Controlled-Release Oxycodone vs. Placebo in the Treatment of Chronic Breathlessness—A Multisite Randomized Placebo Controlled Trial
Version 2 2024-06-04, 10:05Version 2 2024-06-04, 10:05
Version 1 2019-11-05, 13:30Version 1 2019-11-05, 13:30
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 10:05 authored by DH Ferreira, S Louw, P McCloud, B Fazekas, CF McDonald, MR Agar, K Clark, Nikki McCaffreyNikki McCaffrey, M Ekström, DC Currow© 2019 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine Context: Chronic breathlessness is a clinical syndrome that results in significant distress and disability. Morphine can reduce chronic breathlessness when the contributing etiologies are optimally treated. Objectives: Does oxycodone reduce chronic breathlessness compared with placebo? Methods: A multisite, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel-arm, fixed-dose trial of oral controlled-release oxycodone 15 mg (5 mg, eight hourly) or placebo (ACTRN12609000806268 at www.anzctr.org.au). As-needed immediate-release morphine (2.5 mg per dose; six and less doses/day) was available for both arms as required by one ethics committee overseeing the trial. Recruitment occurred from 2010 to 2014 in 14 inpatient and outpatient respiratory, cardiology, and palliative care services across Australia. Participants were adults, with chronic breathlessness (modified Medical Research Council Scale 3 or 4), who were opioid naive. The primary end point was the proportion of people with greater than 15% reduction from baseline in the intensity of breathlessness now (0–100 mm visual analogue scale) comparing arms Days 5–7. Secondary end points were average and worst breathlessness, quality of life, function, and harms. Results: Of 157 participants randomized, 155 were included (74 oxycodone and 81 placebo), but the study did not reach target recruitment. There was difference in neither between groups for the primary outcome (P = 0.489) nor any of the prespecified secondary outcomes. Placebo participants used more as-needed morphine (mean 7.0 vs. 4.2 doses; P ≤ 0.001). Oxycodone participants reported more nausea (P < 0.001). Conclusion: There was no signal of benefit from oxycodone over placebo. Future research should focus on investigating the existence of an opioid class effect on the reduction of chronic breathlessness.
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Journal
Journal of Pain and Symptom ManagementVolume
59Pagination
581-589Location
United StatesISSN
0885-3924eISSN
1873-6513Language
EnglishPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalIssue
3Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INCUsage metrics
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Science & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineHealth Care Sciences & ServicesMedicine, General & InternalClinical NeurologyGeneral & Internal MedicineNeurosciences & NeurologyChronic breathlessnessoxycodonerandomized controlled trialeffectiveness studyplacebo studypalliative caresymptom controlCHRONIC HEART-FAILUREQUALITY-OF-LIFEADVANCED CANCEROPIOIDSPREVALENCEDYSPNEAINSTRUMENTMANAGEMENTINTENSITYMORPHINE920102 Cancer and Related Disorders111299 Oncology and Carcinogenesis not elsewhere classified3211 Oncology and carcinogenesis3214 Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences4203 Health services and systems
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