2003
DOI: 10.1097/00002508-200309000-00002
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Clinical Application of Opioid Equianalgesic Data

Abstract: Physicians and other healthcare professionals may often be faced with the need to change opioids during the course of a patient's opioid analgesic care due to a number of clinical reasons. The act of converting opioid analgesics, for many physicians, nurses, and pharmacists, who do not receive adequate training, remains a challenging and often uncomfortable aspect of pain treatment. Part of the challenge clinicians face is secondary to the relatively weak literature evidence base that exists to support the equ… Show more

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Cited by 219 publications
(163 citation statements)
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“…Opioid consumption was extracted from the closest reported time to 2 h postsurgery and was converted to morphine-equivalent consumption in mg based on the following scale: 1:100 for remifentanil and fentanyl; 20:1 for codeine; 15:1 for hydromorphone; 10:1 for tramadol and pethidine; 4:1 for hydrocodone; 1.3:1 for oxycodone; and 1:1 for piritramide and nalbuphine [15]. Data on intra-operative opioid use, postoperative non-opioid analgesic consumption and the number of subjects who required analgesics were not included.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Opioid consumption was extracted from the closest reported time to 2 h postsurgery and was converted to morphine-equivalent consumption in mg based on the following scale: 1:100 for remifentanil and fentanyl; 20:1 for codeine; 15:1 for hydromorphone; 10:1 for tramadol and pethidine; 4:1 for hydrocodone; 1.3:1 for oxycodone; and 1:1 for piritramide and nalbuphine [15]. Data on intra-operative opioid use, postoperative non-opioid analgesic consumption and the number of subjects who required analgesics were not included.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We calculated the total amount of oral morphine equivalents that each patient used between midnight and midnight on the day of enrollment with the following conversion with 30 oral morphine equivalents equivalent to 10 mg intravenous morphine sulfate; 1.5 mg intravenous hydromorphone; 7.5 mg oral hydromorphone; 20 mg oral oxycodone; 30 mg oral hydrocodone; and 150 mg oral tramadol [20,30,33].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For those on opioids at admission, initial daily opioid dosing was calculated from the medication records based on the highest opioid taper dose dispensed in the first 3 d of the program. This dose was converted to a morphine equivalent dose (MED) for comparison purposes using established methods [26].…”
Section: Participants and Proceduresmentioning
confidence: 99%