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Palliative Pain Management

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Page 1: Palliative Pain Management

Palliative Pain Management

Page 2: Palliative Pain Management

Content

• Pain – definition, assessment

• Nociceptive and Neuropathic Pain

• Types of pain in cancer

• Opioids – principles and WHO ladder

• Opioids – titration, relative potency, prescribing, formulations, side-effects

• Opioid Induced Neurotoxicity (OIN)

• Adjuvants for types of cancer pain

Page 3: Palliative Pain Management

Principles used in symptom control

• What causes the symptom ?

– Physical

– Psycho-social

– Spiritual

• How do we manage it ?

• Treat the treatable

• Symptom control

• Review your management – things change!

Page 4: Palliative Pain Management

Total Suffering

Pain

Social & Financial

Spiritual

Cultural Psychological

Physical Symptoms

Total Pain/Suffering Woodruff

Page 5: Palliative Pain Management

Pain and advanced cancer

• .. are not synonymous

• ¼ of patients do not have pain

• ¾ of patients experience pain at some stage of their illness – 1/3 of patients have 1 pain

– 1/3 of patients have 2 pains

– 1/3 of patients have >3 pains

Page 6: Palliative Pain Management

Causes of pain in cancer patients Cancer related …

• Visceral

• Bone

• Soft tissue infiltration

• Nerve compression/infiltration

• Muscle spasm

• Raised intracranial pressure

• Metabolic/ Endocrine

Page 7: Palliative Pain Management

Causes of pain in cancer patients Treatment related …

• Surgery – Surgical wound – acute / chronic

– Adhesions

• Radiotherapy – Acute / chronic e.g. mucositis / fibrosis

• Chemotherapy – Acute / chronic e.g. mucositis / neuropathy

Page 8: Palliative Pain Management

Causes of pain in cancer patients Associated factors …

• Constipation

• Pressure sores

• Bladder spasm

• Joint stiffness

• Post herpetic neuralgia

Page 9: Palliative Pain Management

Causes of pain in cancer patients Concurrent illnesses …

• Low back Pain

• Angina

• Arthritis

• IBS

• Trauma

• Other

Page 10: Palliative Pain Management

Specific assessment tools

• Visual analogue scales

• Numeric analogue scales

• Categorical scales

• Body charts

0 10

Severe 3

Moderate 2

Mild 1

None 0

Visual analogue scale

Categorical scale

Page 11: Palliative Pain Management

What is “Total Pain”?

Total

Pain

Physical

Other symptoms

Adverse Rx effects

Insomnia/Chronic fatigue

Psychological

Anger

Disfigurement

Fear of pain/death

Helplessness

Social

Family/Finance worries

Loss of job/income

Loss of role

Abandonment/Isolation

Spiritual

Why me?

Anger at God

What is the point?

Guilt

Page 12: Palliative Pain Management
Page 13: Palliative Pain Management

Other cancer problems

• Social circumstances

• Family communication

• Patient coping - denial

• Family coping

• Treatment side-effects

• Disease symptoms - recurrent disease

• Genetics

Page 14: Palliative Pain Management

SYMPTOMS IN ADVANCED CANCER

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Asthenia

Anorexia

Pain

Nausea

Constipation

Sedation/Confusion

Dyspnea % Patients (n=275)

Ref: Bruera 1992 “Why Do We Care?” Conference; Memorial Sloan-Kettering

Page 15: Palliative Pain Management

Pain

• Defined as an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage

• Acute pain is generally sudden in onset, temporary, and subsides of its own accord or after successful treatment of the cause

• Chronic pain persists or recurs for prolonged and often indefinite periods of time

Page 16: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Assessment

• Measure pain levels with the patient at regular intervals.

• Cause of pain should be identified and treated promptly.

• Patients can describe:

– location of pain

– aggravating or relieving factors

– intensity or severity

– goals for pain control

– duration, and when it occurs

Page 17: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Scale

Visual Analog Scale (VAS) 100mm long

Simple Descriptive Pain Intensity Scale

Numeric Rating Scale (NRS)

No Pain

No Pain

No Pain

Mild Pain

Moderate Pain

Severe Pain

Worst Possible Pain

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Worst Possible Pain

Page 18: Palliative Pain Management

Assessing pain Investigations may be useful

Page 19: Palliative Pain Management

Assessing pain Investigations may be useful

Page 20: Palliative Pain Management

Classification of Pain

• Nociceptive pain - tissue damage (two types) • Somatic

– e.g. metastatic bone pain

• Visceral – e.g. liver capsule pain – e.g. colic from malignant bowel obstruction

• Neuropathic - arises from nerve damage • Central [brain, spinal cord, autonomic]

• Peripheral nerves

– Dysesthetic (burning) – Lancinating/shooting – Sensory changes – hyperaesthesia, allodynia, numbness

Page 21: Palliative Pain Management

• Somatic Pain

• Arises from bone, muscle, cutaneous and

connective tissue

• Localised

• Typically clinically described as throbbing,

aching or stabbing

• Visceral Pain

• Arises from internal organs

• Generalised / diffuse

• Clinically, typically described as cramping or

gnawing

Nociceptive Pains

Page 22: Palliative Pain Management

• Arises from neural tissue

• Clinical descriptions variable

• Continuous ‘burning’

• Spontaneous ‘lancinating’ or ‘electric’

• Associations

• Allodynia

abnormal sensations

• Hyperalgesia

Neuropathic Pain

Page 23: Palliative Pain Management

Types of pain in cancer

• Visceral pain

• Neuropathic pain

• Bony pain

• Referred pain

• Breakthrough pain

Page 24: Palliative Pain Management

Visceral Pain

• Results from infiltration , compression, distension or stretching of thoracic and abdominal viscera

• Often poorly localised

• Often referred to cutaneous sites

• Can usually be well controlled and responds well to analgesics

Page 25: Palliative Pain Management

Neuropathic pain

• Pain caused by injury to, or disease of, the PNS or CNS

• Puzzling & frustrating: – often seems to have no

cause

– may respond poorly to treatment

– can last indefinitely

– can escalate over time

– often results in severe disability

Page 26: Palliative Pain Management

Neuropathic pain

• Most distinguishing feature: anatomical pattern of distribution,

pain follows nerve distribution

• Two broad classifications: –constant (often described as

burning, throbbing, or stinging) –intermittent (often described as

sharp, jabbing, or shooting) • Often worse at night

Page 27: Palliative Pain Management

‘Bony’ pain • Can be very painful

• Cancer cells multiply inside the bone and put pressure on the nerves

• Also causes bones to crumble – this exposes the nerves, and leads to more pain

• Responds well to analgesics and radiotherapy

Page 28: Palliative Pain Management

Referred pain

• Pain from internal organs felt at a site distant from the tissue damage

e.g. pancreatic cancer pain is felt in the back

Page 29: Palliative Pain Management

Breakthrough pain

• Transient increase in pain over ‘baseline’

• Rapid onset and severe

• Frequent breakthrough pain may indicate inadequate control of ‘baseline’ pain

Page 30: Palliative Pain Management

Dose for breakthrough cancer pain

The breakthrough dose should be equivalent to a 4 hourly dose

• i.e. - 1/6th of total daily opioid dose

• Generally use the same opioid as being used for regular regimen

Page 31: Palliative Pain Management

Around-the-Clock (ATC) Medication

Pain Relief Threshold

Persistent Pain

Treating Persistent Pain P

ain

In

ten

sit

y

Time

Theoretical Model

Page 32: Palliative Pain Management

Breakthrough pain (BTP)

Around-the-clock

Medication

Time

Breakthrough

Pain

Theoretical Model

Pa

in In

ten

sit

y

Page 33: Palliative Pain Management

Increasing ATC Medication – May Increase Side Effects

Around-the-

clock

Medication

Breakthrough

Pain

Theoretical Model

Pa

in In

ten

sit

y

Time

Page 34: Palliative Pain Management
Page 35: Palliative Pain Management

Commonly used medication in palliative care patients

• Analgesics

• Antiemetics

• Laxatives

• Antispasmodics

• Anticholinergics

• Anticonvulsants

• Antidepressants

• Corticosteroids

• Antibiotics

• Sedatives

Page 36: Palliative Pain Management

Drug complications

• Allergy

• Predicted pharmacological effects

• Increased drug levels – Organ failure

– Increasing age

• BNF appendices

– Organ failure • Liver impairment

• Renal impairment

– Drug interactions

Page 37: Palliative Pain Management

Basic Principles of Opioid Analgesia

The right dose of opioid is the one that achieves the best analgesia with the fewest side effects.

• By the cause of the pain(s) • By the clock • By the ladder • By the mouth • For breakthrough pain • For the individual • Adjuvant therapies as needed • Prevent side effects

Page 38: Palliative Pain Management

Opioid Side Effects Advise patients

• Constipation

– Co-prescribe laxatives e.g. Senna/Lactulose

• Nausea & vomiting (30%)

– Prophylactic anti-emetics e.g.. Haloperidol/Cyclizine/ Domperidone/Metoclopramide

• Sedation

– Reassure and monitor

– Advise re driving

• Dry mouth

Page 39: Palliative Pain Management

Polypharmacy

• Concurrent use of several different medications

• Drug interactions

• Increased cost

• Non compliance

• Adverse effects

• Study GP

– Use >5 medications – increased risk

Page 40: Palliative Pain Management

• Polypharmacy & drug interactions • Cytochrome P450 interactions with inhibition

or induction of drug biotransformation (‘bullets’ & ‘blanks’)

• Terfenadine/ ketoconazole- cardiac dysrhythmias by inhibition of terfenadine metabolism

• Rifampicin / phenytoin increases phenytoin clearance- reduced effect

Page 41: Palliative Pain Management

World Health Organization Pain Ladder Cancer Pain Management

Increasing Pain

Step 1

Step 2

Step 3

Non-opioid +/- Adjuvant

Opioid for mild to moderate pain +/- Non-opioid +/- Adjuvant

Opioid for moderate to severe pain +/- Non-opioid +/- Adjuvant

Address psychosocial and spiritual issues; consider adjuvant therapies

Step 4 ?

Page 42: Palliative Pain Management

Analgesics

P

A

I

N

Paracetamol

Codeine

Dihydrocodeine

Tramadol

Morphine

Diamorphine

MILD

SEVERE

Simple analgesics

Opioid agonists

Strong opioid agonists

Page 43: Palliative Pain Management

Paracetamol

Active metabolite of phenacetin

Mode of action: Analgesic

Weak prostaglandin inhibitor

Indications: Mild to moderate pain without

inflammation

Adverse effects: Rare at normal dosage

Liver/renal toxicity in overdosage

Page 44: Palliative Pain Management

Mode of Action

Produce analgesia through actions at regions in the brain that contain endogenous opioid peptides

Receptor Subtype

Mu Delta Kappa

Opioid Peptides + +

AGONIST

Codeine

Morphine

PARTIAL AGONIST

Buprenorphine

(+)

+

±

(+)

(+)

(+)

Page 45: Palliative Pain Management

Prescribing Opioids

• Weak opioids

– Dose often Codeine limited by presence of paracetamol

– Tramadol

• Strong opioids

– Morphine, oxycodone, diamorphine, fentanyl, hydromorphone, methadone, buprenorphine

• Do NOT use:

– Pethidine

Page 46: Palliative Pain Management

Codeine/Morphine relative potency

Page 47: Palliative Pain Management

Initiating Opioids: Starting Doses

• Morphine 2.5-5 mg q4hr PO • Oxycodone 1-2 mg q4hr PO • Diamorphine 2.5mg q4hr SC

• Fentanyl transdermal – ONLY for stable pain

– 12 mcg/hr patch may be excessive in opioid naïve patients

• Add breakthrough dose (4 hrly prn)

• Consider smaller doses in frail, renally impaired and

elderly patients

Page 48: Palliative Pain Management

Pharmacokinetics of Opioids

• Onset of pain relief – Oral opioids 15–30 min

– SC opioids 5–10 min

– IV opioids 1 min

• Duration of pain relief – Short-acting oral opioids 3–5 hours

– Long-acting oral opioids 8–12 hours

– Fentanyl patches 72 hours

– IV or SC opioids 2–4 hours

Page 49: Palliative Pain Management

Short-acting

Formulations

(4 hour duration)

• Opioid-naïve patients

• Pain crises

• Breakthrough cancer pain

Long-acting

Formulations

(12 hour duration)

• Reserve for stable situations

Opioid Formulations

Page 50: Palliative Pain Management

Routes of Opioid Administration

• Preferred route – oral

• When unable to swallow: SC, CSCI, IV, TD

• Seldom used (only in special situations):

– Sub Lingual (breakthrough pain, fentanyl)

– Intraspinal (epidural or intrathecal)

• Do NOT use IM

Page 51: Palliative Pain Management

Titrating the Dose of Opioid

Increase the dose by 25-50% if the patient is not achieving adequate pain control.

Take into account number of breakthrough doses taken.

Page 52: Palliative Pain Management

Opioid Myths

Many patients harbor fears about opioids.

• “It means the end is near”

• “Opioids cause addiction”

• “Opioids will lose their effectiveness over time, leaving nothing to treat severe pain ‘at the end’”

• “Opioids will make me a zombie or take away my mental capacity”

• “They will stop my breathing”

• “They will my shorten life”

Page 53: Palliative Pain Management

Common Opioid Adverse Effects

Common side effects: • Constipation (requires ongoing laxatives) • Nausea

– Usually resolves after a few days – Metoclopramide or cyclizine in the first few days

• Sleepiness (usually resolves after a few days)

Less common side effects: • Opioid neurotoxicity • Sweating, dry mouth, pruritis – very uncommon

(especially with appropriate dosing) • Respiratory depression

Page 54: Palliative Pain Management
Page 55: Palliative Pain Management

Opioid Induced Neurotoxicity (OIN)

• Clinical Presentation – Myoclonus, hallucinations, cognitive impairment,

delirium, severe somnolence, dysaesthesia, allodynia

• Mechanism unclear – Opioid metabolites

– Opioids themselves

• Increased risk – Renal impairment, high doses of opioids, infection

(sepsis)

Page 56: Palliative Pain Management

Management of Opioid Neurotoxicity

(OIN) Seek advice from the Specialist Palliative Care

Team Exclude other causes for symptoms. The main strategies for treatment of OIN are:

– Hydration – Opioid dose reduction – Opioid switching – Change route of administration

Page 57: Palliative Pain Management

Constipation – management

• Pre-empt constipation by putting everyone at risk (e.g. patients on opioids) on regular aperients

• Treat reversible causes e.g. give analgesia if pain on defecation, alter diet, ↑ fluid intake

• Treat with regular stool softener (e.g. lactulose) ± regular bowel stimulant (e.g. senna) or a combination drug (e.g. co-danthrusate). Titrate dose against response

Page 58: Palliative Pain Management

- If that is ineffective consider adding rectal measures.

• if soft stools and lax rectum—try bisacodyl suppositories (0 must come into direct contact with rectum);

• if hard stools—try glycerol suppositories—insert into the faeces and allow to dissolve

• - If still not cleared refer to the district nurse for lubricant ± high phosphate (stimulant) enema (usually act in ~20min.)

• - Once cleared leave on a regular aperient with instructions to ↑ aperients if constipation recurs.

Constipation – management

Page 59: Palliative Pain Management
Page 60: Palliative Pain Management

Types of pain in cancer

• Visceral pain

• Neuropathic pain

• Bony pain

• Referred pain

• Breakthrough pain

Page 61: Palliative Pain Management

Adjuvants for Visceral Pain

• Liver metastases or malignant bowel obstruction

– Corticosteroids (Dexamethasone 2-8 mg OD or BD)

– NSAIDs e.g. Diclofenac SR 75mg bd

• Colic

– Hyoscine Butylbromide SC (20mg)

Page 62: Palliative Pain Management

Dysaesthetic pain (burning)

Neuralgic pain (lancinating)

Opioid and dose titration (moderate to severe pain)

Gabapentin or Pregabalin or TCA

TCA and Gabapentin or Pregabalin +/- lidocaine patch

Corticosteroid (may be used first line in pain crisis)

NMDA antagonists (ketamine)

Drugs for Neuropathic Pain

Page 63: Palliative Pain Management

Adjuvants for Bone Pain [1] • NSAIDs

– Limited use in severe pain – Renal and gastro-intestinal side effects – Limitations of Cox-2 specific NSAIDs recently noted

• Steroids – Useful in pain crises

• Radiotherapy – 75% to 85% response rate (decreased pain) – Few side effects with palliative therapy – Response within 1 to 2 weeks (maximum response up to 4

weeks later) – Duration of analgesia is several months

Page 64: Palliative Pain Management

Adjuvants for Bone Pain [2]

• Bisphosphonates

– Reduction of skeletal events (good evidence)

– Management of more acute pain with parenteral infusion (some controversy)

• Surgery

– impending or pathological fracture

Page 65: Palliative Pain Management

Key points

Page 66: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Management • Nociceptive Pain

– Somatic: arises from bone, muscle, cutaneous tissue and CT. localised, clinically presents as throbbing/aching/stabbing pain.

– Visceral: internal organs, generalised diffuse achy pains like period pains

• Neuropathic Pain – Arises from neural tissue: PNS or CNS

– Can be continuous or spontaneous, descriptions vary from burning to electric

– Associated with allodynia (slightest touch causes pain), hyperalgesia (exaggerated pain response)

– May be disproportionate to injury (chronic) or indicate neural compression (cancer)

– May respond poorly to treatment

– Can last indefinitely and escalate over time – severe disability

– Distinguishing feature: anatomical pattern of distribution

– Constant or intermittent – burning, throbbing OR sharp stabbing, jabbing

– Often worse at night

– Rx: gabapentin, pregabalin, amytriptyline, paroxetine, opioids help a bit, ketamine

• Visceral Pain – Arises from internal organs, is generalised or diffuse and poorly localised

– Crampy/colicky pain

– May respond better to anti-cholinergic/anti-spasmodics e.g. buscopan

Page 67: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Management • Referred Pain

– Pain from internal organs felt at a distant site from tissue damage

– E.g. back pain in pancreatic cancer, shoulder tip pain in diaphragm irritation

• “Bony” Pain – Can be really painful

– Cancer cells multiply inside bones and put pressure on the nerves, they also cause bone to crumble which exposes the nerves pain

– Responds well to analgesics and radiotherapy

– Pathological fractures and prophylactic stinting

• Breakthrough Pain – Transient increase in pain over “baseline”

– Rapid onset of severe pain

– May indicate inadequate control of baseline pain if frequently occurring

– Dose = 1/6 of daily opioid dose ( one 4hourly dose)

– Same opioid as baseline medication, faster acting if possible

– Careful of A/Es

– If too much breakthrough being used: review analgesia and change dose

Page 68: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Management • Prescribing Opioids

– Weak: codeine dose often limited by paracetamol. Tramadol used but nauseating and causes delirium

– Strong: morphine, oxycodone (oxycontin-baseline and oxynorm-breakthrough), diamorphine, hydromorphone, methadone (good for neuropathic pain but last line), buprenorphine

– Do NOT use pethidine: useless, causes epileptic fits

– Codeine is metabolised to morphine – 10g codeine = 1g morphine • E.g. 2 x 8/500 codeine = 16 codeine = 1.6 morphine

Page 69: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Management • Starting Doses

– Morphine: 2.5-5mg q4hr PO

– Oxycodone 1-2mg q4hr PO

– Diamorphine 2.5mg q4hr SC

– Fentanyl transdermal patch for stable pain 12mcg/hr (=45mg oral morphine)

– Add breakthrough dose: 1/6 daily dose

– Smaller doses in renal impairment, old, frail, hepatic failure

– Monitor A/Es for toxicity

– Onset: 15-30min PO, 5-10min SC, 1min IV

– Duration: short acting 3-5 hours (4hrly), long acting 8-12hrs, fentanyl patch 72hrs, IV/SC 2-4hrs

– Long acting: stable pain

– Short acting: breakthrough, pain crises, opioid naïve pts

– CSCI: continuous sub cutaneous infusion

– Do NOT use IM

– Inadequate pain control: increase dose by 25-50%

– A/Es: constipation (laxatives), nausea, (anti-emetics), sleepiness. OD, sweating, dry mouth, pruritis, resp depression

Page 70: Palliative Pain Management

Pain Management • Opioid Induced Neurotoxicity

– Presentation: myoclonus, hallucinations (flashes of light), cognitive impairment, delirium, severe somnolence, dysaethesia, allodynia

– Mechanism: unsure if due to opioid metabolites or opioids themselves

– Increased risk: renal impairment, high dose opioids, infection (natural opioid released by body)

– RR 8+: watch

– RR<8 – give naloxone slowly. Reverses A/Es as well as pain effects

– Management: hydration, opioid dose reduction, opioid switching, changed route

• Adjuvants for visceral Pain – Liver mets or malignant bowel obstruction: steroids, NSAIDs

– Colic: hyoscine butylbromide – buscopan 20mg

• Adjuvants for bone pain – NSAIDs – if not severe, careful with kidneys and liver

– Steroids: good for pain crises. Not long term

– Radiotherapy: 75-85% response rate within 1-2weeks, lasts several months

– Bisphosphonates: reduces skeletal events, helps with pain

– Surgery: stent impending or pathological fracture