pain management in the hospital rog kyle, md medical university of south carolina 2/7/12

Post on 22-Dec-2015

213 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Pain Management in the Hospital

Rog Kyle, MDMedical University of South Carolina

2/7/12

Objectives

• Differentiate acute, chronic, somatic, neuropathic, referred, and visceral pain syndromes.

• Differentiate tolerance, dependence, addiction, and pseudo-addiction.

• Explain the indications and limitations of non-pharmacological, pharmacological, and adjuvant methods of pain control in the hospitalized patient.

• Explain the indications and limitations of opioid pharmacotherapy.

• Determine equianalgesic dosing for pharmacologic therapy as needed.

Key Messages• Chronic pain is a significant problem in the elderly • There are many different mechanisms involved in generation and

perception of pain

• Both non-opioid and opioid options are available for managing pain. • Different classes of medication and non-pharmacotherapies are available

for the management of pain syndromes • Opioids have a narrow therapeutic window and their use must be weighed

carefully in the management of chronic, non-cancer pain

• Types of pain• Tolerance, dependence and addiction• Medications

Types of Pain

Nociceptive Pain

• Nociceptors = pain fiber sensitive to noxious stimuli

• Somatic – injury to tissues, well localized• Visceral – injury to organs (stretch receptors),

poorly localized• Referred – afferent visceral fibers + somatic to

same spinothalamic pathway

Neuropathic pain • Abnormal neural activity secondary to disease, injury,

or dysfunction• Persists without ongoing injury (trigeminal neuralgia,

DM neuropathy)• Types:

– Sympathetic – from peripheral nerve injury with autonomic changes

• “New” term – Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS)– Type I = RSD– Type II = causalgia

– Peripheral autonomic pain – • Same but without autonomic change (PHN)

– Central Pain (spinal cord injury)

Tolerance, Dependence, Addiction

Tolerance

• Tolerance - increase the dose to maintain equipotent analgesic effects– Associative - linked to environmental clues and

involves psychological factors– Adaptive - involves down-regulation or

desensitization of opioid receptors, or both

Tolerance

• Repeated administration of opioids– Desensitization or down-regulation– Sensitization – similar to neuropathic pain with

increased sensitivity to pain

• Can’t distinguish the hyperalgesia due to opioid treatment from the hyperalgesia due to worsening neuropathic pain

• It is often impossible to distinguish between pharmacologic tolerance and abnormal pain sensitivity– Both lead to escalation of opioid therapy that

ultimately fails

Dependence

• Rapid discontinuation of opioid following prolonged administration produces symptoms– Dysphoria– Anxiety– Mood volatility– Hypertension– Tachycardia– Sweating

Dependence

• Psychological dependence– Extreme behavior (craving) associated with

procuring/consuming drug– High vs. withdrawal

• Physical dependence– class-specific withdrawal syndrome that can be

produced by abrupt cessation or rapid dose reduction of a drug (or administration of an antagonist)

Addiction

• Physical and psychological dependence• Chronic relapsing disorder characterized by

persistent drug-seeking and drug-taking behaviors

• Impaired control over use, compulsive use, continued use despite harm and craving

Medications

NSAIDS

Wide variety

• 60 million Rx’s/yr • Clinical efficacy of equipotent doses is similar• Individual responses highly variable – especially toxicity

– cox-1 vs. cox-2– naprosyn may have greatest relative cardiovascular safety profile– diclofenac - available as a topical patch for pain due to trauma and as a gel for

treatment of painful joints– sulindac – increased hepatotoxicity– indomethacin - GI and central nervous system adverse effects may be more

frequent or severe than with other NSAIDs– ketorolac - risk of gastropathy is increased when use exceeds five days– piroxicam – high GI toxicity– celecoxib – no antiplatelet function. Increased CV risk above 200mg/day

Utility of NSAIDS

• Variations in patient response• Generally indicated in mild to moderate pain• Mostly for pain of somatic origin although has a CNS

effect as well• Each trial should last a couple weeks• May have an opioid sparing effect as adjunct• Use at the maximum anti-inflammatory dose• Protein bound – may interfere with other protein

bound drugs (dilantin. coumadin)

Utility of NSAIDS

• Noted variability in the response to NSAIDS between patients– Does not appear related to serum concentrations– Degree of Cox inhibition doesn’t correlate with

effect– Non-prostaglandin effects may predominate in

some patients– Switching between classes of NSAIDS may be

beneficial

Tricyclic Antidepressants

Utility in pain management

• Most useful in neuropathic pain• None of the TCA’s carries an indication for pain

management• Used frequently in variety of settings• Amitriptyline most widely studied• Anti-depressant effects may alleviate depression

associated with chronic pain• May have synergy with opioids• Switching TCA’s based on effect and/or side effects

can be tried…but often frustrating

Mechanism of action

• Generally unknown• Theories involve action on serotonin,

norepinephrine receptors (TCAs with the greatest effect upon serotonin seem to have the greatest analgesic effect)

• May potentiate endogenous opioid system• However, potent serotonin RI’s have no

analgesic effect of their own• Can take weeks to work

Side effects• Anticholinergic (amitriptyline > nortriptyline)• Also GI, CV, neurologic (esp. sedation – maybe

a +’ve)• Anticholinergic and CNS effects may diminish

in days to weeks – “ride it out”

Anticonvulsants

Utility in pain management

• Can be very effective, particularly in neuropathic pain

• Wide variation in use among pain specialists, except with carbamazepine for trigeminal neuralgia

• Gabapentin is frequently a first choice as levels do not need monitoring

Mechanism of action

• Theories include membrane stabilization (phenytoin), inhibition of repeated neuronal discharges (carbamazepine), GABA inhibition enhancement (valproic acid, clonazepam), GABA mimetics (gabapentin, pregabalin).

Adjuvant medications

Benzodiazepines• Good choice when anxiety complicates pain

management (esp’ly cancer patients)• Clonazepam particularly useful in neuropathic

pain (GABA potentiation)• Drawbacks well known

– Addictive potential is significant– Potentiates sedation and respiratory depression

Antispasmodics

• Painful muscle spasm, myoclonic jerks can accompany a variety of pain conditions (and opioids)– toxicity of morphine

• Mechanism of action may reflect their sedative effects more than direct muscle effect

• Commonly used – cyclopenzaprine, carisoprodol, baclofen, methcarbamol

SSRI/SNRI

• Often tried when TCA side effects limit utility• May be treating depression – not an uncommon

consequence of life with chronic pain• Venlafaxine has been shown to be similar to

imipramine in one study of painful neuropathy• Duloxetine approved for diabetic peripheral

neuropathy• Depression is probably undertreated in chronic pain

patients in general (cancer and non-cancer pts)

Opioids

Opioids

• Role in treatment of pain is well established for acute pain, malignant pain and care of the terminally ill

• Role in chronic non-cancer pain is more controversial• WHO Ladder

Opioids

• WHO Ladder• Moderate to severe - fixed dose schedule and

not on a “prn” basis• Stepwise approach• Adjuvants useful in enhancing analgesia and

controlling side effects

Opioids

• Equi-analgesic dosing

http://www.musc.edu/pharmacyservices/medusepol/OpioidAnalgesicConversionChart.pdf

Opioids

• Equianalgesic dosing• Equianalgesic conversion

– MUSC pharmacy recommends 50% dose reduction for cross tolerance (others recommend 25-50%) except for methadone and fentanyl (see below)

http://www.musc.edu/pharmacyservices/medusepol/OpioidAnalgesicConversionChart.pdf

Opioids

• Equianalgesic dosing• Equianalgesic conversion• Methadone conversion ratio

http://www.musc.edu/pharmacyservices/medusepol/OpioidAnalgesicConversionChart.pdf

Opioids

• Equianalgesic dosing• Equianalgesic conversion• Methadone conversion ratio• Fentanyl conversion

http://www.musc.edu/pharmacyservices/medusepol/OpioidAnalgesicConversionChart.pdf

Therapeutic failures and adverse outcomes

• One of the fundamental principles of pain management is that the dose of an opioid should be increased until maximal analgesia is achieved with minimal side effects

• What to do when this doesn’t work?• Identifying causes of treatment failure

– Progression of underlying illness– Pharmacologic tolerance– Increased pain sensitivity

PCA

• Efficacy established in post-op pain• Morphine, hydromorphone, fentanyl

– Higher pt satisfaction, better pain control, higher amount of opioid overall

PCA

• Morphine– Metabolites (morphine-6-glucuronide) accumulate in renal

failure = sedation, respiratory depression• Fentanyl

– Less histamine release = better in hypotension, bronchospasm

– Inactive metabolites (hepatic), Safe in ESRD• Hydromorphone

– Safe in ESRD– High concentration/low volume

PCA Conversion

• When converting from a PCA to an oral regimen in patients requiring long term pain control– Give approximately 50% of 24 hr total opioid use

as a long acting oral formulation and 50% as breakthrough oral formulation

– Reduce dose 25-50% to account for cross tolerance if switching opioid

Side Effects

• Depressed respiratory drive • Depressed consciousness, hallucinations • Hypotension• Nausea, vomiting• Ileus, constipation• Urinary retention

Examples – Equianalgesic Dosing

• Convert a patient requiring 120 mg of p.o. morphine and 20 mg i.v. morphine to p.o. oxycodone– 20 mg i.v. morphine = 60 mg p.o. morphine– 120 mg + 60 mg = 180 mg morphine/24 hr– Ratio 3:2 for morphine:oxycodone (po) = 120 mg

oxycodone– Reduce by 25-50% = 10-15 mg oxycodone po Q4H

Examples – Methadone Conversion

• Convert a patient taking 300 mg MS Contin BID and 60 mg MSIR Q4H to methadone– Total oral morphine/24 hrs = 960mg– Conversion ratio is 16 for 960 mg = 960/16 = 60– Reduce by 50% for cross tolerance = 30– Given Q8H = 30/3 = 10 mg Q8H methadone

Examples – PCA to Oral Opioid

• Convert a patient with hydromorphone PCA set at basal rate of 1 mg/hr and breakthrough of 0.2mg Q10 min that utilized a total of 6 mg of breakthrough in previous 12 hours to oral oxycodone– 24 hr iv hydromorphone use = 24 mg basal (1 mg/hr x 24 hrs) +

12 mg breakthrough (6 mg/12 hrs x 2) = 36 mg hydromorphone IV

– oxycodone:hydromorphone iv = 20:1.5 = 480 mg oxycodone– Reduce 50% for cross tolerance = 240 mg oxycodone– Giving 50% of total as long acting = OxyContin 60 mg BID + 20

mg oxycodone Q4H

References1. Ballantyne JC, Mao J. Opioid Therapy for Chronic Pain. N Engl J Med 2003;349:1943-53.2. Hudcova J, McNicol ED, Quah CS, Lau J, Carr DB.

Patient controlled opioid analgesia versus conventional opioid analgesia for postoperative pain (Review). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD003348

3. Roelofs PD, Deyo RA, Koes BW, Scholten RJ, van Tulder MW. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for low back pain: an updated Cochrane review. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2008;33(16):1766

4. Von Korff M, Kolodny A, Deyo RA, Chou R. Long-term opioid therapy reconsidered. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(5):325

5. Joranson DE, Ryan KM, Gilson AM, Dahl JL. Trends in medical use and abuse of opioid analgesics. JAMA. 2000;283(13):1710

6. Dobecki DA, Schocket SM, Wallace MS. Update on pharmacotherapy guidelines for the treatment of neuropathic pain. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2006;10(3):185

7. Saarto T, Wiffen PJ. Antidepressants for neuropathic pain: a Cochrane review. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2010;81(12):1372

References1. Ballantyne JC, Mao J. Opioid Therapy for Chronic Pain. N Engl J Med 2003;349:1943-53.2. Hudcova J, McNicol ED, Quah CS, Lau J, Carr DB.

Patient controlled opioid analgesia versus conventional opioid analgesia for postoperative pain (Review). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 4. Art. No.: CD003348

3. Roelofs PD, Deyo RA, Koes BW, Scholten RJ, van Tulder MW. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for low back pain: an updated Cochrane review. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2008;33(16):1766

4. Von Korff M, Kolodny A, Deyo RA, Chou R. Long-term opioid therapy reconsidered. Ann Intern Med. 2011;155(5):325

5. Joranson DE, Ryan KM, Gilson AM, Dahl JL. Trends in medical use and abuse of opioid analgesics. JAMA. 2000;283(13):1710

6. Dobecki DA, Schocket SM, Wallace MS. Update on pharmacotherapy guidelines for the treatment of neuropathic pain. Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2006;10(3):185

7. Saarto T, Wiffen PJ. Antidepressants for neuropathic pain: a Cochrane review. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2010;81(12):1372

top related