Optimal Fentanyl Patch Use

There is alot of confusion of what amounts to optimal fentanyl patch use. Many patients contend it only lasts 2 days. How does one adjust the dosage?

1) First thing is that opioids often only give 20-30% relief. Dr. Turk has written an article that contended that only 50% of patients will continue to use opioids as they either have too many side effects or are ineffective.

article here

2) Fentanyl can be dangerous with 2% of patients (I presume novices) subject to respiratory depression.

3) I suspect one of the reasons it appears to only last 2 days is because they were relatively ineffective to start with, and relief is only attained during the peaks. There was a case published of a lady who required Thirty Four 100 ug patches to control her cancer pain:

Bleeker CP, Bremer RC, Dongelmans DA, van Dongen RTM, Crul BJ. Inefficacy of high-dose transdermal fentanyl in a patient with neuropathic pain: a case report. Eur J Pain. 2001;5:325-329

Pain partially responsive to opioids can lead to rapid escalating dosages due to tolerance development. In this report the case of a 58-year-old female with neuropathic pain using increasing transdermal (TTS) fentanyl dosages to a maximum dose of 3400 microg/h resulting in fentanyl plasma levels of 173 ng/ml is described. For pain relief an epidural infusion at the level T1-2 with bupivacaine was started. Immediate pain relief was accompanied by short lasting respiratory depression and drowsiness.

4) Now I find this a little confusing because people as supposed to attain steady state after recurrent use:

(from:

Transdermal Fentanyl An Updated Review of its Pharmacological Properties and Therapeutic Efficacy in Chronic Cancer Pain Control
Richard B.R. Muijsers and Antona J. Wagstaff
Drugs 2001; 61 (15): 2289-2307

  • It can take between 12-38 hours for a new patch to attain good blood levels”Delays of 34 to 38 hours have been reported between patch application (25 to 100 μg/h) and occurrence of Cmax.”
    Fentanyl half lives are 13- 22 hours – “elimination half-life values of 13 to 22 hours have been reported.”
    A hot bath can cause rapid utilization (and depletion) of the patch. Iwonder about flushes too…
    If one looks at the worst case scenario, someone could eliminate the fentanyl in 13 hours but take 38 hours to reach peak of the new patch – this would result in a 25 hour period of suboptimal control.
    Some people with chronic pain are overweight – just because exercise is too painful. I suspect absorption might be delayed but elimination could be too.

    5) Conclusion is, there are going to be people who are poorly managed between patches. They may say the patches only last 2 days because they can only tolerate the day waiting for the new patch to kick in, when fentanyl levels are at their highest (2 days).One article suggested strongly that if a patch falls off prematurely, one should put the new one on the same spot to maintain blood levels – that begs the question that perhaps these fluctuations are real if applied to a new site.

    6) One patient had a novel way of handling that. She would leave the old patch on for 3 days but apply the new patch on day 2. That way, the new patch has an opportunity to kick in before the old one is removed. I would not try this on a novice as one is asking for trouble but seems like a viable option for patients not well controlled otherwise.

    7) I feel ashamed of our medical community. For decades, they undertreated cancer pain because they thought they knew better. In one study, untrained university students were better judges of pain level than health care professionals (the more trained, the worse at judging). For heavens sake, if a patient says the patch only lasts two days then it probably only last two days despite all one’s pseudo-expertice. Try the above course and see what happens.

    I would be interested in opinions

This entry was posted in Drugs. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to Optimal Fentanyl Patch Use

  1. kati says:

    I am helping my elderly dad with pain management and he just started the FP on Monday evening and we changed it today (5/28). He had been taking 8-10 Norco a day for chronic pain and now is down to 4 for BT pain along with 25 mcg of the FP. He has not had any relief in the 4 days he has been on the patch and I am wondering if we need to increase to 50 mcg, does anyone have any ideas? I appreciate any input I can get, thanks

  2. Mr. T. says:

    I was on 75mcg and yes, it only lasted two days. I started on 12.5mcg and as I titrated up I noticed that the patched never lasted more than two days. In fact, the first day wasn’t so great either. I tried both the generic and in the end the Duragesic brands, but never seemed to get more than two days relief. [Warning: withdrawal was very, very, very bad from this drug]

  3. I just wanted to get something to control my pain better than oxycontin, don’t get me wrong now it was a great pain killer until 1 1/2 yrs later.

    I was getting wonderful relief from it when I started in Sept 2008, but I also was very careful not to flare up my multiple spinal fractures;

    However I had a undiagnosed injury, 5 years undiagnosed; (Thats a crock also) but due to WCB and their head games, thats the way it is;

    Now getting back to the meds;
    I was taking 3 x 20 mgs in AM and 2 x 20 mgs in PM / 12 hr time release;

    Of course they lost effect after 4-5 hrs if I wanted to do anything, so I tried the patch, it SUCKED;
    Started with 25 mg patch, didn’t even touch my pain, left me miserable
    and laying in bed; writhing in pain;

    So up the ladder again to a 50 mg patch, that seemed to work, but as many others have said, only for a couple days, if I was really careful;
    I took duct tape and covered the patch, so it wouldn’t fall off or get wet;

    The moral of this story, if you get injured, get the HELL OUT OF SASKATCHEWAN, get properly diagnosed because CANADA wants to KILL you so they won’t have to provide surgery of benefits for work or auto accident claims;

    Get med pot not opiods if possible before you kill yourself trying to kill the unrelenting pain from your undiagnosed and untreated injury;

    Take it from me, 100 Doctors to diagnose my spinal injury, don’t see Dr. Woo or Dr. Yong-Hing or Dr. K Kumar, these creeps are evil and won’t even conduct a full examination, and just state “NO REASON FOR PAIN FOUND”

    Thats how WCB screws injured workers who need surgery;

  4. Almada says:

    Your article some nice! Keep up the beautiful work!

Leave a Reply to Injured and abused by Sask WCB Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.