Opioid toxicity: Information for clinicians

Opioid toxicity is an important consideration in palliative care. It may arise from dose escalation, organ failure (liver and renal), or drug interactions.

Increased risk if Morphine Equivalent Daily Dose (MEDD) > 120mg per day but can occur at much lower doses.

Incidence can be as high as 15-20%.

Red Flags
  • Myoclonus (twitching muscles)
  • Hallucinations
  • Increased sensitivity to painful stimuli (hyperalgesia) and non-painful stimuli (allodynia)
  • Slow breathing (<8 breaths/min)
Clinical Features
  • CNS: increasing drowsiness, delirium, hallucinations
  • Neuromuscular: myoclonus, hyperalgesia, falls
  • GI: nausea, vomiting, constipation
  • Respiratory: slow, shallow breathing
An initial approach to treatment
  • Review opioid dose - reduce to 25% of the current dose and add in non-opioid analgesics
  • Check renal/hepatic function - are there recent changes?
  • Stop interacting drugs - e.g. concomitant use of pregabalin increases risk with oxycodone
  • Fluids may help
Specific treatments according to symptom
Cause Treatment
Accumulation Reduce or switch opioid (e.g. to fentanyl in renal failure)
Neurotoxicity Reduce dose or switch opioid
Delirium Reduce dose and consider haloperidol or levomepromazine
Respiratory depression Rarely use naloxone (if required due to breathing compromise then titrate very carefully)
Myoclonus Reduce dose, opioid switch, or add clonazepam
Hyperalgesia Reduce dose or switch; add non-opioids

When switching opioids, reduce the equianalgesic dose by 30–50% to allow for incomplete cross-tolerance.

Risk factors

Age > 65, frailty, rapid dose escalation, liver and renal failure, concomitant psychotropic drugs

 

Recommended Resources

PANG - Opioid side effects and toxicity

Published 1st January 2020

Share

Related Services

24 hour Advice Line Michael Sobell Hospice
Close

24 hour Advice Line Michael Sobell Hospice

T. 0203 824 1268

Offers support and advice on palliative care issues to GPs, Care Homes, District Nurses and hospital doctors.

It is also an Advice Line for patients and families who live in Hillingdon and need advice on any aspect of palliative care. 

The Advice Line is answered by hospice nurses in the Inpatient Unit and queries are escalated to the on-call palliative medical team if needed.

24/7 Your Life Line 24/7 Hillingdon (YLL)
Close

The team is made up of clinical nurse specialists and health care assistants (HCA) who can support patients with complex needs at home in the last weeks and months of their life (with any diagnosis). 

The service is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and can offer advice.

 Urgent night visits  are available to patients already referred to the service.

If you have already been referred to this service, you will have been given a direct contact number.

Speak to your GP or district nurse to be referred to the service.

Hillingdon Community Palliative Care Team
Close

Hillingdon Palliative Care Team (hosted by NHS CNWL) provides specialist advice and visiting to palliative care patients living in Hillingdon. Each GP practice has their own named Clinical Nurse Specialist ( CNS ). A Triage CNS manages calls and referrals each day and they have the option to escalate to consultants if needed.

They can be contacted Monday to Friday 8.00am to 4.30pm excluding bank holidays.

Out of hours phone Michael Sobell Hospice 24 hour Advice Line on 020 3824 1268

Referral form for clinician use only.

Community Specialist Palliative Care Referral Form V4.1 (DOCX)

Related Articles

4th September 2025

Opioid conversion

Feedback