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The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: A Review of the Literature.
Pain Med. 2015 Jul; 16(7):1265-77.PM

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To better characterize safety profiles associated with the intrathecal (IT) administration of morphine and ziconotide and discuss how they relate to mechanisms of action.

METHODS

Published data were evaluated to identify potential relationships between safety profiles of IT morphine and IT ziconotide and their mechanisms of action.

RESULTS

Potentially severe and clinically relevant adverse events (AEs) associated with IT morphine include respiratory depression, tolerance, and granuloma formulation, whereas IT ziconotide is associated with neuropsychiatric AEs, such as cognitive impairment, hallucinations, and changes in mood or consciousness, particularly with high doses and rapid titration. AEs associated with these IT therapies may result from spread of the medication out of the IT space into areas of the central and peripheral nervous systems and systemic circulation. AEs that occur usually can be managed and, in some cases, prevented. To mitigate risk, patients' histories should be reviewed to identify potential complicating factors (e.g., obesity or other risk factors for respiratory dysfunction in patients receiving IT morphine; a history of psychosis in patients receiving IT ziconotide). Also, treatment should be initiated at a low dose, titrated slowly, and patients should be closely monitored during treatment.

CONCLUSIONS

IT morphine and IT ziconotide are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for patients who do not respond to less invasive treatments, but the safety profiles of each may make them more or less appropriate for certain patient populations.

Authors+Show Affiliations

PRA Health Sciences, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

25645109

Citation

Webster, Lynn R.. "The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: a Review of the Literature." Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.), vol. 16, no. 7, 2015, pp. 1265-77.
Webster LR. The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: A Review of the Literature. Pain Med. 2015;16(7):1265-77.
Webster, L. R. (2015). The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: A Review of the Literature. Pain Medicine (Malden, Mass.), 16(7), 1265-77. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12666
Webster LR. The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: a Review of the Literature. Pain Med. 2015;16(7):1265-77. PubMed PMID: 25645109.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - The Relationship Between the Mechanisms of Action and Safety Profiles of Intrathecal Morphine and Ziconotide: A Review of the Literature. A1 - Webster,Lynn R, Y1 - 2015/01/22/ PY - 2015/2/4/entrez PY - 2015/2/4/pubmed PY - 2016/5/3/medline KW - Chronic Pain KW - Morphine KW - Psychosis KW - Refractory KW - Respiratory Depression KW - Ziconotide SP - 1265 EP - 77 JF - Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.) JO - Pain Med VL - 16 IS - 7 N2 - OBJECTIVE: To better characterize safety profiles associated with the intrathecal (IT) administration of morphine and ziconotide and discuss how they relate to mechanisms of action. METHODS: Published data were evaluated to identify potential relationships between safety profiles of IT morphine and IT ziconotide and their mechanisms of action. RESULTS: Potentially severe and clinically relevant adverse events (AEs) associated with IT morphine include respiratory depression, tolerance, and granuloma formulation, whereas IT ziconotide is associated with neuropsychiatric AEs, such as cognitive impairment, hallucinations, and changes in mood or consciousness, particularly with high doses and rapid titration. AEs associated with these IT therapies may result from spread of the medication out of the IT space into areas of the central and peripheral nervous systems and systemic circulation. AEs that occur usually can be managed and, in some cases, prevented. To mitigate risk, patients' histories should be reviewed to identify potential complicating factors (e.g., obesity or other risk factors for respiratory dysfunction in patients receiving IT morphine; a history of psychosis in patients receiving IT ziconotide). Also, treatment should be initiated at a low dose, titrated slowly, and patients should be closely monitored during treatment. CONCLUSIONS: IT morphine and IT ziconotide are approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for patients who do not respond to less invasive treatments, but the safety profiles of each may make them more or less appropriate for certain patient populations. SN - 1526-4637 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/25645109/The_Relationship_Between_the_Mechanisms_of_Action_and_Safety_Profiles_of_Intrathecal_Morphine_and_Ziconotide:_A_Review_of_the_Literature_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -