Abstract

To describe the use of a continuous fentanyl infusion in an adult cancer patient. A 66-year-old white woman diagnosed with metastatic pancreatic carcinoma required hospital admission for pain control after receiving five different chemotherapy regimens. Morphine 2 mg/h i.v. was initiated and the dosage was titrated upward to a total of 6613 mg/d by hospital day 16. As hospital supplies of opioids became depleted over a holiday weekend, therapy was changed to a continuous infusion of hydromorphone 70 mg/h on hospital day 17, then changed to a continuous fentanyl infusion beginning with a dosage of 500 micrograms/h. The fentanyl dosage was titrated to 4250 micrograms/h by hospital day 20. She died comfortably on hospital day 22 while receiving this dosage. Continuous infusions of opioids, particularly morphine and hydromorphone, are frequently used for control of cancer pain and are safe and effective when administered by this route. Transdermal fentanyl has been shown to effectively manage chronic cancer pain, and use of continuous subcutaneous fentanyl has been reported. However, reports of continuous intravenous fentanyl infusion in the cancer pain literature are limited. Our patient achieved good pain control with a continuous infusion of fentanyl 4250 micrograms/h. Continuous fentanyl infusion should be considered for the treatment of cancer pain in patients requiring high doses who become refractory to other opioids, when other opioids cause intolerable adverse effects, when patients have a true morphine allergy, or when high-dose requirements threaten to deplete existing stock of alternate opioids.

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