18.02.2017 Views

VA/DoD CLINICAL PRACTICE GUIDELINE FOR OPIOID THERAPY FOR CHRONIC PAIN

2lfFhbO

2lfFhbO

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

<strong>VA</strong>/<strong>DoD</strong> Clinical Practice Guideline for Opioid Therapy for Chronic Pain<br />

2010<br />

Recommendation<br />

Location 18 2010 Recommendation Text 19<br />

Module<br />

Section<br />

Number<br />

pain or likely high level of opioid tolerance. If the new dose is well tolerated but<br />

ineffective, additional increases in dose can be considered.<br />

3 K2 8 To ensure that the full effect from a dosage change has been manifested, and to avoid<br />

potential toxicity due to rapid accumulation of a drug, do not increase the dose more<br />

frequently than every five half-lives. In the case of methadone, upward dosage titration<br />

should not occur more frequently than every 7 days and perhaps longer (e.g., every 1 to<br />

2 months), and only if there is no problem with daytime sedation, taking into<br />

consideration that there is wide interpatient variability in half-lives and responsiveness.<br />

(See Appendices E1 and F)<br />

3 K2 9 If possible, titrate only one drug at a time while observing the patient for additive<br />

effects. Maintain patients on as few medications as possible to minimize drug<br />

interactions and adverse events. Discontinue medications, especially adjuvant<br />

medications, which do not add substantially to patient function or comfort. Continue<br />

close assessment of patients prescribed multiple centrally acting/psychoactive<br />

medications.<br />

3 K2 10 If a medication provides less than satisfactory pain reduction despite increasing the dose<br />

as tolerated to a reasonable level (less than 200 mg/day morphine equivalent), evaluate<br />

for potential causes such as nonadherence and drug interactions (see Appendix E, Table<br />

E6– Drug Interactions), and consider changing to an alternate opioid medication.<br />

3 K2 11 Medication may be increased until limited by adverse effects or clear evidence of lack of<br />

efficacy. If a high dose of medication (greater than 200 mg/day morphine equivalent)<br />

provides no further improvement in function, consider consultation rather than further<br />

increasing the dose.<br />

3 K2 12 During the titration phase, reasonable supplemental (rescue) doses of a short acting<br />

opioid may be considered. (See Annotation K-4-Supplemental Dosing)<br />

3 K2 13 Consider one or more of the following adjustments in therapy when there is an apparent<br />

loss of analgesic effect<br />

a. Further optimize adjuvant therapies<br />

b. Re-titrate the dose<br />

• Increase dose by 25-100%.<br />

• Do not increase the dose more frequently than every 5 half lives (for methadone or<br />

fentanyl no more than once a week), to ensure that the full effect from a dosage change<br />

2010 Grade 20<br />

2016<br />

Recommendation (if<br />

Category 21 applicable) 22<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

None Not reviewed,<br />

Deleted<br />

February 2017 Page 142 of 192

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!