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Archives of Palliative Care

Opioid-Induced Constipation: A Prospective Observational Study on Bowel Function Assessment and Laxative Use in Advanced Cancer Patients Treated with WHO Step III Oral Opioids

Research Article | Open Access | Volume 1 | Issue 1

  • 1. Palliative care and Pain Relief, Antea Palliative Care Unit, Italy
  • 2. Department of biostatistics, Regina Elena National CancerInstitute, Italy
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Corresponding Authors
Caterina Magnani, Palliative care and Pain Relief, Antea Palliative Care Unit, Piazza Santa Maria della Pietà, 5, Pad XXII, 00135, Rome, Italy Fax: 390630332555; Tel: 3906303321/393484455024;
Abstract

Objective: Opioids are effective in cancer pain management but their use is frequently complicated by side effects such as constipation. The aim of the study was to assess opioid-induced constipation (OIC) in a sample of palliative care cancer patients under treatment with WHO step III oral opioids. A secondary aim was to describe laxative medication use in the same sample.

Method: This was a prospective, observational study of 14-day duration. Subjects with a documented history of cancer pain in treatment with around-the clock oral strong opioids were eligible to participate in the study

Results: The analysis included 97 patients (mean age 76.0 ± 10.1): 50 were under treatment with oxycodone/naloxone, 25 with morphine, 20 with oxycodone and 2 with hydromorphone. The mean BFI was 35.67 ± 19.38 at recruitment and there were no significant modifications within the 14 days of study. The percentage of non-constipated patients (BFI <28.8) was higher in the OXN group than in the other groups, at both T1 (7 days after recruitment) and T2 (14 days after recruitment) (p<0.05). During the study period 46.4% of patients were under treatment with laxative medications. Patients in treatment with oxycodone and morphine consumed more laxatives than the OXN (chi-square 11.30, p-value 0.0007). 87.4% patients referred laxatives AEs

Conclusions: The study was limited due to difficult advanced cancer patients’ recruitment. However this work reinforces the need of further research in palliative care to pro¬vide evidence-based guidance on OIC management in this population.

 

Keywords

• Opioid-induced constipation

• Constipation

• Palliative care

• Cancer pain

• Laxatives

Citation

Magnani C, Giannarelli D, Calvieri A, Dardeli A, Lombardi A, et al. (2016) Opioid-Induced Constipation: A Prospective Observational Study on Bowel Function Assessment and Laxative Use in Advanced Cancer Patients Treated with WHO Step III Oral Opioids Arch Palliat Care 1(1): 1004.

ABBREVIATIONS

WHO: World Health Organization; EAPC: European Association of Palliative Care; PR: Prolonged-Release; SR: SlowRelease; OXN: Oxycodone/Naloxone; OIC: Opioid-Induced Constipation; AE: Adverse Effect; BFI: Bowel Function Index; ATC: Around-The-Clock; KPS: Karnofsky Performance Status Score; CRF: Case Report Form; NRS: Numerical Rating Scale; CTCAE: Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events

INTRODUCTION

Opioid analgesics have been recommended for the management of moderate-to-severe cancer pain by the WHO since 1990 [1]. For 25 years, oral morphine has been recommended as the first choice for cancer pain treatment [2], due to familiarity, availability, and cost rather than proven superiority [2]. The availability of different opioids has significantly improved and clinical studies on oxycodone, hydromorphone, and fentanyl have been carried out in order to assess their efficacy and tolerability profiles compared with morphine [3]. A systematic review conducted to identify and assess the quality of evidence for the use of oxycodone, morphine, and hydromorphone for cancer pain in adults [4] reported no evidence of a significant difference in analgesia or adverse effects in the cancer palliative care population. EAPC evidence-based recommendations on the use of opioids for cancer pain relief state that morphine, oxycodone, or hydromorphone given by the oral route can be used as the first-choice step III opioid for moderate-to-severe cancer pain [2].

In Italy, the following strong opioids are available for oral route: morphine, oxycodone, hydromorphone, and methadone. In clinical practice either morphine, oxycodone, hydromorphoneor the association OXN is used to treat moderate-to-severe cancer pain. Although strong opioids are effective in pain management, their use is frequently complicated by side effects such as dizziness, nausea, sedation, constipation and itching [5]. Tolerance to different secondary opioid effects develops at different rates. While tolerance to central nervous system opioid effects such as sedation, dizziness, nausea and vomiting can occur rapidly, there is minimal development of tolerance to constipation [6]. The prevalence of OIC in cancer patients has recently been estimated in the Dyonisos study [7] as 61.7%. Research on OIC in cancer patients8 has shown that constipation might create symptom distress and have a negative impact on overall quality of life [9]. Furthermore, patients with OIC are often under treatment with laxatives and they frequently experience the bothersome AEs of these medications. Although OIC is the most frequently reported and persistent side effect in patients receiving opioid analgesia [10], current strategies to manage it are not well defined, frequently lack a good evidence base and may be ineffective [11]. Cancer patients continue to experience OIC despite laxative use in 84.7% of cases [7,12]. A Cochrane review on the effectiveness and differential efficacy of laxatives for the management of constipation in people receiving palliative care was first published in 2006 and then updated in 2010 and 2015 [13]. There are no reported conclusions on the individual effectiveness of different laxatives because of insufficient data from clinical research. No evidence suggests that one laxative agent should be recommended over others [2]. However, use of peripherally acting opioid antagonists has been identified as a promising approach; these agents specifically target gastrointestinal receptors without limiting the central analgesic activity of opioids [14].

The current research is an observational prospective study conducted to assess OIC in a sample of patients with moderate-tosevere cancer pain under treatment with strong opioids given by the oral route. The secondary objectives included the assessment of the analgesic efficacy, the description of laxative medication use and the assessment of laxatives’ AEs.

 

MATERIALS AND METHODS

This was a prospective, observational study of 14-day duration. The study protocol was approved by the local research ethics committee and was conducted in full compliance with applicable Good Clinical Practice and regulations. Patients were given an information sheet, after which they had the opportunity to ask questions about the study. Then, they were asked to sign a consent form.

Advanced cancer patients aged more than 18 years, with a documented history of moderate-to-severe pain requiring ATC opioid therapy were eligible to participate in the study. Subjects were required to be on a stable dose of a WHO step III oral opioid, for at least 7 days prior to recruitment.

Patients were excluded from the study for the following reasons

1) evidence of clinically unstable disease or significant renal, hepatic or psychiatric disease; 2) KPS < 20; 3) clinically significant gastrointestinal disease; 4) cognitive impairment; 5) any condition associated with altered pain perception; 6) significant structural abnormalities of the GI tract or enterostomy drainage bag; 7) chemotherapy or radiotherapy within 2 weeks before recruitment visit that would influence bowel function.

The assessment tools used in the study were

1. BFI [15] for OIC: it is a clinician-administered tool that allows easy measurement of OIC from the patient’s perspective and includes three variables: “ease of defecation”; “feeling of incomplete bowel evacuation”; and “personal judgement of constipation”. Using a numerical analogue scale of 0–100, patients rate these variables according to their experience during the preceding 7 days, where 0 represents freedom from the symptom and 100 represents maximum difficulty or the most severe symptom. The BFI score is calculated as the mean of the three component scores. The BFI reference range for non-constipated patients with chronic pain can be defined as 0–28.8 [16]. Changes in the BFI scores of ≥ 12 points are likely to be related to clinically meaningful changes in patients’ perceptions of their bowel habits [16,17]. BFI is considered to be a reliable and valid measure of OIC in European countries [15].

2. NRS for pain intensity self-assessment: it is a verbally administered 11-point scale, with 0 indicating no pain, 1–3 mild pain, 4–6 moderate pain, and 7–10 severe pain [18].

3. CTCAE [19] for laxative adverse events assessment: this is the standardized method for safety and tolerability assessment in clinical cancer studies. It is routinely updated and used in conjunction with the medical dictionary for regulatory activities by regulatory agencies. Using CTCAE, adverse events are graded on a scale from grade 1 to 5, in which, by convention grades 1–3 represent progressive worsening in severity or frequency of the toxicity, interference with self-care and the performance of daily activities, and the need for clinical intervention. The adverse events related to laxative treatment, registered in the current study were: abdominal swelling, abdominal pain, diarrhoea and bloating

A flow diagram of the study protocol is reported in Figure (1).

Descriptive statistics were used to summarize the data. Mean and standard deviation were calculated when referring to quantitative variables and absolute counts and percentages when related to qualitative items. The paired Student’s t test was used to analyse differences in age while the chi square test was used to measure association among categorical factors. IBM SPSS v.21 statistical software was used for analysis.

 

RESULTS

Patients were recruited from an Italian palliative care unit that provided assistance to 980 cancer patients during the study period (15 May 2015 to 15 May 2016). Of these patients, a total of 102 participated in the study and data from 97 were usable because the remaining 5 CRFs were incomplete. 52.6% were inpatients and 47.4% outpatients.

Patients’ characteristics are reported in Table (1) 

Table 1: Patients’ characteristics

  N (%) or mean ( ± SD)
Mean age 76.0 ( ± 10.1)
Sex  
MALE 41 (42.3)
Female 56 (57.7)
Setting  
Inpatients 51 (52.6)
Outpatients 46 (47.4)
Karnofsky Performance Status score  
40 34 (35.0)
30 63 (65.0
Cancer localization  
Lung 23 (23.7)
Colo-rectal 16 (16.5)
Breast 8 (8.2)

Prostate

Pancreas

Stomach

Ovarian/uterin

9 (9.3)

7 (7.2)

1 (1.0)

9 (9.3)

Urinary system

Liver

Unknown

Other

5 (5.1)

1 (1.0)

3 (3.1)

15 (15.5)

Metastasis  

None

Multiple

Abdomen

13 (13.4)

52 (53.6)

7 (7.2)

Bone 15 (15.5)
Lymph Nodes 6 (6.2)
Lung 6 (3.1)
Liver 1 (1.0)

At the first follow-up visit (T1) 10 patients had dropped out (7 had died and 3 had changed the route of drug administration), at the second follow-up visit (T2) 17 patients had dropped out (15 had died and 2 had changed the route of drug administration). Of the whole sample, 50 patients were under fixed ATC treatment with PR OXN, 25 patients were under treatment with fixed ATC oral morphine (SR or PR), 20 patients were under treatment with fixed ATC oral PR oxycodone, 2 patients were under treatment with fixed ATC oral PR hydromorphone and none was under treatment with methadone. At the start of the study, subjects were receiving mean OXN doses of 36.0 mg/day (SD 22.38); mean oxycodone doses of 43.25 mg/day (SD 33.17); mean oral morphine doses of 39.40 mg/day (SD 16.43) and mean hydromorphone doses of 24 mg/day (SD 16.0).

At recruitment the mean BFI for the total sample was 35.67 ± 19.38 while it was 35.91 ± 19.61 at T1 (7 days after recruitment) and 34.43 ± 17.03 at T2 (14 days after recruitment) (p-values > 0.05). Given that the BFI reference range for non-constipated patients can be defined as 0–28.8 [16,17], in the oxycodone group 87.5% of patients were constipated at T1 (reported BFI values > 28.8) and 92.3% at T2; in the morphine group 63.6% of patients were constipated at T1 and 75.0% at T2; in the OXN group 45.8% of patients were constipated at T1 and 53.8% at T2. At both T1 and T2 there were more non-constipated patients in the OXN group than in the morphine and oxycodone groups (T1 chi-square = 8.927 p = 0.01 and T2 chi-square = 6.969 p=0.03) Table (2).

Table 2: Constipated patients at T0-T1-T2 in the three groups (OXN, Oxycodone, Oral morphine).

 

OXN

Oxycodone

Morphine

pvalue

 

N

Constipatedpatients

N (%)

N

Constipatedpatients

N (%)

N

Constipatedpatients

N (%)

T0

T1

T2

50

 

48

 

39

29 (58.0%)

22 (45.8%)

21 (53.8%)

20

16

13

13 (65.0%)

14 (87.5%)

12 (92.3%)

25

22

12

17 (68.0%)

14 (63.6%)

9 (75.0%)

0.67

0.01

0.03

OXN: Oxycodone/Naloxone

N: Number of patients

T0: Recruitment

T1: 7 days after the recruitment

T2: 14 days after the recruitment

P value corresponding to the chi square test

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The mean baseline pain intensity was NRS 3.49 ± 1.93; after 7 days it was 2.64 ± 1.62 and after 14 days it was 2.23 ±1.45 with a p-value <0.0001 for paired data T0-T1 and a p-value <0.0001 for paired data T1-T2. Data on mean pain intensity at T0-T1-T2 in the three groups and the t-test for paired data are reported in Table (3)

Table 3: Mean pain intensity NRS values at T0-T1-T2 in the three groups (OXN, Oxycodone, Morphine)

Paired data

 

OXN

pvalue

Oxycodone

pvalue

Morphine

pvalue

 

 

N

Mean (SD)

 

N

Mean  (SD)

 

N

Mean (SD)

T0 NRS

 

T1 NRS

48

 

 

 

48

3.60 (1.75)

2.56 (1.64)

 

0.001

16

 

16

3.62(2.19)

3.00 (1.93)

 

0.22

22

 

22

3.64 (1.70)

2.68 (1.29)

 

0.03

T0 NRS

 

T2 NRS

41

 

41

3.68 (1.81)

2.44 (1.53)

 

0.001

14

 

14

3.64 (2.34)

2.35 (1.28)

 

0.07

14

 

14

3.36 (1.28)

2.14 (1.35)

 

0.007

T1 NRS

 

T2 NRS

41

 

41

2.61(1.61)

2.44 (1.53)

 

0.41

14

 

14

2.71 (1.73)

2.36 (2.78)

 

0.36

14

 

14

2.57 (1.22)

2.14 (1.35)

 

0.31

OXN: Oxycodone/Naloxone

N: Number of patients

SD: Standard deviation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

During the study period, 46.4% of patients were under treatment with laxative medications. Lactulose, polyethylene glycol and senna glycoside were the laxatives in use. See Table (4)

Table 4: Laxatives’ characteristics.

Category

Molecule

Mechanism of action

Common adverseeffects

Osmotic/

saline

Lactulose

Poorlyabsorbedmolecules create a localosmoticgradientwithin the intestinal lumen (Woolery et al., 2008). Peristalsisisstimulate by increase in pressure from reabsorption of fluid and electrolytes, and decreasedgutpH in the colon (Lee-Robichaud et al., 2010)

Bloating, flatulence, colic and diarrhea

Iso-osmotic

polyethylene glycol

Physiologicallyinert; they are notabsorbed or metabolized in the gut.Increased water content and volume of the stool (Woolery et al., 2008).

Abdominaldistension, abdominalpain, diarrhea

Stimulant

senna glycoside

Peristalsisstimulation due to nerveirritatingeffect in the colonic mucosa. Limited water absorption (Woolery et al., 2008).

Abdominalpain (crampin

 

 

for the mechanism of action and common AEs of the laxatives reported in this study. At T2 the oxycodone and the morphine treatment groups had consumed more laxatives (23/28; 82.1%) than the OXN treatment group (17/41; 41.5%) (chi-square 4.27, p-value 0.03). Only 12.6% of patients who took laxatives did not experience adverse effects. SeeTable 5

 

Table 5: Laxatives AEs in the three treatment groups.

 

LaxativesAEs N (%)

 

Bloating

Abdominalpain

Abdominaldistension

Diarrohea

OpioidTreatment

Oxycodone (T1)

13 (81.2)

12 (75.0)

12 (75.0)

1 (6.2)

Oxycodone (T2)

10 (71.4)

11 (78.5)

9 (64.3)

1 (7.1)

OXN (T1)

33 (68.7)

30 (62.5)

34 (70.8)

5 (10.4)

OXN (T2)

30 (96.7)

31 (75.6)

31 (75.6)

5 (12.2)

Morphine (T1)

21 (95.4)

17 (77.3)

18 (81.8)

2 (9.0)

Morphine (T2)

12 (85.7)

13 (92.8)

13 (92.8)

0 (0)

OXN: Oxycodone/Naloxone

AEs: Adverse events

N: Number of patients

 

 

for descriptive data of adverse effects of laxatives. DISCUSSION

 

DISCUSSION

In the current study, the mean BFI for the total sample of patients ranged between 34.43 and 35.91, showing a mild degree of constipation if compared with the results of the most recent clinical research conducted20 on chronic cancer pain patients who had a mean BFI score of 63.1 ± 23.5.

This finding might mean that cancer patients with advanced disease can experience improvement in constipation control when they enter a palliative care programme.

BFI modification over the three visits (T0–T1–T2) was not significant, but the mean BFI score in the OXN treatment group was 10 points lower than in the oxycodone and morphine treatment groups. The percentage of non-constipated patients (BFI <28.8) was higher in the OXN group than in the morphine and oxycodone groups, at both T1 and T2 (p<0.05). This result may confirm the efficacy of OXN in OIC management.

Analgesic efficacy was statistically significant in the whole sample and in the three treatment groups (p<0.05). This finding confirms that oxycodone, OXN or morphine given by the oral route is effective in patients with moderate-to-severe cancer pain. This finding shows that using an opioid antagonist does not result in a decrease of opioid-induced pain relief.

From the study findings, almost half of patients (46.4%) received laxative medication. Laxatives were given based on the doctor’s recommendation following common clinical practice. Laxative consumption at T2 was higher in the oxycodone and morphine groups than in the OXN group. These results suggest that, given a similar degree of constipation, patients who are under treatment with oral oxycodone and morphine need more laxatives than patients under treatment with OXN.

The study findings, although the study sample was small, confirm that the targeted approach of administering peripherally.

Acting opioid antagonists co-applied with opioid agonists is effective in managing constipation in advanced cancer patients. In our opinion, given that current laxatives do not have a good evidence base [11], a combination of opioid ago- and antagonists should be considered as a possible treatment method for all cancer subjects.

.Lactulose, polyethylene glycol and senna glycoside were the laxatives in use. Insufficient evidence exists to determine the efficacy and side effect profiles of lactulose, polyethylene glycol and senna glycoside in the prevention and treatment of constipation. An algorithm for the prophylaxis and ongoing assessment of bowel pattern in palliative care patients [9] recommended prescribing laxative prophylactically in order to anticipate the constipating effects of pharmacological agents such as opioids. In the algorithm [9], the first-line recommended treatment with oral laxative involves a combination of a softener such as polyethylene glycol or lactulose and a stimulant such as senna. The second-line recommended treatment involves the use of a rectal suppository and enema and the possible use of a peripherally specific opioid antagonist. The third-line recommended treatment involves manual evacuation and eventually the use of a peripherally specific opioid antagonist. Based on the current study findings, the OXN combination can be considered as a valid opportunity in palliative care patients taking opioids.

In the study sample, adverse effects that were probably due to laxatives were frequent. The most common adverse effects were bloating and abdominal distension characterized by mild or moderate intensity.

 

LIMITATIONS

The present study has several limitations. The sample was small due to the short life expectancy and patients’ frequent refusal to participate; patients were ineligible if they were unable to self-report pain and constipation (these patients might have experienced pain and OIC as well); there were only 2 patients in treatment with hydromorphone and none with methadone; only four possible laxative AEs were assessed. A randomized clinical trial would have been a more appropriate study design, but there are many barriers to palliative care research [21,22] such as patients’ fragility, limited life expectancy and prognostic uncertainty. Although caring for this highly symptomatic population requires the further development of scientific evidence for palliative care, studies are difficult to perform. Despite these limitations, the results of this prospective observational study are encouraging as they demonstrate reasonably good management of constipation in palliative care cancer patients.

 

CONCLUSION

This observational prospective study describes OIC assessment, analgesic efficacy, laxative consumption and AEs in palliative care cancer patients under treatment with oral WHO step III opioids.

Based on the study findings, palliative care patients with moderate/severe cancer pain, treated with oxycodone or OXN or morphine by the oral route, experienced a similar, statistically significant, analgesic effect. In the study sample, the mean BFI score demonstrated a mild degree of constipation with no significant differences in the three treatment groups. Fourteen days after recruitment, laxative consumption was significantly lower in patients treated with OXN. Adverse effects probably due to laxative medication were common.

 

Given the demonstrated negative impact of constipation on quality of life in cancer patients, further research should be encouraged to provide evidence-based guidance on the use of the available laxatives or specific-opioid antagonists for the prevention and treatment of OIC.

 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

 We would like to thank Sabrina Castellana for data management, (Antea Palliative Care Unit, Rome) and Monica Pittaluga M.D. (Antea Palliative Care Unit, Rome), Paola Ruggeri R.N. (Antea Palliative Care Unit, Rome), Lorena Cossu R.N. (Antea Palliative Care Unit, Rome), Umberto Palleschi M.D. (Antea Palliative Care Unit, Rome) for their contribution in patient’s recruitment. Furthermore we would like to thank Proof-readingservice (http://www.proof-reading-service.com) for English language editing.

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Magnani C, Giannarelli D, Calvieri A, Dardeli A, Lombardi A, et al. (2016) Opioid-Induced Constipation: A Prospective Observational Study on Bowel Function Assessment and Laxative Use in Advanced Cancer Patients Treated with WHO Step III Oral Opioids Arch Palliat Care 1(1): 1004.

Received : 29 Sep 2016
Accepted : 14 Oct 2016
Published : 16 Oct 2016
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ISSN : 2578-3580
Launched : 2014
Annals of Clinical and Medical Microbiology
ISSN : 2578-3629
Launched : 2014
JSM Pediatric Surgery
ISSN : 2578-3149
Launched : 2017
Journal of Memory Disorder and Rehabilitation
ISSN : 2578-319X
Launched : 2016
JSM Tropical Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2578-3165
Launched : 2016
JSM Head and Face Medicine
ISSN : 2578-3793
Launched : 2016
JSM Cardiothoracic Surgery
ISSN : 2573-1297
Launched : 2016
JSM Bone and Joint Diseases
ISSN : 2578-3351
Launched : 2017
JSM Bioavailability and Bioequivalence
ISSN : 2641-7812
Launched : 2017
JSM Atherosclerosis
ISSN : 2573-1270
Launched : 2016
Journal of Genitourinary Disorders
ISSN : 2641-7790
Launched : 2017
Journal of Fractures and Sprains
ISSN : 2578-3831
Launched : 2016
Journal of Autism and Epilepsy
ISSN : 2641-7774
Launched : 2016
Annals of Marine Biology and Research
ISSN : 2573-105X
Launched : 2014
JSM Health Education & Primary Health Care
ISSN : 2578-3777
Launched : 2016
JSM Communication Disorders
ISSN : 2578-3807
Launched : 2016
Annals of Musculoskeletal Disorders
ISSN : 2578-3599
Launched : 2016
Annals of Virology and Research
ISSN : 2573-1122
Launched : 2014
JSM Renal Medicine
ISSN : 2573-1637
Launched : 2016
Journal of Muscle Health
ISSN : 2578-3823
Launched : 2016
JSM Genetics and Genomics
ISSN : 2334-1823
Launched : 2013
JSM Anxiety and Depression
ISSN : 2475-9139
Launched : 2016
Clinical Journal of Heart Diseases
ISSN : 2641-7766
Launched : 2016
Annals of Medicinal Chemistry and Research
ISSN : 2378-9336
Launched : 2014
JSM Pain and Management
ISSN : 2578-3378
Launched : 2016
JSM Women's Health
ISSN : 2578-3696
Launched : 2016
Clinical Research in HIV or AIDS
ISSN : 2374-0094
Launched : 2013
Journal of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Obesity
ISSN : 2333-6692
Launched : 2013
Journal of Substance Abuse and Alcoholism
ISSN : 2373-9363
Launched : 2013
JSM Neurosurgery and Spine
ISSN : 2373-9479
Launched : 2013
Journal of Liver and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2379-0830
Launched : 2014
Journal of Drug Design and Research
ISSN : 2379-089X
Launched : 2014
JSM Clinical Oncology and Research
ISSN : 2373-938X
Launched : 2013
JSM Bioinformatics, Genomics and Proteomics
ISSN : 2576-1102
Launched : 2014
JSM Chemistry
ISSN : 2334-1831
Launched : 2013
Journal of Trauma and Care
ISSN : 2573-1246
Launched : 2014
JSM Surgical Oncology and Research
ISSN : 2578-3688
Launched : 2016
Annals of Food Processing and Preservation
ISSN : 2573-1033
Launched : 2016
Journal of Radiology and Radiation Therapy
ISSN : 2333-7095
Launched : 2013
JSM Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
ISSN : 2578-3572
Launched : 2016
Annals of Clinical Pathology
ISSN : 2373-9282
Launched : 2013
Annals of Cardiovascular Diseases
ISSN : 2641-7731
Launched : 2016
Journal of Behavior
ISSN : 2576-0076
Launched : 2016
Annals of Clinical and Experimental Metabolism
ISSN : 2572-2492
Launched : 2016
Clinical Research in Infectious Diseases
ISSN : 2379-0636
Launched : 2013
JSM Microbiology
ISSN : 2333-6455
Launched : 2013
Journal of Urology and Research
ISSN : 2379-951X
Launched : 2014
Journal of Family Medicine and Community Health
ISSN : 2379-0547
Launched : 2013
Annals of Pregnancy and Care
ISSN : 2578-336X
Launched : 2017
JSM Cell and Developmental Biology
ISSN : 2379-061X
Launched : 2013
Annals of Aquaculture and Research
ISSN : 2379-0881
Launched : 2014
Clinical Research in Pulmonology
ISSN : 2333-6625
Launched : 2013
Journal of Immunology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2333-6714
Launched : 2013
Annals of Forensic Research and Analysis
ISSN : 2378-9476
Launched : 2014
JSM Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
ISSN : 2333-7109
Launched : 2013
Annals of Breast Cancer Research
ISSN : 2641-7685
Launched : 2016
Annals of Gerontology and Geriatric Research
ISSN : 2378-9409
Launched : 2014
Journal of Sleep Medicine and Disorders
ISSN : 2379-0822
Launched : 2014
JSM Burns and Trauma
ISSN : 2475-9406
Launched : 2016
Chemical Engineering and Process Techniques
ISSN : 2333-6633
Launched : 2013
Annals of Clinical Cytology and Pathology
ISSN : 2475-9430
Launched : 2014
JSM Allergy and Asthma
ISSN : 2573-1254
Launched : 2016
Journal of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
ISSN : 2334-2307
Launched : 2013
Annals of Sports Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2379-0571
Launched : 2014
JSM Sexual Medicine
ISSN : 2578-3718
Launched : 2016
Annals of Vascular Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2378-9344
Launched : 2014
JSM Biotechnology and Biomedical Engineering
ISSN : 2333-7117
Launched : 2013
Journal of Hematology and Transfusion
ISSN : 2333-6684
Launched : 2013
JSM Environmental Science and Ecology
ISSN : 2333-7141
Launched : 2013
Journal of Cardiology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2333-6676
Launched : 2013
JSM Nanotechnology and Nanomedicine
ISSN : 2334-1815
Launched : 2013
Journal of Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders
ISSN : 2475-9473
Launched : 2016
JSM Ophthalmology
ISSN : 2333-6447
Launched : 2013
Journal of Pharmacology and Clinical Toxicology
ISSN : 2333-7079
Launched : 2013
Annals of Psychiatry and Mental Health
ISSN : 2374-0124
Launched : 2013
Medical Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
ISSN : 2333-6439
Launched : 2013
Annals of Pediatrics and Child Health
ISSN : 2373-9312
Launched : 2013
JSM Clinical Pharmaceutics
ISSN : 2379-9498
Launched : 2014
JSM Foot and Ankle
ISSN : 2475-9112
Launched : 2016
JSM Alzheimer's Disease and Related Dementia
ISSN : 2378-9565
Launched : 2014
Journal of Addiction Medicine and Therapy
ISSN : 2333-665X
Launched : 2013
Journal of Veterinary Medicine and Research
ISSN : 2378-931X
Launched : 2013
Annals of Public Health and Research
ISSN : 2378-9328
Launched : 2014
Annals of Orthopedics and Rheumatology
ISSN : 2373-9290
Launched : 2013
Journal of Clinical Nephrology and Research
ISSN : 2379-0652
Launched : 2014
Annals of Community Medicine and Practice
ISSN : 2475-9465
Launched : 2014
Annals of Biometrics and Biostatistics
ISSN : 2374-0116
Launched : 2013
JSM Clinical Case Reports
ISSN : 2373-9819
Launched : 2013
Journal of Cancer Biology and Research
ISSN : 2373-9436
Launched : 2013
Journal of Surgery and Transplantation Science
ISSN : 2379-0911
Launched : 2013
Journal of Dermatology and Clinical Research
ISSN : 2373-9371
Launched : 2013
JSM Gastroenterology and Hepatology
ISSN : 2373-9487
Launched : 2013
Annals of Nursing and Practice
ISSN : 2379-9501
Launched : 2014
JSM Dentistry
ISSN : 2333-7133
Launched : 2013
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