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I.v. infusion of opioids for cancer pain: clinical review and guidelines for use.

Authors :
Portenoy RK
Moulin DE
Rogers A
Inturrisi CE
Foley KM
Source :
Cancer treatment reports [Cancer Treat Rep] 1986 May; Vol. 70 (5), pp. 575-81.
Publication Year :
1986

Abstract

To assess the safety, efficacy, and use of continuous iv infusion (CI) of opioids for cancer pain, we reviewed the clinical experience of 36 patients who received 46 CIs. CI was always preceded by a period of repetitive dosing of opioids. Morphine was used in 36 CIs, methadone in four, hydromorphone in four, oxymorphone in one, and levorphanol in one. Mean doses during CI were the morphine equivalent of 17 mg/hour (range, 0.7-100) at the start, 69 mg/hour (range, 4-480) at the maximum, and 52 mg/hour (range, 1-480) at termination. Pain relief was acceptable during 28 CIs, unacceptable during 17, and unknown during one. There were few toxic effects other than sedation. Twenty-five patients died, 12 resumed im or oral opioids, six continued CI with a different opioid (yielding analgesia in two), and outcome was undetermined in three. This review suggests that (a) CI is safe, (b) analgesia may require rapid escalation of infusion rates, (c) patient response varies and lack of acceptable analgesia may occur in up to one-third, (d) ineffective CI with one drug may be followed by success with another, (e) CI should be preceded by a period of repetitive iv boluses with the same drug, and (f) guidelines can be developed which incorporate pharmacokinetic principles.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0361-5960
Volume :
70
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer treatment reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
2423236