Oxycodone
Oxycodone
Generic Name
Oxycodone
Mechanism
- Oxycodone is a potent, selective agonist at the mu‑opioid receptor (MOR), producing analgesia, sedation, and euphoria through inhibition of cyclic‑AMP production in nerve terminals.
- Partial agonism at the kappa‑opioid receptor contributes to its analgesic profile but also accounts for some dysphoric and psychotomimetic effects.
- Activation of MOR in the rostral ventral medulla (RVM) enhances descending inhibition of nociceptive pathways, while peripheral MOR stimulation dampens inflammatory signaling via reduced release of substance P and glutamate.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Oral bioavailability ≈ 60‑70 % (first‑pass metabolism). Rapid peak plasma concentration (~ 30 min IV; 60‑75 min oral).
- Distribution: Highly lipophilic; wide tissue distribution and high plasma protein binding (~ 50 %). Extensive penetration into CNS and placenta → caution in pregnancy.
- Metabolism: 70‑80 % metabolized by CYP3A4 to nor‑oxycodone (inactive) and CYP2D6 to oxymorphone (potent, active metabolite).
- Elimination: Renally excreted (~ 15 % unchanged). Half‑life 4‑6 h IR, 10‑12 h ER.
- Drug interactions:
- Potentiation by CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, clarithromycin, erythromycin).
- Reduced analgesia with CYP2D6 poor metabolizers.
- Co‑administration with other CNS depressants increases risk of respiratory depression.
Indications
- Acute moderate‑to‑severe pain (post‑operative, injury).
- Chronic cancer‑related pain.
- Non‑cancer refractory chronic pain when other analgesics fail.
Contraindications
- Absolute:
- Severe respiratory insufficiency, mechanical obstruction of upper airway, severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
- Acute overdose or severe opioid intoxication.
- Relative:
- Use with caution in elderly, hepatic or renal impairment.
- History of substance‑abuse or opioid dependence.
- Concurrent medications: CNS depressants (benzodiazepines, barbiturates, alcohol) → ↑ risk of respiratory depression.
Dosing
| Formulation | Adult (non‑elderly) | Elderly / Renal/Hepatic impairment | Notes |
| Immediate‑release (IR) oral | 5 mg q4‑6 h PRN | ↓ dose to 2.5 mg q4‑6 h PRN | Monitor for tolerance; avoid > 30 mg/day |
| Immediate‑release (IV) | 0.1 mg/kg q4‑6 h (bolus) | Reduce dose by 25 % | Use central line & monitor vitals |
| Extended‑release (ER) oral | 15 mg q8‑12 h | Consider 10 mg q8‑12 h | Avoid crushing tablets; use in opioid‑tolerant patients only |
Titration: Start low, go slow. Increase by 5‑10 % per 48–72 h until adequate analgesia.
Adverse Effects
- Common (≥ 10 %):
- Constipation, nausea, vomiting, pruritus, sedation, dizziness, muscle cramps, dry mouth, urinary retention.
- Serious (≤ 1 % but high‑impact):
- Respiratory depression, central sleep apnea, severe hypotension, paradoxical agitation, serotonin syndrome (with MAOIs/SSRIs), opioid‑induced hyperalgesia, seizures (high‑dose), fatal overdose.
Monitoring
- Respiratory status: rate, minute ventilation, oxygen saturation (especially first 24 h or after dose escalation).
- Analgesic efficacy: pain score (NRS/MPQ) every 4‑6 h initially.
- Adverse effects: constipation score, sedation scale, GI symptoms.
- Laboratory: CBC, CMP in chronic users; LFTs in hepatic impairment.
- Drug‑level: Plasma oxycodone may be measured if overdose or therapeutic drug monitoring is warranted.
Clinical Pearls
1. Avoid “break‑through” IR dosing in opioid‑naïve patients – start with 5 mg IR only after 8–12 h of opioid therapy.
2. Use of a scheduled laxative (senna or polyethylene glycol) at initiation prevents opioid‑induced constipation; consider a pro‑kinetic if severe.
3. CYP2D6 poor metabolizers receive less oxymorphone; consider using non‑opioid adjuncts or a non‑CYP2D6 metabolite opioid (e.g., fentanyl).
4. Co‑treat with naloxone‑injected formulations (Oxy‑NE) in high‑risk populations to counteract potential aspiration or overdose.
5. Monitor renal function: dose reduction > 50 % if CrCl 2 months, assess for tolerance vs. appropriate opioid‑tolerant indication.
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