Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema — Why?

Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema — Why?

    Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema – Why? C. Ellingsrud, S. Agewall PII: DOI: Reference: S0167-5273(15)30578-7 doi:...

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    Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema – Why? C. Ellingsrud, S. Agewall PII: DOI: Reference:

S0167-5273(15)30578-7 doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.10.014 IJCA 21304

To appear in:

International Journal of Cardiology

Received date: Revised date: Accepted date:

19 May 2015 16 September 2015 3 October 2015

Please cite this article as: Ellingsrud C, Agewall S, Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema – Why?, International Journal of Cardiology (2015), doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2015.10.014

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema – Why?

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C Ellingsrud and S Agewall

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Department of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital Ullevål and Institute of Clinical Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Correspondence to:

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S Agewall, Department of Cardiology, Oslo University Hospital Ullevål and Institute of Clinical Sciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. E-mail; [email protected]

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Abstract Morphine has since a long time, been used in patients with acute pulmonary oedema due to its

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anticipated anxiolytic and vasodilatory properties, however a discussion about the benefits and risks has been raised recently. A literature search in Medline and Embase using the

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keywords «pulmonary oedema» OR «lung oedema» OR «acute heart failure» AND «morphine» was performed. A certain vasodilation has been described after morphine administration, but the evidence for this mechanism is relatively poor and morphine-induced

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anxiolysis may possibly be the most important factor of morphine in pulmonary oedema and

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therefore some authors have suggested benzodiazepines as an alternative treatment. Respiratory depression seems to be a less relevant clinical problem according to the literature,

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whereas vomiting is common, which may cause aspiration. In the largest outcome study, based on the ADHERE registry, morphine given in acute decompensated heart failure was an

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independent predictor of increased hospital mortality, with an odds ratio of 4,8 (95 % CI: 4,52-5,18, p < 0,001). Other, smaller studies have shown a significant association between

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factors.

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morphine administration and mortality, which was lost after adjusting for confounding

Morphine is still used for pulmonary oedema in spite of poor scientific background data. A randomised, controlled study is necessary in order to determine the effect – and especially the risk – when using morphine for pulmonary oedema. Since the positive effects are not sufficiently documented, and since the risk for increased mortality cannot be ruled out, one can advocate that the use should be avoided.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Acute pulmonary oedema is a common condition in the emergency room, associated with considerable mortality [1,2]. The oedema develops when the left ventricle fails, making the

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hydrostatic pressure in the pulmonary circulation increase, and therefore fluid builds up in the pulmonary insterstitium and alveoli. The condition is defined by severe respiratory distress

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that worsens in supine position, crackles over the lung and signs of pulmonary congestion on chest X-ray [3]. Peripheral oxygen saturation is usually below 90 % prior to treatment.

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Pharmacological treatment of pulmonary oedema aims at treating the increased hydrostatic pressure in the pulmonary circulation, primarily by lowering filling pressure (preload), and by

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lowering the peripheral arterial pressure (afterload) – achieved through venous and arterial dilation [4]. Traditionally there has also been emphasis on removing excess fluid through

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increased diuresis [5].

Since the 1960s, three drugs have been most frequently used to achieve these effects,

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alongside oxygen treatment. It is furosemide, which inhibits reabsorption of sodium in

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Henle´s loop and distal tubuli and thereby increasing excretion of fluids through the kidney. Then there is nitroglycerin, which via cGMP and smooth muscle relaxation induces vasodilatation – at low doses only venous, at high doses also causing arterial relaxation [6,7].

The third drug, morphine, has been used due to its anticipated anxiolytic and vasodilatory properties. During the last decade, a discussion about the benefits and especially the risks accompanying the use of morphine in cases of pulmonary oedema has been raised [1,4,8-11]. In a retrospective study from 2008 based on the ADHERE registry, morphine given in acute decompensated heart failure was an independent predictor of increased hospital mortality, with an odds ratio of 4,8 (95 % CI: 4,52-5,18, p < 0,001) [2].

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A literature search in Medline using the keywords «pulmonary oedema» OR «lung oedema»

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OR «acute heart failure» AND «morphine» was performed. The search was conducted in February 2014 and gave 263 results. A similar search was performed in Embase, where

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Medline articles were excluded and the search was limited to articles written in English (191 results). We were particularly interested in studies that documented the outcome after using morphine in the treatment of acute pulmonary oedema as well as studies and review articles in

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which the physiological effects of the drug were discussed. A total of 24 articles were

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discretionary picked out after reviewing abstracts [2,4-26].

Guidelines

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The European heart failure guideline from 2012 state that one can consider to give 4-8 mg of

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morphine intravenously (repeated as needed) if the patient suffers from severe anxiety or distress caused by pulmonary oedema (figure 1) [27]. American Heart Failure Society does

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not include morphine in its recommendations from 2010 and comments that the drug should

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be used with caution if administered [28]. The collaboration American College of Cardiology Foundation / American Heart Association does not mention morphine in their guidelines from 2013 [29].

Physiological effects of morphine Morphine induces depression of the central nervous system via opiate receptors in the brain, which causes both sedation and analgesia [12]. In addition to this, morphine has a supposed anxiolytic effect, which together with the sedative effect reduces the activity of the sympathetic nervous system and causes a reduction of both the filling pressure and the arterial pressure [4].

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There are data indicating that morphine has a vasodilating effect in pulmonary oedema

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[3,13,28]. The background of this belief, is three trials from 1966 to 1976, where the groups consisted of 12 dogs, 12 patients with myocardial infarction (where nobody received

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morphine as the sole drug) and 13 patients with mild pulmonary oedema, respectively [14,30,15]. However, in the study by Vismara et al. [15] it was concluded that there must be a different effect than the vasodilation that is responsible for the clinical improvement of

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pulmonary oedema seen when using morphine – a theory supported by several studies

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towards the 1990s [16,17,31].

In 1994, a trial with vessels from dogs in vitro showed that morphine had a relaxing effect on

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the smooth muscles in both veins and arteries [18]. The effect was probably caused by

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histamine release [19,32]. In 2008, an in-vivo trial in cats, found a morphine-induced dosedependent vasodilation in the pulmonary vascular bed, expressed by reduced arterial vascular

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resistance [33]. Whether the physiological effects of morphine are similar in humans and to

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what extent these effects are significant in the altered haemodynamics of pulmonary oedema, is still scarcely elucidated.

A trial from 1979 including 28 patients who underwent coronary artery bypass surgery, showed that large doses of morphine (0,5 mg/kg) produced a transient large reduction in peripheral vascular resistance [34]. However, these doses are considerably larger than those we administer today.

To summarise: Although vasodilation has been described after morphine injection, the morphine-induced anxiolysis through depression of the sympathetic nervous system, might be

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the most important factor in pulmonary oedema, without this mechanism being fully

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explained and without the effect being objectively measurable [4,20] .

Adverse physiological effects

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The most common adverse effects of morphine are constipation and nausea. While constipation has no significance in acute medical context, it is described that between one fifth and one third of patients experience nausea when using opioids [35,36]. Vomiting occurs

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about half as frequently as nausea. European guidelines recommend the addition of 10 mg of

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metoclopramide to counteract nausea if morphine is administered [27]. Nausea in pulmonary oedema is a disadvantageous side effect because of the subjective discomfort and because nausea produces catecholamine release and thereby increased afterload. Nausea and vomiting

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is also very unfortunate because of the risk for aspiration, if there is a need for treatment with

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continuous positive pressure (CPAP), which European Society of Cardiology recommends if

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peripheral oxygen saturation is below 90 % [27].

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It has also been found that morphine induces depression of the myocardium that results in decreased heart rate and cardiac output [37]. This effect can be negative for a circulation where the heart is already beginning to fail.

A feared side effect of morphine is respiratory depression. Opioids affect the respiratory centre so that both the respiration rate and the tidal volume decrease [38]. The effect appears to be dose-dependent, but even at low doses, respiration pattern becomes irregular [39]. In addition, morphine has been shown to decrease the sensitivity of the peripheral (in the aorta, carotid arteries and lungs) and the central (in the medulla, separate from the main respiratory centre) chemoreceptors, to both increased pCO2 [38] and to low pO2 [39]. Such an effect on

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the sensitivity for pCO2 was recorded with all of the 66 healthy participants in a trial from 2001 [36]. A review article from 2010 described a low incidence of opioid-induced

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respiratory depression – only 0,5 % [40]. The article is partly based on a study from Sweden with 14 000 post-operative patients where the incidence was measured to 0.09 % [41].

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However, these patients were given epidural morphine (4 mg), so the comparison has certain limitations. For post-operative patients in the United Kingdom the incidence was estimated to

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1 % [39].

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Heterogeneous prognoses

In a review article from 2008 Sosnowski [11] emphasises that there seems to be a correlation between the use of morphine and worsening of the patient's condition, based on five studies

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from 1987 to 2003 [10,21-24]. One of these is a small trial of prehospital treatment of

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pulmonary oedema. It showed that 38 % of patients treated with morphine and furosemide, experienced subjective deterioration compared with none of the patients who received

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nitroglycerin and furosemide [10]. These five studies are small, but the results suggested that

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there is a correlation between morphine and worsening of the condition but also that morphine was given to the sickest patients, which of course is a confounder in this analysis.

As mentioned above, Peacock and colleagues published data from the large (more than 147 000 patients) ADHERE registry [2]. Almost 21 000 patients received morphine and after adjusting for factors known to be associated with increased hospital mortality, including advanced age, troponin elevation and hypertension; morphine remained an independent predictor of mortality. In addition, significant correlations between morphine administration and increased intubation rate, more intensive care unit admissions and prolonged hospitalisation were found.

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In a similar but smaller study from 2003 to 2007 in UK, no significant correlation between

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morphine administration and mortality was observed [1]. However, there was neither any

patient perceived breathlessness over the first hour.

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correlation between the use of morphine and improvement in respiratory distress, measured in

In a retrospective study in Israel containing 2336 patients, morphine administration was

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associated with an increased mortality [25]. However, after propensity score matching this

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association became non-significant. Both in the European and the Israeli study, there was a tendency to aggravation associated with morphine treatment, but the results were not significant. None of the studies tended to demonstrate an improved prognosis when morphine

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was given.

When evaluating observational studies one must be aware of the confounding factors despite

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sophisticated statistical adjustment analysis. It is likely that morphine is given in a higher rate

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to those with a more pronounced acute heart failure situation. Neither is it possible, to evaluate if intubation was an “adverse effect” of receiving morphine or if the patient received morphine as a sedative in conjunction with the intubation in a retrospective registry study.

Based on the results mentioned above, it seems unlikely that serious respiratory depression is a widespread problem due to the use of morphine. Nausea, on the other hand, is a much more common adverse effect, which however may be corrected with antiemetics. Even though nausea is unpleasant, although not a dangerous adverse effect, it can be serious if the patient is receiving CPAP treatment. This illustrates how morphine has various benefits and risks in different subpopulations. The cardiodepressive effect that is described could equivalently be

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT quite disadvantageous when the cardiac capacity is weakened, whereas it will not be

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particularly crucial for hypertensive patients.

Benzodiazepines have been suggested as an alternative for morphine in treatment of

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pulmonary oedema [4,26]. However, these types of drugs have not been tested in this clinical situation properly. Nevertheless, this is interesting because benzodiazepines have shown to be efficient anxiolytics over a longer period of time, in addition to the fact that they have positive

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cardiovascular effects [42]. In a literature study, benzodiazepines were recommended in the

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treatment of chest pain due to these properties, and several aspects are presented suggesting

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that they could be an alternative in treatment of pulmonary oedema [42].

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Conclusion

Morphine is still used for pulmonary oedema in spite of relatively poor scientific background

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data. A randomised, controlled study is necessary in order to determine the effect – and

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especially the risk – when using morphine for pulmonary oedema. Since the positive effects are not sufficiently documented, and since the risk for increased mortality cannot be ruled out, one can advocate that the use should be avoided.

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Legends

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Figure 1 Algorithm for treatment of acute pulmonary oedema, according to the guidelines from the European Society of Cardiology from 2012, which recommend that 4-8 mg of morphine i.v. may be

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considered and possibly repeated if needed by severe anxiety or distress [27]

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ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT References

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Highlights

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Morphine may cause harm in patients with acute pulmonary oedema.

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The evidence for a vasodilatory effect is poor

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