Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy Staff Publications

Language

English

Publication Date

1-1-2025

Journal

Critical Care Sciences

DOI

10.62675/2965-2774.20250396

PMID

40767695

PMCID

PMC12266829

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-15-2025

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Purpose: Pain may pose significant challenges in the intensive care unit, especially in mechanically ventilated patients. Methadone has recently emerged as an alternative option for eliciting acute analgesia. In this systematic review, we evaluated the use of methadone in mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit.

Source: We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Wiley's Cochrane Library, CINAHL, PubMed (non-MEDLINE), Scopus, and LILACS databases from inception to January 24th, 2025. Eligible studies included randomized controlled trials and observational studies that compared the use of methadone to the standard of care or to other analgosedation strategies in mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit. The primary outcome was the duration of mechanical ventilation. The secondary outcomes included opioid-associated adverse effects and scores regarding pain, agitation, and delirium.

Principal: findings: The search strategy yielded 3,523 studies. A total of 773 patients were included across the 12 studies (including 7 abstracts and 5 manuscripts). Patient populations included patients with trauma, those with burns, those at high risk for fentanyl abstinence syndrome, those with opioid use disorder, those with opioid withdrawal symptoms, and those who had received fentanyl for 72 hours prior to weaning. Overall, compared with the group that did not receive methadone, the methadone group was associated with more ventilator-free days, shorter weaning times, and a greater probability of successful weaning on day 5. Most of the studies exhibited high risks of bias; moreover, the overall quality of the evidence was low.

Conclusion: Few studies have evaluated the use of methadone in mechanically ventilated patients. Based on the low-quality evidence, methadone may be associated with improved patient-centered outcomes. Further research is warranted with respect to this topic.

Keywords

Humans, Methadone, Respiration, Artificial, Critical Illness, Intensive Care Units, Analgesics, Opioid, Pain Management, Methadone, Respiration, artificial, Opioid, Analgesia, Sedation

Published Open-Access

yes

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