Transdermal opioids for cancer pain

被引:0
|
作者
Tracy L Skaer
机构
[1] Washington State University,College of Pharmacy
关键词
Fentanyl; Buprenorphine; Cancer Pain; Oxycodone; Oral Morphine;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Patients with moderate to severe malignancy-related pain frequently require the use of opioid pharmacotherapy. Unfortunately, many cancer patients continue to be prescribed subtherapeutic doses of pain medications resulting in undo suffering and diminished quality of life. The choice of analgesic pharmacotherapy should be individualized and based on the intensity and etiology of pain reported by the patient. Health care providers must be able to readily quantify the relative analgesic potency when converting from one opioid to another or from one route of administration to another. Transdermal fentanyl is effective and well tolerated pharmacotherapy for the cancer pain patients. However, clinicians need to be cognizant that the U.S./U.K. manufacturer's recommendations for equilalagesic dosing of transdermal fentanyl may result in initial doses that produce subtherapeutic levels and unrelieved pain in some patients. A more aggressive dosing algorithm for transdermal fentanyl using a 2:1 (mg/day of oral morphine: mcg/hr of transdermal fentanyl) conversion ratio that considers both a review of the literature and clinical experience should help clinicians individualize cancer pain pharmacotherapy. Transdermal buprenorphine is now being prescribed in Europe and Australia for chronic and cancer pain management. Buprenorphine's mixed agonist/antagonist activity, dosage ceiling, and high affinity to the opiate receptor limits its use to those patients who do not already require large daily doses of opioids. Thus, buprenorphine may not be an appropriate medication for some patients with advanced unremitting cancer pain.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Transdermal opioids for cancer pain
    Skaer, Tracy L.
    HEALTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE OUTCOMES, 2006, 4 (1)
  • [2] Opioids Switching with Transdermal Systems in Chronic Cancer Pain
    Aurilio, C.
    Pace, M. C.
    Pota, V.
    Sansone, P.
    Barbarisi, M.
    Grella, E.
    Passavanti, M. B.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL & CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH, 2009, 28
  • [3] Opioids Switching with Transdermal Systems in Chronic Cancer Pain
    C Aurilio
    MC Pace
    V Pota
    P Sansone
    M Barbarisi
    E Grella
    MB Passavanti
    Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research, 28
  • [4] Practice guidelines for transdermal opioids in malignant pain
    Skaer, TL
    DRUGS, 2004, 64 (23) : 2629 - 2638
  • [5] Practice Guidelines for Transdermal Opioids in Malignant Pain
    Tracy L. Skaer
    Drugs, 2004, 64 : 2629 - 2638
  • [6] Transdermal and oral opioids for outpatient pain therapy
    Hoeer, A.
    Kurepkat, M.
    Gottberg, A.
    Haeussler, B.
    SCHMERZ, 2008, 22 (02): : 156 - 163
  • [7] Transdermal opioids as front line treatment of moderate to severe cancer pain: a systemic review
    Tassinari, Davide
    Drudi, Fabrizio
    Rosati, Marta
    Maltoni, Marco
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2011, 25 (05) : 478 - 487
  • [8] The Opioid Rotation Ratio From Transdermal Fentanyl to "Strong" Opioids in Patients With Cancer Pain
    Reddy, Akhila
    Yennurajalingam, Sriram
    Reddy, Suresh
    Wu, Jimin
    Liu, Diane
    Dev, Rony
    Bruera, Eduardo
    JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2016, 51 (06) : 1040 - 1045
  • [9] Opioids and cancer pain
    Thompson, Jo
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE NURSING, 2018, 24 (11) : 536 - 538
  • [10] Transdermal Patches Containing Opioids in the Treatment of Patients with Chronic Pain
    De Marco, Iolanda
    PROCESSES, 2023, 11 (09)