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0 A Comprehensive Review of Treating Acute Pain Kelly W. Jones, Pharm.D., BCPS Florence, South Carolina kjones@mcleodhealth.org
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1 Disclaimer I have no conflict of interest relating to the material covered in our discussion today. I do not serve on any speaker bureau. I do not have any grants concerning the area of discussion.
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3 2 types of pain Acute and chronic Nociceptive and neuropathic Nociceptive is sharp, throbbing, aching It is easy to describe, localize Hard to describe if visceral Neuropathic is described as burning, tingling, shooting, stabbing, electrical Both may need opioids and adjuvants
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4 The STEPS Approach Safety Tolerability Efficacy Price Simplicity
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5 The STEPS approach SSafety respiratory depression TTolerability itching, constipation, addiction, etc EEfficacy efficacy? PPrice depends on delivery system SSimplicity depends on patient and condition
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6 Efficacy - Acute Pain Outcome: # with at least 50% pain relief AnalgesicNNTCI Acetaminophen42.3-9.5 Aspirin2.01.8-2.2 Ibuprofen2.42.0-4.2 Diclofenac2.32.0-2.7
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7 Efficacy - Acute Pain AnalgesicNNTCI Tylenol #32.21.7-2.9 Percocet2.21.7-3.2 Codeine16.711-48 Morphine IM2.92.6-3.6 Tramadol4.83.8-6.1
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8 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches
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9 Nonpharmacologic Approach Comprehensive therapy with many approaches Spiritual advise Rest Exercise Biofeedback or Psychotherapy Heat/cool packs Hot baths Complementary medicine
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10 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates
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11 Acetaminophen Analgesic No more than 4 grams per day Extra strength = 500 mg 5 grains = 325 mg Caution in alcoholics and those with liver disease - 2 grams/day limit Caution with warfarin Drug of choice for OA
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12 Acetaminophen toxicity Poison of choice in teenagers They don’t consider it dangerous Use nomogram to determine toxicity Measure serum level of acetaminophen after 4 hours of ingestion Antedote: acetylcysteine 140 mg/kg x 1, then 70 mg/kg for 17 more doses Acetadote® (acetylcysteine) Injectable form for acetaminophen overdose
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13 OTC Analgesics – Acetaminophen Final ruling – label changes to reflect new safety information Ingredient “acetaminophen” prominently identified on product’s container and carton Labels contain new warnings that highlight the potential for liver toxicity and warn against Using more than the recommended dose of acetaminophen; Using more than one product (over-the-counter or prescription) containing with acetaminophen Taking acetaminophen with moderate amounts of alcohol. FDA 4/29/09
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14 Acetaminophen FDA advisory committee: options to reduce risk of liver damage Reduce the current dose recommendations for maximum adult daily dose and single adult dose Limit single adult dose to maximum of 650 mg Lower max daily dose from 4000mg to 3250 mg Clarify dosing for alcohol users (> 3 drinks/day) Limit dose formulations for over-the-counter liquid preparations Restrict to a single mid-strength concentration Eliminate OTC (and possibly prescription) combination acetaminophen products Vote was 20 to 17 in favor to pull acetaminophen out in combination with narcotics FDA Advisory Committee public hearing 6/30/09
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15 The Best the FDA has… Only one study does the argument any justice. Study in Atlanta from 2000 to 2004 94 patients admitted to hospital in 5 yrs with acute liver failure 29 adults with liver failure from acetaminophen 15 were unintentional, 14 intentional overdoses Study defines incidence 5 cases/million/year in Atlanta Extrapolation - 350 unintentional cases/300,000,000/year in USA (0.000001 or 0.0001%) Am J Gastroent 2007;102:2459-63
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16 Do we live in a no risk world? 2005 data Odds of dying from any injury - 1 in 2,517 Odds of dying from a fall - 1 in 15,085 Odds of dying from an auto injury - 1 in 20,331 Odds of dying from complications from medical and surgical care - 1 in 111,763 Odds of dying from a firearm - 1 in 375,801 Odds of having unintentional liver injury from acetaminophen - 1 in 850,000 (NOT “odds of dying”) Odds of dying from fireworks - 1 in 57,588,244 National Safety Council. The odds of dying in 2005 http://www.nsc.org/research/odds.aspx
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17 More beliefs! Acetaminophen in alcoholics 6 trials All trials done with 4 gm There are no 2 gram studies! There were NO changes in liver function as compared to placebo on days 4 and 11 as compared to day 0. No changes in LFT’s in 3 or 5 day study “We do not believe the new studies justify removal of the alcohol warning.” Claim small numbers, people use longer than 10 days Because these new studies do not adequately demonstrate that alcohol use is NOT a risk factor….we believe an alcohol warning continues to be necessary.” Was the study designed to answer this question? Hepatology 1995;22:767-73; Al Pharm & Ther 2007;26:283-90 Federal Register 2009;74(81):19385-19409
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18 Non-acetylated Salicylates Does not interfere with platelet aggregation Rarely associated with GI bleeding Does not affect renal function Safe in aspirin allergic patients “Weak” antiinflammatory agents: No RCTs demonstrating efficacy in chronic pain Onset of action slower than NSAIDs
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19 Non-acetylated Salicylates Products Diflunisal (Dolobid®) 500 mg - dose is 2 tabs loading dose, then 1 tab twice daily Generic price - $1.00 per tablet Choline magnesium trisalicylate (Trilisate®) 500 mg, 750 mg, 1000 mg tabs Typical dose is 1500 mg BID Salsalate (Disalcid®) 500 mg, 750 mg tabs Magnesium Salicylate Doan’s Pills - OTC
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20 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs
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21 NSAIDs Allergy to aspirin = allergy to NSAIDs If one NSAID does not work, does not mean others will not work. Analgesic effects are single dose Anti-inflammatory effects occur between days 7 and 14 Long-acting vs short-acting NSAIDs What happened to the COX-2 inhibitors? Consider monitoring LFT’s in patients taking diclofenac (hepatitis - 1 to 5/100,000, hum..?)
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22 High: aspirin, indomethacin, ketorolac, meclofenamate, piroxicam, tolmetin Medium:diclofenac, fenoprofen, flurbiprofen, ketoprofen, ibuprofen, naproxen, oxaprozin, sulindac, mefanamic acid Low: etodolac, nabumetone Lowest: celecoxib, non-acetylated salicylates NSAID-Induced Ulcers Risk Reduction through Choice of Agent
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23 New NSAIDs Diclofenac epolamine 1.3% (Flector® Patch) NSAID patch for acute pain from strains, sprains, contusions Dose is one patch twice a day Do not apply to damaged skin Do NOT wear while bathing or showering Wash hands after application Come in a box of 2 envelopes, each envelope has 5 patches $156/#30 patches Ibuprofen injection (Caldolor®) Acute pain - 400 mg to 800 mg IV infusion over 30 min every 6h prn Fever - 400 mg every 4 to 6 hrs prn (can use lower doses)
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24 New NSAIDs Diclofenac Potassium for Oral Solution (Cambia®) Oral solution for acute migraine, get level within 5 min,max in 15 min 50 mg dose, mix powder in 1-2 oz of water Buy in a co-joined dose pack of three or a box of nine Diclofenac (Zipsor®) Liquid-filled capsule formulation for mild to moderate pain
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25 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen
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26 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol for Chronic pain
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27 The Opiates Narcotic agonist Natural (opiates) - morphine, codeine Semisynthetic (opioids) - hydromorphone, oxycodone Synthetic (opioids) - fentanyl, methadone Narcotic agonist/antagonist Nalbuphine, butorphanol Narcotic antagonist Naloxone (Narcan®)
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28 Opioid Allergy? True allergic and anaphylactic reactions are rare Single case reports with meperidine, morphine and fentanyl Most cases reported use of other medications likely to cause allergy None documented cross-sensitivity with other opioids Urtiacaria, pruritis, sneezing, and exacerbations of asthma are common Opioids cause a histamine release… this is NOT an allergic reaction, only allergy-like symptoms! Does this mean the patient is “cross-sensitive” to other opioids? Naturally occurring and semi-synthetic are more potent histamine releasers than synthetic Risk of cross-sensitivity is extremely low if at all
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29 Pharmacokinetics Time to reach Cmax PO, SL, PR60 to 90 min IM30 min SQ, IV10 to 15 min Duration of effect is somewhere around 3 to 5 hours for PO/PR PO is generally weaker than IV/IM due to first-pass effect, ~3 to 5 times weaker
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30 Immediate release dosing Dose every 4 hours PRN is OK for acute pain Can adjust dose daily for chronic use The exception is methadone, which is immediate release with a long half-life (more later).
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31 Sustained-release dosing Especially important for chronic pain management Dosed every 8h, 12h, 24h, depending on the product and formulation. Don’t crush or chew these Adjust dose every 2 to 4 days
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32 Tylenol #3 Codeine 30 mg + acetaminophen Chronic codeine causes lots of side effects: Constipation Urinary retention Tylenol #2 contains 15 mg of codeine Tylenol #4 contains 60 mg of codeine Empirin with Codeine® (codeine and aspirin) 325mg/30mg; 325mg/60mg
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33 Tramadol Binary analgesic Drug interactions with SSRI’s and TCA’s Seizure risk? Cross-sensitive allergy with codeine is possible Regular release and extended release products (100 mg, 200 mg, 300 mg) Combination with acetaminophen (Ultracet®)
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34 New Binary Analgesic Tapentadol (Nucynta®) Strong narcotic (C-II) + NE reuptake inhibitor Watch with look-alike Nuvigil® (armodafinil) Analgesic for acute moderate to severe pain Approved for those > 18 years of age 50 mg, 75 mg, 100 mg tabs every 4-6 hrs prn Dose the second dose as soon an hour after first dose if not relief Tapentadol is metabolized, but there are no known interactions No effect on QT elongation or other EKG parameters, even in combination with moxifloxacin (pkg insert)
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35 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol What’s in the basement?
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36 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol What’s in the basement? Darvocet®
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37 Darvocet Research Observations Listed on the “Beer’s” list Why? Increase side effects from the metabolite norpropoxyphene long half-life (36 hrs) and the risk of accumulation Studies show no enhanced analgesic effects from the addition of propoxyphene to acetaminophen
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38 Propoxyphene Products Darvocet-N 50® (generic available) 50 mg propoxyphene + 325 mg acetaminophen Darvocet-N 100® (generic available) 100 mg propoxyphene + 325 mg acetaminophen Wygesic® Tablets (generic available) 65 mg propoxyphene + 650 mg acetaminophen New Product Darvocet A500® 100 mg propoxyphene + 500 mg acetaminophen
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39 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol Tylenol #3 + NSAID
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40 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol Tylenol #3 + NSAID Hydrocodone combo
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41 Hydrocodone Derivative of codeine Many different products: Lorcet 10mg/650 mg (acetaminophen) Lorcet HD & Vicodin 5 mg/500 mg Lorcet Plus 7.5 mg/650 mg Lortab 2.5 mg/500mg, 5 mg/500 mg, 7.5 mg/500 mg, 10 mg/500 mg Lortab Elixir 2.5 mg/167 mg per 5 ml
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42 Hydrocodone Vicodin 5 mg/500 mg Vicodin ES 7.5 mg/750 mg Vicodin HP 10 mg/660 mg Vicoprofen 7.5 mg/200 mg Zydone 5 mg/400 mg, 7.5 mg/400 mg Norco 10 mg/325 mg Anexsia 5 mg/325, 5/500, 7.5/325, 7.5/650 Maxidone 10 mg/750 mg (max of 5 tabs a day)
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43 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol Tylenol #3 + NSAID Hydrocodone or combo Oxycodone or Oxymorphone
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44 Oxycodone Percodan® contains aspirin Percocet® contain acetaminophen Combunox® (oxycodone 5 mg + ibuprofen 400 mg) Lots of new Percocet® products: 2.5 mg/325 mg 7.5 mg/325 mg, 7.5 mg/500 mg 10 mg/325 mg, 10 mg/650 mg Tylox® 5mg/500 mg Oxycontin®: 10 mg, 20 mg, 40 mg, 80 mg, 160 mg
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45 Immediate-release oxycodone Oxycodone or Roxicodone Tablets - 5 mg, 15 mg, 30 mg Capsules - 5 mg Oral solution - 5 mg/5 ml Concentrate - 20 mg/ml
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46 New CII for Pain Oxymorphone Semi-synthetic metabolite of oxycodone Long-acting formulations not for opioid-niave patients; standard dose determined from previous opioid dose Opana® - oxymorphone - 5 mg ($2.40 per tab), 10 mg ($4.30 per tab) Dose 10 to 20 mg every 4-6 hours prn Opana ER® - oxymorphone - 5 mg, 7.5 mg, 10 mg, 15 mg, 20 mg, 30 mg, 40 mg ($11 per tab), given every 12 hours 10 mg oxymorphone = 20 mg hydrocodone, 20 mg oxycodone, 20 mg methadone, 30 mg oral morphine
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47 Pain Ladder Nonpharmacologic Approaches Acetaminophen or nonacetylated salicylates NSAIDs NSAID + Acetaminophen Tylenol #3 or Tramadol Tylenol #3 + NSAID Hydrocodone or combo Oxycodone or Oxymorphone Morphine
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48 Morphine products Sustain-release MS-Contin® 15 mg, 30 mg, 60 mg, 100 mg, 200 mg Avinza® once daily 30 mg, 60 mg, 90 mg, 120 mg Kadian® once daily 10 mg, 20 mg, 30 mg, 50 mg, 60 mg, 80 mg, 100 mg, 200 mg capsule DepoDur® (morphine extended release, epidural) Immediate-release Tablets Oral solution 10 mg/5 ml, 20 mg/5ml, 20mg/ml Supp: 5 mg, 10 mg, 20 mg, 30 mg
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49 Morphine/naltrexone (Embeda®) 24 hour analgesic for moderate to severe pain Can give daily or twice daily Extended-release capsule, not “prn” medication 20mg/0.8mg, 30 mg/1.2 mg, 50 mg/2 mg, 60 mg/2.4 mg, 80 mg/3.2 mg, 100 mg/4 mg New CII for Pain
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50 Pain Ladder Hydromorphone Ladder Extension
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51 Hydromorphone products Dilaudid tablets 1 mg, 2 mg, 3 mg, 4 mg, 8 mg Extended release formulation - Exalgo® For chronic pain Liquid 5 mg/5 ml Injection 1 mg, 2 mg, 4 mg, 10 mg per ml Suppositories 3 mg Dilaudid cough syrup 1 mg/5 ml; + 100 mg guaifenesin
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52 Pain Ladder Hydromorphone Ladder Extension Fentanyl
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53 Fentanyl Products Injection 0.05 mg/ml Transmucosal (Fentanyl Oralet®, Actiq®) Oralet®-100 mcg, 200 mcg, 300 mcg, 400 mcg Actiq® - 200 mcg, 400 mcg, 600 mcg, 800 mcg, 1200 mcg, 1600 mcg Transdermal Duragesic® -12 mcg, 25 mcg, 50 mcg, 75 mcg, 100 mcg
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54 Transdermal Fentanyl C max = 24 hours Patch last 48 to 72 hours Watch if used on skinny folks need fat to absorb it predictably Do not use in opiate naive patients. 25 mcg patch is ~50 mg IR morphine per day Watch in patients with fever, use of heating pad, blankets, hot tubs, etc.
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55 Fentanyl (Onsolis®) Buccal soluble film formulation for rescue cancer pain 200, 400, 600, 800, 1200 mcg No more than 4 doses per day Separate by at least 2 hours Patient has to enroll into the FOCUS program Get medication from a special pharmacy New Fentanyl Product
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56 kjones@mcleodhealth.org
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