• Joint Bone Spine · Oct 2002

    Opioid rotation in the treatment of joint pain. A review of 67 cases.

    • R M Grilo, P Bertin, C Scotto di Fazano, D Coyral, C Bonnet, P Vergne, and R Treves.
    • Rheumatology and Therapeutics Department, CHU Dupuytren, 2 avenue Martin Luther King, 87042 Limoges, France.
    • Joint Bone Spine. 2002 Oct 1;69(5):491-4.

    ObjectiveTo determine that opioid rotation can be useful for establishing a more advantageous analgesia/toxicity relationship in rheumatologic pain.MethodsAmong patients treated with opioids for rheumatologic non-malignant pain, 67 patients with opioid rotation were enrolled retrospectively. In all cases, the other analgesics had failed. The opioids used were: oral morphine, oral hydromorphone, oral buprenorphine and transdermal fentanyl. The reasons for rotation were noted and the improvement of pain was assessed by comparing baseline and post-treatment visual analog scales (VAS in mm).ResultsThe 67 patients suffered from low back pain with sciatica in 27 cases, inflammatory arthritis in 14 cases, brachial neuralgia in six cases, osteoarthritis in eight cases and miscellaneous in 12 cases. The opioid rotations were the substitution of morphine by transdermal fentanyl, by oral hydromorphone in most of the cases. The principal reason for opioid rotation was failure of the first treatment. The mean of VAS improvement was 30 mm (P < 0.001).ConclusionIn rheumatologic non-malignant pain, the opioid rotation might allow the physician to bypass side effects or failure to alleviate pain in most cases.

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