To compare costs and health consequences and to assess the cost-effectiveness of using low-dose oral long-acting morphine in people with chronic breathlessness.
Within-trial planned cost-consequences and cost-effectiveness analysis of data from a multisite, parallel-group, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled trial of low-dose, long-acting morphine.
11 hospital outpatients across the UK.
Consenting adults with chronic breathlessness due to long-term cardiorespiratory conditions.
5–10 mg two times a day oral long-acting morphine with a blinded laxative for 56 days.
Mean and SD of healthcare resource use (HRU) by trial arm; mean differences and 95% CI of costs between trial arms.
Mean differences in 28- and 56-day quality-adjusted life years (QALYs based on EuroQol five-dimension five-level score), Short Form-six dimensional scores and ICEpop CAPability-Supportive Care Measure scores; cost-utility of long-acting morphine for chronic breathlessness.
143 participants (75 morphine and 67 placebo) were randomised; 140 (90% power, males 66%, mean age 70.5 (SD 9.4)) formed the modified intention-to-treat population (participants receiving at least one dose of study medication). There were more inpatient and fewer outpatient services used by the morphine group versus the placebo. In the base-case analysis at 56 days, long-acting morphine was associated with similar mean per-patient costs and QALYs. There was an increase of £24 (95% CI –£395 to £552) and 0.002 (95% CI –0.004 to 0.008) QALYs. Hospitalisations were the main driver of cost differences. The corresponding incremental cost-effectiveness ratio was £12 000/QALY, with a probability of cost-effectiveness of 54% at a £20 000 willingness-to-pay threshold. In the scenario analysis that excluded costs of adverse events considered unrelated to long-acting morphine by site investigators and researchers, the probability of cost-effectiveness increased to 73%.
Oral morphine for chronic breathlessness is likely to be a cost-effective intervention provided adverse events are minimised, but the effect on outcome is small and cautious interpretation is warranted.
To evaluate any association of the presence and severity of nine major symptoms (pain, tiredness, drowsiness, nausea, appetite, breathlessness, depression, anxiety, and perceived well-being) with sleep quality and duration in elderly men.
Cross-sectional analysis within the population-based VAScular and Chronic Obstructive Lung disease study (VASCOL) conducted in southern Sweden in 2019.
A total of 838 older men aged 73 years.
Severity of the symptoms was self-reported between 0 and 10 on a numerical rating scale. Breathlessness was also assessed using the Multidimensional Dyspnoea Profile and Dyspnoea-12. Sleep quality was reported on a 5-point Likert scale from ‘very well’ to ‘very bad’and sleep duration on a 7-point scale from ‘less than 4 hours’ to ‘more than 10 hours’. Associations of each symptom score with having worse sleep quality (‘bad’ or ‘very bad’) and/or shorter sleep duration (
Of 838 men analysed, 11% had worse sleep quality, 8% had shorter sleep duration and 5% had both. Higher severity of each symptom was associated with worse sleep quality (adjusted odds ratios (aOR) ranging 1.12–1.61) and shorter sleep duration (aORs ranging 1.10–1.49).
A wide range of symptoms is associated with worse sleep quality and shorter sleep duration in elderly men, suggesting that clinicians should assess sleep when these symptoms are present and vice versa.