E N D
1. Pain relief in palliative care A brief review
Dr Catherine O’Doherty
Consultant in Palliative Medicine, BTUH
2. Pain “Pain is what the patient says hurts”
An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage
4. Pain in advanced cancer 80% of patients experience pain
Of those with pain, one third have one pain, one third have two pains, one third have three or more pains
5. Causes of symptoms in cancer patients
Related to the cancer
Related to its treatment
Co-existent pathology
6. Classification of pain Nociceptive
Somatic
Visceral
Neuropathic
Nerve compression
Nerve injury
7. Principles of analgesic use By mouth
By the clock
By the ladder
All patients on regular opioid analgesia need an immediate release preparation to be available for breakthrough pain
9. Non-opioid analgesics Paracetamol
NSAIDs
Useful for bone, soft tissue and liver capsule pain
10. Conventional NSAIDs Non-selective COX inhibitors eg ibuprofen, diclofenac
Variable potency
Side effects include gastric irritation/ ulceration, renal impairment, fluid retention, inhibition of platelet aggregation
11. Step 2 opioids Codeine
Dihydrocodeine
Dextropropoxyphene
Tramadol
12. Tramadol Step 2 and ?Step 3 opioid
Monoamine re-uptake inhibitor
Available in IR and SR formulations
?Ceiling effect
13. Step 3 analgesics Morphine
Diamorphine
Fentanyl
Oxycodone
Hydromorphone
Methadone
14. Step 3 analgesics: but not in palliative care Pethidine
(?Buprenorphine)
15. Morphine Opioid of first choice for moderate to severe cancer pain
Mu opioid receptor agonist
Drowsiness, dizziness, mental clouding, nausea and vomiting can occur on initiation
Constipation is main ongoing side effect
16. Morphine - formulations Immediate release – tablets, liquid and concentrated liquid
Modified release – 12hrly, 24hr
Suppository
Injection – diamorphine (given sc is 3x as potent mg for mg as oral morphine), morphine sulphate (given sc is 2x as potent mg for mg as oral morphine)
17. How to start a patient on morphine Talk to the patient
Start a low dose of regular morphine
Remember to prescribe breakthrough analgesia
Always co-prescribe a laxative
Ensure an anti-emetic is available
18. How to start a patient on morphine Assess for pain relief and side effects
If pain still present and opioid sensitive, increase dose by 30-50%
19. Fentanyl Semi-synthetic opioid
About 80x as potent as parenteral morphine
Rapidly undergoes first pass metabolism
Available in transdermal, oral transmucosal and injectable forms
20. Transdermal fentanyl “Patch” changed every 72 hours
Best reserved for patients whose opioid requirements are stable
May be useful when oral drug delivery is difficult
Can be used if opioid switch is needed (use conversion chart)
May be issues over breakthrough analgesia
21. Oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate (OTFC)
Rapid onset of action
Short duration of action
Only licensed for use in patients already on regular strong opioids
Role probably lies in treatment of rapidly escalating, unpredictable breakthrough pain
22. Oxycodone Semi-synthetic mu and kappa opioid agonist
Available in MR (12hrly) and IR (4hrly) formulations
Analgesia similar to that obtained with morphine
Oral oxycodone 2x as potent mg for mg as oral morphine
May cause fewer psychogenic side effects
Injectable form available (given sc is 2x as potent mg for mg as oral oxycodone)
23. Methadone Widely available in liquid and tablet form
Half life 17-100 hours
Relative potency variable
Mu and delta opioid agonist
NMDA receptor antagonist
May be more useful than morphine in neuropathic pain
Injectable form can be used in syringe drivers
24. Which pains are opioid sensitive? Most pains have some degree of opioid sensitivity
Nociceptive: somatic and visceral
Neuropathic: nerve compression and nerve injury
25. Why might pains persist despite opioids? (1) The pain itself
Inflammatory pain: soft tissue, muscle infiltration, bone metastasis
Neuropathic pain: particularly sympathetically maintained
Raised intracranial pressure
Muscle spasm
26. Why might pain persist despite opioids? (2) Other reasons
Underdosing
Poor absorption
Insufficient attention to psychological aspects
27. Management of neuropathic pain Often partially opioid sensitive
Consider early use of adjuvant analgesics
Tricyclic antidepressants
Anticonvulsants
Antiarrhythmics
Corticosteroids can be useful
TENS, nerve blocks can help
28. Gabapentin and Pregabalin Anticonvulsants
Licensed for use in neuropathic pain
No evidence that they are more effective than older anticonvulsants in neuropathic pain
29. Interventional pain relief in palliative care Nerve blocks
Continuous epidural infusions
Continuous spinal infusions
30. Syringe drivers A method of drug delivery by continuous subcutaneous infusion
Useful in situations where the drug cannot be absorbed by the oral route
Remember there is nothing magical or sinister about a syringe driver!
31. Non-drug analgesia TENS
Acupuncture
Reflexology
Relaxation techniques
Psychological intervention
32. Conclusions Pain is a common symptom in patients with life limiting disease and this can adversely affect their quality of life
The underlying pathophysiology needs to be considered carefully to allow a structured approach to analgesia
A holistic approach should be adopted in order to optimise symptom control