Thursday, May 5, 2005
Morphine for Chest Pain Increases Death Risk
Duke University Medical Center News Office
While patients hospitalized for a heart attack have long been treated
with morphine to relieve chest pain, an analysis by researchers
from the Duke Clinical Research Institute has shown that these patients
have almost a 50 percent higher risk of dying.
The researchers call for a randomized clinical trial to confirm
their analysis. Meanwhile, they advise cardiologists to begin treatment
with sufficient doses of nitroglycerin to relieve pain before resorting
to morphine.
In their analysis of the clinical data and outcomes of more than
57,000 high-risk heart attack patients -- 29.8 percent of whom received
morphine within the first 24 hours of hospitalization -- the researchers
found that those who received morphine had a 6.8 percent death rate,
compared to 3.8 percent for those receiving nitroglycerin. The increase
in mortality persisted even after adjustment for the patients' baseline
clinical risk.
The results of the Duke study were published as a fast-track article
in the American
Heart Journal.

Trip Meine, MD
| "The results of this analysis raise serious concerns about
the safety of the routine use of morphine in this group of heart
patients," said Duke cardiologist Trip Meine, M.D., the study's
lead author. "Since randomized clinical trials evaluating the
safety or effectiveness of morphine for these patients have not
been conducted, official guidelines for its use are based solely
on expert conjecture. Given the adverse outcomes associated with
morphine use found in our analysis, a randomized clinical trial
is in order."
Morphine was first used to relieve the chest pain associated with
heart attacks in 1912 and has been used regularly ever since. Nitroglycerin
has been used for more than 130 years for the relief of chest pain,
also known as unstable angina. It works by relaxing blood vessels
and allowing blood flow to increase.
"Nitroglycerin has a physiological effect that may, at least
temporarily, influence the underlying ischemia," Meine said.
"Morphine, on the other hand, doesn't do anything about what
is actually causing the pain. It just masks it, and may, in fact,
make the underlying disease worse.
"Morphine has the well-known and potentially harmful side
effects of depressing respiration, reducing blood pressure and slowing
heart rate," he continued. "These side effects could explain
the worse outcomes in patients whose heart function has already
been compromised by disease."
For their analysis, the researchers consulted the nationwide quality
improvement initiative named CRUSADE
(Can Rapid Risk Stratification of Unstable Angina Patients Suppress
Adverse Outcomes with Early Implementation of the American College
of Cardiology and AHA Guidelines) The registry continually collects
data from more than 400 hospitals on outcomes and on the use of
proven drugs and procedures used to restore blood flow to the heart.
From this registry, the researchers identified 57,039 high-risk
patients with non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (non-STEMI),
a categorization of heart attack based on electrocardiogram (ECG)
readings. These patients typically arrive at emergency rooms with
chest pain, but often will not have telltale signs of a heart attack
on the initial ECG. They might be diagnosed with a heart attack
only when the results of the blood tests are reported a few hours
later.
The researchers found that patients who were given morphine had
48 percent higher risk of dying and 34 percent higher risk of suffering
another heart attack while in the hospital.
"This increase in mortality was present in every subgroup
of patients we studied," Meine said. "What we found interesting
was that patients given morphine were more likely to receive evidence-based
medicine, were more likely to be treated by a cardiologist and were
more likely to receive an invasive cardiac procedure."
Meine recommended that physicians with hospitalized heart attack
patients should begin with nitroglycerin therapy to control pain.
"Our recommendation is that patients should receive the full
dose of nitroglycerin," he said. "Based on our analysis,
morphine should be the last resort after else has been tried."
While patients with acute STEMI are at higher risk of dying within
30 days of their hospital stay, patients with non-STEMI actually
have a higher risk of dying six months and one year after initial
hospital presentation. It is estimated that about 1.3 million Americans
are hospitalized each year with non-STEMI.
CRUSADE continuously gathers data from participating U.S. hospitals
on treatments for patients with non-STEMI and provides quarterly
feedback to hospitals with the ultimate goal of improving adherence
to the ACC/AHA treatment guidelines and patient outcomes.
The CRUSADE registry is funded by Millennium Pharmaceuticals,
Cambridge, Mass., and Schering Corp, Kenilworth, N.J. Bristol-Meyers
Squibb/Sanofi Pharmaceuticals Partnership, NY, provided an unrestricted
grant in support of CRUSADE. |