Abstract

BackgroundConcerns that opioids may hasten death can be a cause of the physicians’ reluctance to prescribe opioids, leading to inadequate symptom palliation. Our aim was to find if there was an association between different opioid doses and the survival of the cancer patients that participated in our palliative care program.MethodsA retrospective study was conducted at Ramathibodi Hospital, Bangkok between January 2013 and December 2015. All of the cancer patients that were referred to palliative care teams by their primary physicians were included in the study. The study data included the patients’ demographics, disease status, comorbidities, functional status, type of services, cancer treatments, date of consultation, and the date of the patient’s death or last follow-up. The information concerning opioid use was collected by reviewing the medical records and this was converted to an oral morphine equivalent (OME), following a standard ratio. The time-varying covariate in the Cox regression analysis was applied in order to determine the association between different doses of opioids and patient survival.ResultsA total of 317 cancer patients were included in the study. The median (IQR) of the OME among our patients was 6.43 mg/day (0.53, 27.36). The univariate Cox regression analysis did not show any association between different opioid doses (OME ≤ 30 mg/day and > 30 mg/day) and the patients’ survival (p = 0.52). The PPS levels (p < 0.01), palliative care clinic visits (HR 0.32, 95%CI 0.24–0.43), home visits (HR 0.75, 95%CI 0.57–0.99), chemotherapy (HR 0.32, 95%CI 0.22–0.46), and radiotherapy (HR 0.53, 95%CI 0.36–0.78) were identified as factors that increased the probability of survival.ConclusionsOur study has demonstrated that different opioid doses in advanced cancer patients are not associated with shortened survival period.

Highlights

  • Concerns that opioids may hasten death can be a cause of the physicians’ reluctance to prescribe opioids, leading to inadequate symptom palliation

  • Regarding two recent systematic reviews on the association between systemic opioid analgesia and survival among cancer patients [26, 27], the results showed that there was no clear association between opioid doses or increasing doses of opioids and survival; other studies showed that opioids might be associated with decreased survival, while others suggested that opioids improved survival or had no effect

  • The aim of this study was to find if there was an association between different opioid doses and the survival of the cancer patients that participated in our palliative care program

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Summary

Introduction

Concerns that opioids may hasten death can be a cause of the physicians’ reluctance to prescribe opioids, leading to inadequate symptom palliation. Our aim was to find if there was an association between different opioid doses and the survival of the cancer patients that participated in our palliative care program. A study in the Netherlands on the perceptions of physicians concerning opioid use and the survival of the patient showed that physicians more often took hastening death into account when they gave higher doses of opioids when the patient experienced more severe symptoms and with female patients [9]. Regarding two recent systematic reviews on the association between systemic opioid analgesia and survival among cancer patients [26, 27], the results showed that there was no clear association between opioid doses or increasing doses of opioids and survival; other studies showed that opioids might be associated with decreased survival, while others suggested that opioids improved survival or had no effect

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