1. Consensus‐based recommendations for titrating cannabinoids and tapering opioids for chronic pain control
- Author
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Robert Sealey, Alan Bell, Hance Clarke, Karen Ethans, Zachary Walsh, Colleen O'Connell, Dwight E. Moulin, Jordi Perez, Vernon Naidoo, Ziva D. Cooper, Dustin Sulak, Paul Daeninck, May Ong, Sana-Ara Ahmed, M-J Milloy, Bernard Le Foll, Allison Blain, Brennan K Smith, Amol Deshpande, David Flusk, Claude Cyr, Kevin Rod, and Aaron Sihota
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Psychological intervention ,Tapering ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,Tetrahydrocannabinol ,Adverse effect ,Primary Care ,biology ,business.industry ,Cannabinoids ,Chronic pain ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Opioid ,Anesthesia ,Morphine ,Quality of Life ,Cannabis ,Chronic Pain ,business ,Cannabidiol ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Aims Opioid misuse and overuse have contributed to a widespread overdose crisis and many patients and physicians are considering medical cannabis to support opioid tapering and chronic pain control. Using a five‐step modified Delphi process, we aimed to develop consensus‐based recommendations on: 1) when and how to safely initiate and titrate cannabinoids in the presence of opioids, 2) when and how to safely taper opioids in the presence of cannabinoids and 3) how to monitor patients and evaluate outcomes when treating with opioids and cannabinoids. Results In patients with chronic pain taking opioids not reaching treatment goals, there was consensus that cannabinoids may be considered for patients experiencing or displaying opioid‐related complications, despite psychological or physical interventions. There was consensus observed to initiate with a cannabidiol (CBD)‐predominant oral extract in the daytime and consider adding tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). When adding THC, start with 0.5‐3 mg, and increase by 1‐2 mg once or twice weekly up to 30‐40 mg/day. Initiate opioid tapering when the patient reports a minor/major improvement in function, seeks less as‐needed medication to control pain and/or the cannabis dose has been optimised. The opioid tapering schedule may be 5%–10% of the morphine equivalent dose (MED) every 1 to 4 weeks. Clinical success could be defined by an improvement in function/quality of life, a ≥30% reduction in pain intensity, a ≥25% reduction in opioid dose, a reduction in opioid dose to
- Published
- 2020