Comparing the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation of low-dose oral modified release morphine in people with chronic breathlessness: a synopsis of a RCT and process evaluation
Johnson MJ, Williams B, Keerie C, Tuck S, Hart SP, Bajwah S, Chaudhuri N, Pearson M, Cohen J, Evans RA, Currow DC, Higginson IJ, Hall PS, Atter M, Norrie J, Thompson C, Huang C, Pitel L, Jones A, Stewart G, Fallon MT, MABEL collaborative
Record ID 32018015513
English
Authors' objectives:
Chronic breathlessness is common and disabling in chronic medical conditions. There is good rationale to use opioids from neuroscience and exercise laboratory studies. We assessed the 56-day effectiveness, cost–consequences and safety of long-acting oral morphine for breathlessness in people with cardio-respiratory diseases or cancer.
Authors' results and conclusions:
Between 18 March 2021 and 26 October 2023, 143 were randomised (75 morphine, 68 placebo); 140 formed the modified intention-to-treat population [90% power; males 66%; mean age 70.5 (standard deviation 9.4)]. By day 28, 60/73 (82%) morphine versus 56/67 (84%) placebo participants had ≥ 90% adherence. At day 28, we found no evidence of a primary outcome difference [adjusted mean difference; 0.09 (95% confidence interval −0.57 to 0.75), p = 0.78], or any secondary measure except improved cough seen at day 56 [adjusted mean difference; −1.41 (−2.18 to −0.64)]. Increased moderate/vigorous physical activity was seen at day 28 [adjusted mean difference; 9.51 minutes/day (0.54 to 18.48)], but this was not significant after multiple measures correction. There were 413 adverse events: 251 versus 162 events in 63/73 (86%) morphine versus 51/67 (76%) placebo participants; 18 serious adverse events in 15 participants (morphine, 3/15 related; placebo, 0/3 related); no treatment-related deaths. Morphine participants used more inpatient and fewer outpatient services. In the 56-day base-case analysis, morphine was associated with similar mean per-patient costs and quality-adjusted life-years: an increase of £24 (95% confidence interval −£395 to £552) and 0.002 (95% confidence interval −0.004 to 0.008) quality-adjusted life-years. We found no evidence that morphine improved worst breathlessness intensity. The pattern of improved physical activity and cough, without increased sleepiness, sedation or cognitive impairment, with good adherence provides rationale for future research. A therapeutic trial of morphine should be evaluated using an exertional task.
Authors' methods:
We conducted a parallel-group, randomised, placebo-controlled trial in 11 UK outpatient services, comparing 10–20 mg daily oral morphine with placebo (and blinded laxative) in people with moderate to severe breathlessness, with embedded health economic evaluation. The primary outcome was worst breathlessness/24 hours (0–10 numerical rating scale) at day 28. Secondary outcomes included: physical activity levels; worst cough numerical rating scale/24 hours; Short Form questionnaire-12 items; EuroQol-5 Dimensions, five-level version; morphine-related toxicities; caregiver burden. Analyses were by modified intention-to-treat (modified intention-to-treat; ≥ 1 dose of study drug). Primary analysis used repeated measures of covariance adjusted for baseline worst breathlessness and stratification variables. The planned sample size (90% power, 20% withdrawal) was 158. We undertook two exploratory substudies, a process theory-informed evaluation and an open-label follow-on study. Interpretation is cautious, but findings are plausible and consistent with other evidence. We infer improved exercise endurance. Most participants had chronic lung disease and minoritised ethnic communities are under-represented.
Details
Project Status:
Completed
URL for project:
https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/programmes/hta/17/34/01
Year Published:
2026
URL for published report:
https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/hta/GJMF3819
URL for additional information:
English
English language abstract:
An English language summary is available
Publication Type:
Full HTA
Country:
England, United Kingdom
DOI:
10.3310/GJMF3819
MeSH Terms
- Dyspnea
- Cough
- Morphine
- Analgesics, Opioid
Contact
Organisation Name:
NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme
Contact Address:
NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health and Care Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK
Contact Name:
journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
Contact Email:
journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
This is a bibliographic record of a published health technology assessment from a member of INAHTA or other HTA producer. No evaluation of the quality of this assessment has been made for the HTA database.