1 / 60

DOSING STRATEGIES

DOSING STRATEGIES. MELLAR DAVIS, WAEL LASHEEN, DECLAN WALSH. BACKGROUND. GUIDELINES BARRIERS HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL PATIENTS PAIN OPIOIDS. GUIDELINES. PAIN SEVERITY. STEP 3. POTENT OPIOID ANALGESICS ± NON-OPIOID ANALGESICS ± ADJUVANT. STEP 2. WEAK OPIOID ANALGESICS

johndellis
Download Presentation

DOSING STRATEGIES

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DOSING STRATEGIES MELLAR DAVIS, WAEL LASHEEN, DECLAN WALSH 1

  2. BACKGROUND • GUIDELINES • BARRIERS • HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL • PATIENTS • PAIN • OPIOIDS 2

  3. GUIDELINES PAIN SEVERITY STEP 3 POTENT OPIOID ANALGESICS ± NON-OPIOID ANALGESICS ± ADJUVANT STEP 2 WEAK OPIOID ANALGESICS ± NON-OPIOID ANALGESICS ± ADJUVANT STEP 1 NON-OPIOID ANALGESICS ± ADJUVANT WALSH ET AL SUPP. CANC. THER. 2004 3

  4. HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONAL • INADEQUATE ASSESSMENTS • FAILURE TO PRESCRIBE • INAPPROPRIATE OPIOID USE PATIENTS • UNDER-REPORT • COMPLIANCE 4

  5. PAIN HISTORY • LOCATION • TEMPORAL PATTERN (CP / IP) • INTENSITY • QUALITY • AGGREVAT / ALLEVIATING FACTORS • MEDICATION • IMPACT • ASSOCIATED FACTORS (ANXIETY / DEPRESSION) 5

  6. Continuous Pain Intermittent Pain (IP) Continuous Pain Alone (CP) Intermittent with Continuous Pain (BP) Intermittent Pain Alone (NBP) Incident Incident Non-Incident Non-Incident Mixed Mixed TEMPORAL PAIN PATTERN Cancer Pain EODF 6

  7. PAIN PATHOPHYSIOLOGY CANCER PAIN SOMATIC VISCERAL NEUROPATHIC MIXED 7

  8. OPIOID CHOICES • MORPHINE (MU AGONIST) • FENTANYL (MU AGONIST) • HYDROMORPHONE (MU AGONIST) • OXYCODONE (MU AND KAPPA AGONIST) • METHADONE (MU AND DELTA AGONIST) 8

  9. ADJUVANTS AND INTERVENTIONS 9

  10. SUMMARY • GUIDELINES (WHO LADDER) • BARRIERS • PAIN HISTORY • OPIOIDS 10

  11. PAIN EMERGENCY 11

  12. OPIOID LOADING • OPIOID LOADING (OPIOID NAÏVE / EXPER.) • FREQUENT • SMALL DOSES • SHORT ACTING OPIOID • GOALS • PAIN CONTROL • TOXICITY 12

  13. IV OPIOID LOADING

  14. IV OPIOID LOADING • DOSE • 1 MG MORPHINE • 0.2 MG HYDROMORPHONE • 20 MICGR FENTANYL • FREQUENCY • EVERY MINUTE X 10; RESPITE 5 MIN; REPEAT 14

  15. SC AND ORAL OPIOID LOADING IV 1MG/ 1 MIN SC 2 MG/ 5 MIN ORAL 5MG/ 30 MIN

  16. CARDIO-PULMONARY INSTABILITY • IV ROUTE IS PREFERRED • FIXED DOSE INTERVAL STRATEGY • 2-4 MG IV MORPHINE • EVERY 2 HOURS UNTIL PAIN IMPROVES WALSH ET AL SUPP. CANC. THER. 2004 16

  17. PATIENT ON CHRONIC OPIOID • ALTERNATIVE LOADING STRATEGY: ORAL • DOUBLE ORAL RESCUE DOSE (RD) • GIVE EVERY 30 MINS UNTIL PAIN CONTROL 2 X 5MG = 10 MG 17

  18. ALTERNATIVE STRATEGY: IV (SC) • TOTAL IV (SC) OPIOID PAST 24 HOURS • ATC • RD (FOR NON-INCIDENT PAIN) • CALCULATE THE HOURLY DOSE • LOADING • DOSE: 1ST 2 X HOURLY THEN HOURLY DOSE • FREQUENCY: EVERY 15 MINS PAIN CONTROL 24 MG 24 MG/ 24HRS = 1 MG 2 MG THEN 1 MG 18

  19. SUMMARY • ACUTE ONSET OF EXCRUCIATING PAIN OPIOID LOADING • IV • SC • ORAL • SEVERELY ILL • ALTERNATE STRATEGY 19

  20. OPIOID (OVERDOSE) EMERGENCY 20

  21. TREATMENT OF OPIOID OVERDOSE • INDICATIONS FOR NALOXONE: • PATIENT UN-RESPONSIVE • RR < 10 / MIN WITH EVIDENCE OF INADEQUATE VENTILATION (LOW OXYGEN SATURATION) 21

  22. PROTOCOL • STOP OPIOID ADMINISTRATION • PREPARE NALOXONE: NP VIAL OF NALOXONE (0.4MG/ML) + 9 ML SALINE = 40 MICG / ML NALOXONE • FLOW-CHART 22

  23. Opioids 1 ml NP (40MICG) Evaluate every 3 minutes: Responsive And RR > 10/min NO YES Naloxone Infusion: Sum of Doses Given / hour Observation for at least 4 hours Observation for at least 24 hours START OPIOIDS AT LOWER DOSE WITH ONSET OF PAIN 23

  24. STARTING ATC AND RD THERAPY 24

  25. OPIOID NAÏVE • RD = 5% - 15% OF 24 HR ATC DOSE 25

  26. FRAIL / ORGAN DYSFUNCTION • RD = 5% - 15% OF 24 HR ATC DOSE 26

  27. OPIOID TITRATION FOR CONTIUOUS PAIN (NO S/E) 27

  28. 28

  29. TITRATION FOR PAIN CONTROL • ASSESSMENT EVERY 24 HOURS • PAIN SEVERITY / RELIEF • DURATION OF RELIEF • INTERFERENCE WITH SLEEP AND ACTIVITY • SIDE EFFECTS 29

  30. ATC DOSE TITRATION • NEW ATC DOSE / 24 HRS = • PAST 24 HR OPIOID DOSE + (30% TO 50%) • ATC PAST 24 HOURS • RD (FOR NON-INCIDENT PAIN) PAST 24H 30

  31. EXAMPLE • PAST 24 HOURS • ATC M = 40MG • RD M = 5 MG (5MG X 6 = 30 MG) • TOTAL = ATC + RD = 40 + 30 = 70 MG NEW ATC DOSE • (30% TO 50%) = (21 TO 35) 30 MG • NEW ATC / 24HRS = 70 + 30 = 100MG / 24 31

  32. OPIOID TITRATIONINCIDENT AND NON-INCIDENT PAIN (NO S/E) 32

  33. MANIFESTATIONS • MILD SEDATION • NAUSEA • VOMITING • CONSTIPATION / DRY MOUTH / URINE RETENTION • VISUAL / TACTILE HALLUCINATIONS 33

  34. TITRATING RD • NEW RD • IF OLD RD < 50% RELIEF INCR. RD BY 100% • IF OLD RD = 50% - 75% INCR. RD BY 50% • IF 100% RELIEF BUT PAIN RETURN (0.5 HRS) INCR. RD BY 100% 34

  35. NON-INCIDENT PAIN • GOAL • < 4 • > 4 ADD THE RD TO THE ATC DOSE INCIDENT PAIN • NEVER ADD RD TO ATC • PRE-EMPTIVE DOSING 35

  36. END OF DOSE FAILURE • DEFINITION • STRATEGIES: • INCREASE ATC DOSE • INCREASE ATC FREQUENCY • INCREASE RD (50%) 36

  37. SIDE EFFECTS 37

  38. SIDE EFFECTS • TOLERANCE • PROPHYLAXIS • CHECK MEDICATION / HYDRATION • ATC VS. RD • S/E SHOULD BE TREATED • DOSE LIMITING S/E (GI , CNS) 38

  39. CONTROLLED PAIN • ATC = ↓ DOSE ( 30%) + SAME RD • RD = ↓ DOSE ( 50%) + ADJUVANT + SAME ATC UNCONTROLLED PAIN • OPIOID ROTATION • SYMPTOMATIC TREATMENT OF S/E • ADJUVANT + ↓ DOSE (30-50%) 39

  40. CHRONIC DOSING 40

  41. ORAL CONVERSION & CHRONIC DOSING • PARENTERAL ATC PAST 24 HOURS • MULTIPLY BY 3 (FOR MORPHINE) • ORAL ATC 24 HOUR DOSE • DIVIDED ACCORDING TO DOSING FREQUENCY • FOLLOW UP 48 HOURS 41

  42. EXAMPLE • PAST 24 HR ATC IV MORPHINE DOSE = 30MG • ORAL ATC = 30 X 3 = 90 MG / 24 HRS • IF SRM ( / 12 HRS) = 90 / 2 = 45 MG / 12 HRS • IF SRM ( / 8 HRS) = 90 / 3 = 30 MG / 8 HRS • IF IRM ( / 4 HRS ) = 90 / 6 = 15 MG / 4 HOURS 42

  43. SUMMARY • PAIN EMERGENCY • OPIOID OVERDOSE • START OPIOID THERAPY • TITRATE OPIOIDS (ATC & RD) • STARTING LONG TERM REGIMEN 43

  44. SPECIAL SITUATIONS 44

  45. PAIN CONTROL IN THE ACTIVELY DYING • ASSESS CAREFULLY / CONSULT CAREGIVER • ENSURE CONTINUOUS ANALGESIA EVEN IF PATIENT UNABLE TO COMMUNICATE • ALTERNATE ROUTES • GIVE SPECIFIC ORDERS NOT TO WITH HOLD OPIOIDS EVEN IN FALLING BP OR CHANGING BREATHING RATES 45

  46. SUBSTANCE ABUSE HISTORY • REQUIRED DOSAGE USUALLY HIGHER • MONITORING COMPLIANCE AND SUPERVISION • ONE PHYSICIAN / SHORT Rx / METHADONE • DRUG TESTING 46

  47. DIURNAL PAIN PATTERN • ATC PAIN WELL CONTROLLED DURING THE NIGHT BUT POORLY CONTROLLED BY DAY • INCREASE DAY TIME DOSE ONLY • RD FOR INCIDENT PAIN CONTROLLED BY DAY WAKE THE PATIENT BY NIGHT • A SINGLE LONG ACTING DOSE AT BED TIME • DOUBLE RD 47

  48. FRAIL / ELDERLY / ORGAN IMPAIRMENT • EXTEND DOSING INTERVAL • REDUCE DOSAGE OPIOID DOSE REDUCTION • DO NOT STOP OPIOID ABRUPTLY • ↓ DOSAGE BY 30-50 % EVERY DAY • MAINTAIN RD 48

  49. QUESTIONS 49

  50. CASE 1 • 52 YEAR OLD MALE WITH PANCREATIC CANCER AND SEVERE ABDOMINAL PAIN (10 NRS ) ON SR MORPHINE 30 MG TWICE DAILY • PHYSICAL EXAMINATION:EPIGASTRIC MASS, NO REBOUND TENDERNESS, NO ASCITES, NO JAUNDICE.HE IS DOUBLED OVER IN A FETAL POSITION WHICH RELIEVES HIS PAIN SLIGHTLY • KUB:UNREMARKABLE • CT SCAN ABDOMEN ; LARGE UPPER ABDOMINAL AND CELIAC LYMPH NODES COMPRESSING MESENTERIC VESSELS 50

More Related