1. Twice-daily versus once-daily morphine sulphate controlled-release suppositories for the treatment of cancer pain
- Author
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Andrew Darke, Zoltan Harsanyi, Catherine M. Neumann, Michelle Belzile, I. Ford, and Eduardo Bruera
- Subjects
Palliative care ,business.industry ,Visual analogue scale ,Pain medicine ,Pain scale ,Crossover study ,law.invention ,Oncology ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Anesthesia ,Morphine ,medicine ,Cancer pain ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We evaluated the safety and efficacy of controlled-release morphine sulphate suppositories administered 12-hourly and once daily in patients with chronic cancer in a randomized double-blind crossover trial. Pain was assessed using a 100-mm VAS pain scale and a five-point ordinal pain scale. The VAS pain intensity score was 17.5±17.2 after suppositories every 12 h, versus 16.2±13.4 after suppositories every 24 h (difference not significant). The difference between the mean VAS pain scores with 12-hourly and once-daily dosing was 1.3 mm (not significant). The mean ordinal pain scores were 1.0±0.7 versus 1.0±0.6 for 12-hourly and once-a-day dosing, respectively (not significant). A retrospective power analysis indicated that a difference of 5.9 mm was detectable, even with only 6 patients. Adverse events noted were constipation, nausea, anorexia, and dry mouth. The use of once-a-day controlled-release morphine suppository is a more convenient and equally effective alternative to twice a day dosing.
- Published
- 1999