and can
affect the ability to work, function or on the
quality of life
9Issues to address
- Pain
- Functional impairment
- Psychosocial factors
- Compensation issues
- Depression
- Financial/ job loss
- Lack of Support
10Benefits vs Risks
- Opioid therapy may be a useful component of pain
management - Adverse effects
- Adverse outcome associated with abuse
- Addiction with an increase in prescription opioid
misuse - Diversion
- Mortality associated with opioid misuse
11G R A D E
- Grading of Recommendation
- Assessment
- Development
- Evaluation
- Strength of recommendation strong or weak
- Quality of evidence high, moderate, poor
12Patient selection and Risk stratification
- History, physical examination, tests, Risks of
abuse, misuse or addiction (strong
recommendation, low quality evidence) - Trial of COT in moderate to severe CNCP (moderate
to severe pain is having an adverse impact on
function or quality of life) - (strong recommendation, low quality evidence)
- A benefit-to-harm evaluation i.e. ongoing
history, physical examination, tests during COT
(strong recommendation, low quality evidence)
13Can non opioid treatment be used first?
Appropriate diagnostic tests
- Trigeminal neuralgia anticonvulsant
- RA - disease modifying drug
- Polymyalgia rheumatica corticosteroid
- Migraine headache abortive or prophylactic
therapy - COT considered only after moderate to severe pain
is non responsive to nonopioid therapy.
14Who may be unlikely to respond to COT?
- Poorly defined pain condition
- A likely somatoform disorder
- Unresolved compensation or legal issues
- To avoid unrealistic patients expectation, the
patient should be counselled that total pain
relief with COT is rare. Trials suggest
improvement averages less than 2-3 points on a
0-10 scale
15Who may be likely to abuse COT?
- Personal history of alcohol or drug abuse
- Family history of alcohol or drug abuse
- Younger age
- Presence of psychiatric conditions
16Who may be likely to suffer adverse effects from
COT?
- Pre-existing constipation
- Nausea/vomiting
- Pulmonary disease
- Cognitive impairment
17Management plan
- Informed consent
- Goals, expectations, potential risks
(constipation, nausea, sedation, overdose, abuse,
addiction, hyperalgesia, endocrinologic or sexual
dysfunction) and alternatives to COT (strong
recommendation, low quality evidence) - A COT management plan or Signed contract
- Patients responsibility
- Clinicians responsibility (weak recommendation,
low quality evidence)
18MANAGEMENT PLAN
- Obtaining opioids from one designated pharmacy,
one prescriber or one medical centre only - Limited prescriptions of daily, weekly or
biweekly instead of monthly - To lock up their opioid medication safely to
prevent thefts - Regular clinic visits
- Enumeration of behaviours that may lead to
discontinuation of opioids - Random urine drug screens/ IV track marks
19When to taper or reduce off COT?
- Failure to make progress toward therapeutic goal
- Intolerable adverse effect
- Repeated or serious aberrant drug related
behaviours - Doctor shopping
- IV use
- Request for frequent scripts
20Initiation and titration of COT
- Clinician and patient should regard initial
opioid treatment as a trial from several weeks to
several months only to determine whether COT is
appropriate (strong recommendation, low quality
evidence) - Opioid selection, initial dosing and titration
should be individualised according to the
patients health status, previous exposure to
opioids, attainment of therapeutic goals,
predicted or observed harms (strong
recommendation, low quality evidence)
21Monitoring of COT
- Periodic UDS/ checking for injecting track marks
- Frequent or intense monitoring weekly in
- those with a prior history of addictive disorder
- those in an occupation demanding mental acuity
- older adult
- unstable environments
- co-morbid psychiatric or medical conditions,
- feedback from interviews with family member or
carer - Patients at low risk of adverse outcome every 3
to 6 months
22High risk patients
- More frequent monitoring if considering COT in
patients with CNCP and history of drug abuse.
Consultation with mental health or addiction
specialist is strongly recommended (strong
recommendation, low quality evidence) - Aberrant drug related behaviour noted
- Is COT appropriate?
- Restructure COT
- Referral for assistance in management
- COT not appropriate - Discontinue COT
23Dose escalations, high dose COT
- When repeated dose escalations, evaluate
potential cause and re-assess benefits vs harms
(strong recommendation, low quality evidence) - High doses of COT requires more frequent
follow-up visits (strong recommendation, low
quality evidence) - Consider opioid rotation if intolerable adverse
effects or inadequate benefits despite dose
increase (weak recommendation, low quality
evidence) - Taper or wean off if aberrant drug related
behaviours or if risks outweigh benefits (strong
recommendation, low quality evidence)
24Causes of Dose escalations
- Substance use disorder
- Diversions
- High dose means gt200mg of oral morphine or
equivalent - Hyperalgesia
- Neuroendocrinologic dysfunction
- Immunosuppression
25Discontinuing COT
- Opioid withdrawal can be very unpleasant but are
generally not life threatening - Slow reduction (10/week) lt60-80 mg of morphine,
rapid reduction (25-50 every few days) - DISCONTINUE IF
- Ineffective COT patients report improvement in
well-being and function without any worsening of
pain - OR
- Pain hypersensitivity
26CONSTIPATION FROM COT
- In older adults or any patient likely to develop
constipation, consider routinely initiating bowel
regimen before the development of constipation - Increase fluid and fibre intake
- Stool softeners, laxatives
27Nausea or vomiting from COT
- Tends to diminish over days or weeks of continued
COT - Oral or rectal anti-emetics
28Sedation from COT
- Tends to wane over time
- Counselled about driving, work and home safety
(strong recommendation, low quality evidence) - Counselled on the effects and risks of
concomitant exposure to other drugs or substances
with sedating properties
29Other adverse effects of COT
- Hypogonadism
- Decreased libido, sexual dysfunction or fatigue
should be tested for hormonal deficiencies - Myoclonus
- Pruritus
- Respiratory depression
30Pychotherapeutic cointerventions
- CBT is effective for CNCP in helping them focus
on coping with pain to improve function - Progressive relaxation
- Biofeedback
31Break through pain
- Short acting opioid has been proven to be
effective - Low risk patient - as needed opioid with routine
follow up and monitoring - High risk patient - more frequent monitoring and
follow up
32Opioids in pregnancy
- Pregnant women with CNCP should be counselled
against COT - Low birth weight
- Premature birth
- Hypoxic-ischaemic brain injury
- Neonatal death
- Opioid withdrawal syndrome
- Prolonged QT syndrome
33STEP BY STEP MANAGEMENT OF CNCP
- History, physical examination, tests, Risks of
abuse, misuse or addiction - Trial of non opioid treatment
- Medication for neuropathic pain, steroids
- CBT, Progressive relaxation, Biofeedback
- Non opioid treatment unsuccessful
- Is the pain causing moderate to severe impairment
in function? - Yes, trial of COT