Abstract

The aim of this study was to compare the efficacy, consumption and safety after piritramide administered either intramuscularly (IM) on demand or via patient-controlled intravenous analgesia (PCA) and to examine the impact of OPRM1 and ABCB1 gene polymorphisms on the drug efficacy/safety in both regimens. One hundred and four patients scheduled for elective inguinal hernioplasty received piritramide with PCA or IM for postoperative pain management. We evaluated piritramide consumption, pain intensity using visual analogue scale (VAS) and adverse effects. Median (IQR) piritramide consumption was 18.5 (13.5-31.2) and 15.0 (15.0-15.0) mg in the PCA and IM groups, respectively (P=0.0092). The respective values of area under the VAS2-16-time curve were 40 and 280 mm.h (P=0.0027). Opioid-induced adverse effects were more frequent in the PCA than in the IM group. Variant OPRM1 allele was associated with decreased pain relief, increased opioid consumption and increased incidence of adverse effects, while ABCB1 polymorphisms showed no impact on the observed parameters. We observed higher piritramide consumption, better pain relief and slightly worse safety profile in the PCA group compared with IM administration. Variant OPRM1 118G allele carriers required higher opioid dosing and suffered from more adverse effects, however, the differences between genotypes have been less pronounced in the PCA patients likely due to improved pain management via PCA.

Highlights

  • Opioids represent key drugs frequently used in postoperative pain management[1]

  • Median (IQR) length of operation was 47 (36-54) min in the patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) group and it was shorter in comparison with the respective value in the intramuscular applications (IM) group of 52 (45-69) min (P=0.0064)

  • Piritramide consumption was significantly higher in the PCA group compared with IM patients

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Summary

Introduction

Opioids represent key drugs frequently used in postoperative pain management[1]. Their administration via various routes may translate in unequal efficacy or safety profiles of the drugs and it may affect the drug consumption for achievement of sufficient pain relief[2,3,4]. Piritramide is a synthetic opioid for parenteral use with a relative potency of 0.65 to 0.75 in comparison with morphine. It is commonly used for the treatment of postoperative pain and the safety profile of piritramide is comparable to that of morphine[6]. Piritramide is metabolized into inactive compounds in the liver offering a treatment advantage over morphine with active metabolites that may accumulate in patients with decreased renal functions

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