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Treating Chronic Pain with NMDA- Receptor Blockers

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Endorphins and enkephalins are released by CNS to block pain perception ... Afferent becomes Efferent. Neurogenic Inflammation. 6/1/09. Narrative. 5 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Treating Chronic Pain with NMDA- Receptor Blockers


1
Treating Chronic Pain with NMDA- Receptor Blockers
  • Palliative Care Institute of Southeast Louisiana
  • Hospice of St. Tammany

2
Acute Pain
  • Pathway for acute pain perception is conventional
  • Duration is short
  • Endorphins and enkephalins are released by CNS to
    block pain perception
  • Opioids are effective for acute pain

3
Changing from Acute to Chronic Pain
  • Acute pain causes release of the neurotransmitter
    glutamate
  • Glutamate binds to AMPA receptors in cells of the
    dorsal horn, which triggers pain signals to the
    CNS
  • When AMPA receptors are over whelmed or burned
    out by repeated activation, changes occur in
    neural membranes which activate NMDA receptors.
  • Activation of NMDA receptors marks the transition
    to chronic pain

4
Consequences of NMDA receptor Activation
  • Windup
  • Neural Remodeling
  • Activation of NK-1 Receptors
  • Afferent becomes Efferent
  • Neurogenic Inflammation

5
Chronic Pain is a potentially fatal medical
disease. The general lack of understanding of how
persistent pain becomes magnified and ingrained
prevents many patients from receiving the level
of care that they need to regain control of their
lives and resume natural activities.
Brookoff, David,2000,U. Tenn
6
Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain- General
Principles
  • Use WHO pain ladder to select analgesic
  • Around-the-clock, q. 3-4 hr.
  • Assess frequently, adjust dose
  • Add up total opioid taken q. 24hr.
  • Select long-acting opioid q. 12 hr.
  • Use short-acting opioid for breakthrough pain
    prn.
  • Use one short- and one long-acting
  • Reassess to titrate dose

7
Drugs that block NMDA receptors
  • Opioids
  • Methadone
  • Levorphanol
  • Non-opioids
  • Dextromethorphan
  • Ketamine
  • Amantadine
  • Memantine

8
Methadone
  • Methadone, a synthetic opioid developed in 1940
    has been used worldwide for pain relief.
  • The development of sustained-action morphine,
    oxycodone, and fentanyl in the 80s, promoted and
    marketed by commercial interests in the U.S,
    relegated methadone to use mainly in
    substance-abuse until recently.

9
Advantages of Methadone
  1. Long duration of action
  2. Short initial distribution half-life
  3. No active metabolites
  4. No ceiling dose
  5. NMDA receptor-blocker action in spinal cord
    (important in neuropathic and chronic pain)
  6. Cost approx. 20-25/month( vs. 200-500/mo. for
    hydromorphone,sust.act. morphine,oxycodone,fentany
    l patch.

10
Advantages (contd)
  • Potency at least equal to morphine
  • Oral, rectal absorption excellent
  • Low incidence of side-effects
  • Less constipating
  • Lower incidence of tolerance
  • Available for iv infusion use
  • Most important,methadone is both a mu opioid
    agonist and an NMDA receptor antagonist as it
    relates to pain relief

11
Disadvantages
  • Stigma and association with substance-abuse
  • Accumulation due to long and variable elimination
    half-life in some persons
  • Said to be hard to convert to and from other
    opioids
  • Fear of regulators
  • Lack of education and experience

12
Rationale for using Methadone in Chronic Pain
  • Knowing the difference between acute and chronic
    pain
  • Understanding the importance of NMDA receptor
    activation in chronic pain
  • Efficacy of Methadone (and Levorphanol) as NMDA
    receptor blockers and mu opioid agents
  • Conventional opioids ineffective for neuropathic
    pain
  • Methadone is now the drug of choice for
    neuropathic pain
  • Can rotate to methadone when tolerance to
    conventional opioids developes

13
Uses of Methadone
  • Complex chronic non-malignant pain, often
    low-dose (failed back, fibromyalgia,polyarthralgia
    s)
  • Chronic neuropathic pain (post-herpetic,
    diabetic, phantom limb, causalgia)
  • Cancer, either as first-line or when tolerance to
    other opioids developes

14
Prescribing Methadone
  • Methadone can be prescribed by any licensed
    physician. Be sure that the label directions
    state for chronic pain.
  • Any pharmacist can dispense Methadone for chronic
    pain.
  • Available as oral 5, 10, 40mg tabs.,and can be
    compounded as rectal suppos., oral concentrate
    sol. 20mg/ml, and for iv use.
  • Document clinical picture thoroughly- in LA,
    stable patient to be seen at least q. 12
    wks.(this applies to all opioids)

15
Changing to Methadone
  • Pain control by other major opioid is
    unsatisfactory (poor relief or side-effects)
  • Modalities used for neuropathic pain
    (anticonvulsants, tricyclics, conventional
    opioids) are ineffective
  • Cost is a factor

16
Low-dose Methadone Dosing Method
  • R. Donlop (St. Christophers) begin with 2.5mg
    orally q. 30 min. prn until pain relief.
  • Patients establish an effective dose and an
    effective dosing interval.
  • Less likelihood of overdose or side-effects.
    Safe way to begin.

17
Converting from Morphine to Methadone- Method of
Ripamonti
  • Day 1 Give 2/3 of MS dose begin Methadone q.
    8hr (41 if MS30-90mg/day 61 if
    MS90-300mg/d. 81 if MSgt300mg/d.
  • Day 2 Give 1/3 of MS dose continue Meth.
    increase dose if pain moderate or severe. Use
    short-acting opioid for breakthrough
  • Day 3 No MS maintain Meth. Use 10 of Meth.
    daily dose as breakthrough. Titrate Meth. daily.

18
Converting from Morphine to Methadone Method of
MorleyMakin
  • Day 1 Stop Morphine commence fixed dose of
    Methadone q 3hr prn. Meth. Dose 1/10 of daily MS
    (maximum 30mg dose)
  • Day 6 calculate avg. daily Meth. dose for days 4
    and 5. Give as b.I.d. dosing with breakthrough
    dose q 3hr prn. Increase dose as needed q 4-6
    days by 30-50.

19
Levorphanol
  • NMDA-receptor blocker and mu-opioid agonist
  • 2 mg tablet equal to 8-15 mg morphine p.o
  • Long half-life (6 hr)
  • Recent published evidence combination with
    gabapentin effective in chronic neuropathic pain

20
Non- Opioid NMDA-Receptor Blockers
  • Ketamine- anesthetic used in sub-anesthetic iv or
    sq infusion for intractable neuropathic pain-
    also being tried locally in cream applied to skin
  • Dextromethorphan- new SR oral capsule q 12 hr-
    may reduce need for big opioid dose

21
Nonopioid NMDA-Receptor Blockers
  • Amantadine developed for Parkinsonism,and
    effective blocking Influenza A, has potential in
    blocking pain transmission
  • Memantine NMDA-blocker used in Europe for
    Alzheimers is being tried off-label for chronic
    pain

22
From the literature
  • 108 outpatients with cancer pain on opioids
  • 103 successfully switched to methadone- oral q 8
    hrs.
  • Significant reduction of pain
  • Bruera,E et al, Proceedings of the 9th World
    Congress on Pain,2000,
  • p. 957

23
From the literature
  • 52 prospective, consecutive patients with either
    uncontrolled cancer pain on opioids or
    intolerable side-effects switched to methadone.
  • All had significant reduction of pain with less
    nausea, vomiting, constipation and drowsiness.
  • Mercandante s et al, J of Clinical Oncology,
    2001 192898-2904

24
Personal experience Prescribing Methadone
2001-2003
  • Palliative Care Consults(total) 140
  • Methadone for Chronic pain 88
  • Significant pain relief 68 of 88
  • Excellent relief( pain reduced from 7-10 to
    0-3) 50
  • Fair relief (pain reduced to 4-6)
    18
  • No benefit or side-effects 20
  • ( Nausea 6, Sedation 12, Depression 2)

25
Number of Analgesic Prescriptions United States
est. 2002 (millions)
Step 3
WHO Stepladder
Total 13.03 Morphine 3.67 Fentanyl
4.35 Meperedine 1.78 Hydromorphone
.77 Methadone 1.66 All others .08
Step 2
Total 173.32 Propoxyphene
28.94 Hydrocodone 91.83 Oxycodone
28.95 Codeine 22.61 Dihydrocodeine
0.32 Pentazocine 0.67
Step 1
Total 135.30 COX-2 52.94 Other
NSAIDs 65.98 Tramadol 16.38
Includes Fiorinal with codeine
combinations Source IMS Healths National
Prescription Audit (NPA) Retail Phcy., LTC M.O.
26
Cost Comparison of Opioids ( 30 day supply)
  • Duragesic Patch 25mcg/hr 140
  • Duragesic Patch 100 mcg/hr 430
  • Oxycontin 40 mg q 12 hr 250
  • MS contin 60 mg q 12 hr 210
  • Dilaudid 4 mg q 4 hr ATC 118
  • Percocet 5 mg q 4 hr ATC 210
  • Levorphanol 2 mg q 6 hr 120
  • Methadone 10 mg q 8 hr 20

27
Summary
  • Exciting advances in better pain Rx
  • Methadone and Levorphanol more effective in
    complex chronic pain and in neuropathic pain
  • Less expensive, especially Methadone
  • Difficulty in their use appears exaggerated
  • Research ongoing for non-opioids
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