Could Switching Opioids in Cancer Patients Provide Relief? – Lori Smith, BSN, MSN, CRNP – Nov 12, 2018
I’m disappointed to see this limited only to cancer patients. Since we know that there’s NO DIFFERENCE between cancer and non-cancer pain, these findings would also apply to other kinds of chronic pain.
Side effects and inadequate pain relief with the use of opioids in cancer patients is a challenge for healthcare providers to manage and can cause considerable problems for these patients.
While the topic is still debated within the medical community, opioid switching in cancer patients may provide relief of pain and alleviation of opioid-related side effects, according to the results of a recent Italian study.
Erin McMenamin, CRNP, radiation oncology nurse practitioner at the Abramson Cancer Center of Penn Medicine in Philadelphia, who was not involved with the research, spoke with Cancer Network about these results.
The study researchers conducted a post-hoc analysis from a multicenter, four-arm, phase IV randomized controlled trial, evaluating 498 patients.
What they found was that switching pain relief methods improved pain or opioid toxicity in half of the 79 (15.9%) patients who switched opioids.
“When inadequate pain relief or intolerable side effects interfere with the ability to obtain adequate pain relief for patients, switching opioids is an option.
These days, if your pain relief is inadequate, your doctors will tell you that it’s because “opioids don’t work for chronic pain”, even though this is provably false.
I’m disgusted by the narrow-mindedness of so many highly educated doctors, who mindlessly parrot the PROPaganda without ever fact-checking the nonsense they’re saying.
These “medical professionals” blithely state falsehoods and require patients to accept them as well. If we dare protest or make reasonable arguments, we’re labeled as “problem patients” and refused any further opioids at all.
Switching opioids decreases the opioid requirement,as the body does not perceive them as the same.
Additionally, the “new” opioid may provide improved relief with fewer side effects,” noted McMenamin.
The researchers reported that the primary reason for opioid switching was due to uncontrolled pain in the 79 patients who switched (52.3%).
Other reasons for switching were
- adverse opioid reactions (22.1%),
- a combination of uncontrolled pain and reaction (4.8%), and
- dysphagia (20.8%).
Researchers noted that pain reduction and controlled side effects were reported in 51.45% and 43.5% of medication switches, respectively
The researchers also reported that there was variability in relief of opioid-induced toxicity among adverse events and on a patient-by-patient basis, with daily doses of oral opioids being higher and transdermal therapy doses being lower after switching.
To be most effective, medications must be tailored “on a patient-by-patient basis”.
“Everyone does not respond the same to each of the opioids. This is in part due to the chemical structure of the medication, as well as the metabolism of the medication.
Then why is everyone trying to impose standard doses for ALL patients?
Some patients don’t respond to certain medications, or require a much higher dose than others in order to obtain pain relief.
Others experience side effects that limit the ability to escalate the dose to obtain adequate pain control,” explained McMenamin.
Reblogged this on Flutterby's Rantings and Ravings.
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Excellent piece with excellent comments!
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Reblogged this on ecanarensis and commented:
Another excellent piece with insightful comments by my very good friend & amazing resource, Zyp Czyk
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