Maximum Opioid Doses: A Pharmacological Abomination

By Josh Bloom — Jun 22, 2020
Despite irrefutable pharmacological evidence of the wide range in individuals' metabolism of opioid drugs, states continue to impose "one-size-fits-none" laws. For example, Massachusetts, apparently not entirely at peace with the abolition of the Salem witch trials, became the first state to establish a seven-day limit on first-time opioid prescriptions. Others followed. It's safe to say that no one is really paying attention to the science. So, here it is. Again.

The American Medical Association was two years late to the party when it issued its first statement (1) about the inappropriate use of CDC Guidelines to establish, among other things, laws that define a dose and duration limits for opioid analgesics. No one was listening. Since then things have gotten worse, not better, for pain patients. For example

Fortunately, the AMA has given it another shot. A June 16th, 17-page letter from AMA Executive Vice President and CEO Dr. James L. Madara to Dr. Deborah Dowell, the Chief Medical Officer National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (part of the CDC) has some real oomph to it (emphasis mine.) 

The AMA emphasizes that simply focusing on recommendations concerning opioid prescriptions is far from sufficient to have a meaningful impact on the nation’s overdose and death epidemic.

 

Clearly, the AMA has stepped it up but whether this will make a real difference or will simply give bureaucrats a higher quality document to ignore is unknown.

States Continue to Ignore Science

When I first wrote about the scientific folly of legally setting fixed, maximum doses for opioids (or any other drug, for that matter) there were 33 states with some kind of legislation in place (or in planning stages). Now there are that 34 – approximately 34 too many – with some sort of legislation to limit opioid prescriptions. In March 2016 the state of Massachusetts, apparently not entirely at peace with the abolition of the Salem witch trials, became the first state to establish a seven-day limit on first-time opioid prescriptions. Thirty-three more followed with ghoulish variations of the law.

Pharmacy Benefits Managers Kick Pain Patients When They're Down

Madara points out that prescription drug providers (PBMs) have stuck their balance sheets where they're not welcome.

  • "Walmart’s policy includes a 50MME or 7-day hard threshold for opioid prescribing.
  • CVS Caremark’s policy has multiple restrictions, including a 7-day hard threshold for opioid prescribing •
  • OptumRx’s policy is aligned with 2016 Guidelines"

Drug stores telling doctors how much medicine the can prescribe? Madness. 

Two Year, Zero Progress

It's been nearly two years since I clearly spelled out why fixed limits were scientifically nonsensical; differences in people, drugs, and the absence of a sensible conversion table for MMEs. More than 10,000 of you read it, but apparently, no one with either the power or interest to do anything about it. (It's WAY over the head of Andrew Kolodny, but for $725 per hour I'd be happy to (try to) explain it to him. 

So, here is an abridged version of "Opioid Policies Based On Morphine Milligram Equivalents Are Automatically Flawed." In case anyone out there is paying attention.

READ THIS OR I WILL EAT YOUR CAT

If you were a professional wrestling fan in the 1960s it would be hard to forget William "Haystacks" Calhoun. Calhoun, always a crowd favorite, had a signature move called "The Big Splash," where he bounced off the ropes and hurled himself on top of his opponent, who was lying helplessly in the middle of the ring. Match over. Calhoun, who died in 1989 at age 55, was 6'4" and weighed 601 pounds (1)

At the other end of the scale (literally) is Peter Dinklage, who played Tyrion Lannister in Game of Thrones. Dinklage is 4'5" tall and weighs 110 pounds.

Would Haystacks Calhoun (L) and Peter Dinklage (R) both take two tablets of aspirin? Photos: Deskgraam.net, Digital Spy

Let's suppose that both Dinklage and Calhoun have headaches. The recommended adult dose for Bayer Aspirin is two 325 mg tablets every four hours. Will this dose be suitable for both men? A website called Omni Calculator makes it possible to estimate the volume of blood in a person based on gender, height, and weight.

According to the calculator, Haystacks had 12,019 mL (12.7 quarts) of blood in his body while Dinklage has 3,105 mL (3.3 quarts). All things being equal, the concentration of aspirin in Dinklage's blood would be four-times that in Calhoun's from the same two aspirin tablets. Is Dinklage taking too much aspirin or is Calhoun taking too little? It is impossible to say, but it is all but certain that the ideal dose for each man will be different.

Why do I bring this up? Because pain patients in the US are getting a "big splash" thanks to a terrible policy that is based on terrible science. Maximum daily doses, recommended by the CDC in 2016 have been enacted as law. The maximum dose is based on a ridiculous concept called morphine milligram equivalents (MME) - the ratio of the "power" of the drug compared to that of morphine. This may sound reasonable (assuming that you think that the government should be allowed to dictate to physicians the amount of only one class of drugs – opioid – that they are allowed to prescribe. While MME values are touted as useful predictors of the total "opioid load" that a patient can receive, they are nothing of the sort. And MME-based policies don't just fail because of differences in the size of patients; they fail for multiple reasons. 

Flawed science,  meaningless results

Below is a chart published by the CDC, a "guide" (2) for physicians who prescribe pain drugs. It is a god-awful mess but is used nonetheless.

Morphine is normalized to 1.0 and the conversion factor reflects the relative potency of other opioid drugs. So, if the daily MME is 90 (3) then a patient may receive no more than 90 mg of morphine, 90 mg of hydrocodone, 60 mg of oxycodone, or 30 mg of oxymorphone per day.

Although the conversion table seems to be straightforward enough, it is based on an assumption that all opioids behave similarly in the body. But this assumption could not be less accurate. Once the profound differences in the properties of the drugs and the difference between individuals who take them are taken into account it becomes clear that the CDC chart flawed and the MME is little more than a random number. 

Table 1. MME equivalents. Source: CDC

Not all opioids are created equal, especially in the body

Anyone with even a passing knowledge of pharmacology would immediately be skeptical of the chart. Let's take, for example, the two drugs at the bottom. Although Table 1 tells us that oxymorphone is twice as "strong" as oxycodone it does not take into account a number of critical properties that paint a more complete picture of the fate of the drug once swallowed. In other words, there is no information about pharmacokinetics -  the effect of the body on the drug. 

Bioavailability

One of the many pharmacokinetic properties required to establish how a drug will fare within the body is called bioavailability - a critical determinant for whether a drug will be effective if taken orally.  Bioavailability is a measure of the how well a pill will be absorbed in the gut and subsequently enter the bloodstream. For example, if a drug has a bioavailability of 100% then all of that drug that was swallowed will end up in the blood (4).

Figure 1. (Left) The MME conversion factor used by the CDC for oxycodone and oxymorphone. Values are normalized so that morphine is 1.0. According to the table, a dose of oxymorphone is "worth" three times more than that of morphine and two-times that of oxycodone. PO means orally. IR means immediate release. Source: CDC. (Right). The bioavailability of common opioid drugs. Note that oxycodone is 6-8.7 times more bioavailable than oxymorphone. Source: Pruskowski, et.al., Opioid Pharmacokinetics #307. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 19(6), 668–670(2016). doi:10.1089/jpm.2016.0024

Conversely, when a drug has poor bioavailability, for example, 10%, then most of the drug will either pass through the intestinal tract unchanged or be absorbed but then rapidly metabolized. Furthermore, drugs with low bioavailability have a greater variation from one individual to the next, making the pharmacology of a drug like oxymorphone even less predictable. The difference in bioavailability between oxycodone and oxymorphone is stark (Figure 1) even though chemically they differ only by a single carbon (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Oxycodone and Oxymorphone - Chemically, nearly identical. Pharmacologically, very different. The red circles indicate the only structural difference between the two - one methyl group.

Half-life and metabolism

Although critical, bioavailability is far from the only measure of an oral drug's effect on people or animals. Table 2 shows three of the most common pharmacokinetic properties of oxycodone and oxymorphone. Although poor bioavailability - one of the most daunting obstacles on the long and difficult trip from the lab to the pharmacy - has led to the demise of countless experimental drugs in clinical trials there are plenty of other obstacles. Two of these are the crucial parameters half-life and metabolism. 

Table 2. Three pharmacokinetic parameters of oxymorphone (right) and oxycodone (left). Source: Ref. (a). Ref. (b)

Table 2 clearly shows that oxycodone and oxymorphone, although putatively similar, behave very differently in humans. Oxymorphone, even though it is twice as potent as oxycodone (Table 1), is metabolized much faster; its half-life (5) is 1.3 hours, while oxycodone, although less potent, stays in the blood much longer (its half-life is 4.5 hours). Additionally, there are differences which liver enzymes carry out the metabolism. Oxymorphone is primarily metabolized by a liver enzyme called uridine 5'-diphospho-glucurosyltranferase (UGT) while oxycodone is primarily metabolized by two different cytochrome P450 enzymes called 3A4 and 2D6. The difference in metabolizing enzymes itself is a substantial concern when comparing two different drugs, but it becomes even more so when other drugs are part of the picture.

The only certainty is uncertainty

So, which drug is better for a pain patient? Do the MME values really reflect the drugs' relative ability to relieve pain? Do half-life and bioavailability matter? Does the fact that different types of enzymes are involved in metabolism make a difference? The answer to all of these questions is "who knows?" All we are told is that patients cannot be prescribed more than 60 mg of oxycodone or 30 mg of oxymorphone per day. 

Bear in mind that we have examined only two of the eight drugs on the CDC chart and only three of many pharmacokinetic properties of each drug. When other drugs and other pharmacokinetic properties are added to the mix It becomes patently obvious that the simple CDC chart provides us with numbers that are probably more artifactual than real. The chart tells us little about which opioid drug might the best for a single person or its optimal dose, let alone a diverse population. More on that below. 

Polypharmacy: Drug-drug interactions

The primary site of drug metabolism is the liver. Within the liver, there are different families of metabolizing enzymes. By far, the most important class in humans is the CYP450 family (6) of enzymes. There are about 60 members in this class and these account for about 75% of the metabolic processes that occur within our bodies. Two of the most important subtypes (also called isozymes) of this family are called CYP3A4 and CYP2D6. The two are responsible for metabolizing many common drugs, especially opioids.  

Table 2 shows that even two very similar drugs will behave differently when taken alone, but when other common drugs are taken, the variability of opioid blood levels becomes even greater; opioid-metabolizing enzymes can be profoundly affected by other drugs.  As a result, these enzymes can be inhibited (less metabolism) or induced (more metabolism), each of which will have a pronounced effect on the blood levels of an opioid. Figure 3 provides a summary of common drugs that alter opioid blood levels (7)

Figure 3. Drug-drug interactions of selected opioids with some common drugs. Source: J. Pruskowski and R. Arnold, Opioid Pharmacokinetics #307, Journal of Palliative Medicine Vol. 19, No. 6 (2016). doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2016.0024

Some highlights from Figure 3 include:

  • Of the six opioids listed, five of them are metabolized by both 3A4 and 2D6. Morphine is not metabolized by 3A4. 
  • The 3A4 isozyme is inhibited by many drugs, including antibiotics, antifungals, antidepressants. blood pressure drugs, and HIV antivirals. The presence of any of these drugs will either result in higher than expected opioid blood levels, an increased half-life of the opioid, or both. Inhibitors of 3A4 can increase blood levels of the opioid (except for morphine - it is not metabolized by 3A4), sometimes causing dangerously elevated levels of the opioid.
  • The 3A4 isozyme is also induced by other common drugs, such as anti-inflammatory steroids, HIV antivirals, anti-seizure drugs, and a tuberculosis drug. The presence of any of these drugs will either result in lower than expected opioid blood levels, a decreased half-life, or both. This can result in opioid levels that are inadequate for pain relief.
  • The 2D6 isozyme is inhibited by many of the same drugs that also inhibit 3A4 but also others, including those for allergies, malaria, and schizophrenia.
  • But the 2D6 isozyme is not induced by any of these commonly used drugs. 

The clinical impact of drugs that inhibit 3A4 becomes apparent in a case study of a cancer patient who was being treated with fentanyl patches for pain. While hospitalized, the patient suffered a near-fatal overdose of fentanyl at a dose that would not normally be problematic; he was also taking an antibiotic to treat a bacterial infection (erythromycin) and an anti-fungal drug (itraconazole) to treat the fungal infection caused by the erythromycin. Both drugs are potent inhibitors of 3A4, which led to elevated levels of fentanyl, resulting in impaired breathing. Once the 50 microgram patch was replaced by a 25 microgram patch the breathing difficulties resolved. 

Other studies (8,9) have demonstrated that concomitant use of an anti-fungal drug increased the blood levels of oxycodone four-fold, while a drug for tuberculosis greatly decreased oxycodone levels. 

Genetics: Abundant differences in human metabolism of opioids

Perhaps the most important factor in determining the optimal dose of an opioid is the profound difference in the genetic makeup of individuals; some people may metabolize opioids 100-times that of others simply because of the impact of genetics on CYP function. Table 3 shows the range of variation of the rate of metabolism of four CYP enzymes. 

Table 3. The range of individual variation of the rates of metabolism for four CYP isozymes. Note that the first two, 3A4 and 2D6, are the primary opioid metabolizing enzymes, as shown in Table 2.

References:

(a) Pharmacogenomics of Cytochrome P450 3A4: Recent Progress Toward the “Missing Heritability” Problem. K. Kleinand Ulrich and M. Zanger Front Genet. 2013; 4: 12. (2013) doi:  10.3389/fgene.2013.00012

(b) Hart SN, Wang S, Nakamoto K, Wesselman C, Li Y, and Zhong XB (2008) Genetic polymorphisms in cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase influence microsomal P450-catalyzed drug metabolism. Pharmacogenet Genomics 18:11-24.

(c) Westlind A, Lofberg L, Tindberg N, Andersson TB, and Ingelman-Sundberg M (1999) Interindividual differences in hepatic expression of CYP3A4: relationship to genetic polymorphism in the 5'- upstream regulatory region. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 259:201-205.

Given the wide range of CYP activity variability from individual to individual, it should come as no surprise that this difference profoundly affects opioid users, especially since CYP3A4 and CP2D6 are responsible for much of metabolism of these drugs. It is this genetic variability that is responsible for both poor metabolizers and rapid metabolizers of opioids.

For example, if the innate rate of metabolism by CYP34A of Patient A is 100-fold greater than that of Patient B, it will be impossible to define a standard dose, such as in Table 1, which would be therapeutically appropriate for either A, B, or both. Patient A will appear to have developed a tolerance for the opioid while Patient B will be far more sensitive to the drugs. Thus it is almost a given that any standardized dose will be too low for Patients like A and too high for Patients like B. 

Problems and more problems:

This article is a cursory summary, not a comprehensive review of all the factors that combine to make opioid dosing anything but simple. Yet, the following are obvious:

  • Some opioid drugs will be absorbed and pass to the bloodstream very well and some will do so very poorly.
  • Even opioids that appear to be structurally and functionally similar will be metabolized at very different rates.
  • Other drugs can drastically alter the physiological response of a pain patient to a given opioid; the second drug may increase a person's response to the opioid or it may decrease it.
  • Even under ideal conditions - two people taking the same opioid drug at the same dose, at the same interval, and taking no other drug - huge variations of innate metabolism from one individual to another will necessarily result in a wide range in clinical response to that drug.

Conclusion

The CDC MME chart, in fact, the entire concept of morphine milligram equivalents may be convenient for bureaucrats but because of differences in the absorption of different drugs into the bloodstream, half-life of different drugs, the impact of one or more other drugs on opioid levels, and large differences of the rate of metabolism caused by genetic factors, is not only devoid of scientific utility, but actually causes far more harm than help by creating "guidelines" that are based upon a false premise. When a policy is based on deeply flawed science, the policy itself will automatically be fatally flawed. It cannot be any other way. 

NOTES:

(1) Calhoun's weight increased as he aged. He was said to weigh more than 700 pounds late in his career. 

(2) The "CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain" was nothing of the sort. In reality, it was the basis for the widespread legislation that codified the maximum quantity of prescription drugs that was allowable per patient. This is unprecedented in US history. 

(3) For some unknown reason 90 MME was chosen as the magic maximum. This number will be too high for some and too low for others. No simple number can define the "proper" dose of any drug, nor should it.

(4) This is an oversimplified explanation of bioavailability. In reality, bioavailability is a ratio of the concentration of the drug the blood when given orally compared to that when given intravenously.

(5) The half-life of a drug, which is abbreviated as t1/2 is the amount of time it takes for half of the drug to be metabolized. For example, if a drug has a half-life of one hour, 50% of the drug will remain after an hour. After two hours, 25% will remain. The drug is generally considered to be "gone" after four half-lives; only 6.25% of it will remain. 

(6) CYP450 is an acronym for CY = cytochrome, P= pigment, and 450 refers to the wavelength of light (in nanometers) that it absorbs when exposed to carbon monoxide. The numbers and letters that follow classify the CYPs into different families, which are also called isozymes. 

(7) These lists are incomplete. Comprehensive lists of drugs that inhibit or induce CYPs are considerably longer.

(8)  Hagelberg NM, Nieminin TH, Saari TI, et al. Voriconazole drastically increases exposure to oral oxycodone. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 2009;65(3):263-271.

(9) Nieminen TH, Hagelberg NM, Saari TI, et al. Rifampin greatly reduces the plasma concentrations of intravenous and oral oxycodone. Anesthesiology. 2009;110(6):1371-1378., 

 

 

Category

Josh Bloom

Director of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Science

Dr. Josh Bloom, the Director of Chemical and Pharmaceutical Science, comes from the world of drug discovery, where he did research for more than 20 years. He holds a Ph.D. in chemistry.

Recent articles by this author:
ACSH relies on donors like you. If you enjoy our work, please contribute.

Make your tax-deductible gift today!

 

 

Popular articles