Opioid Conversion Guide
1 Primary Opioid → Oral Morphine Equivalent Dose (oMED)
The calculator first converts the primary regular opioid into an equivalent oral morphine dose.
Primary Dose = total 24-hour dose of the chosen primary opioid (e.g. PO oxycodone).
Primary Ratio = conversion factor from that opioid to PO morphine (from the ratio table below).
2 Add All Additional Opioids → Total oMED
The calculator then adds in any additional/PRN opioids you enter (up to 3), converting each to PO morphine and summing them.
Additional Dose = total 24-hour dose for each other opioid.
Additional Ratio = its conversion factor to PO morphine.
3 Convert Total oMED → Output Opioid
The total PO morphine is then converted into the target opioid and route you selected in the "Convert to opioid" box.
Ratio for Output Opioid = the same type of ratio used in Step 1, but for the output opioid.
Clinical Warnings
When switching between different opioids (especially at high doses >100mg PO morphine/day), patients exhibit incomplete cross-tolerance. Reduce calculated equianalgesic dose by 25-50% of calculated dose and titrate carefully based on response over 24-48 hours.
Patients with poor oral absorption (nausea, vomiting, bowel obstruction, dysphagia, cachexia) require parenteral routes (SC/IV). Do NOT include all PRN doses in 24-hour totals for these conversions - use only regular doses. Oral bioavailability is unpredictable due to poor absorption.
Long-acting formulations require careful overlap planning (4-24 hours) during rotation to avoid gaps or overdose.
• Current: CSCI morphine 60mg/24h
• Apply fentanyl patch 50μg/hr (fentanyl peaks at 12-24hrs)
• Continue running CSCI for 6-12hrs
• Current: IR morphine 10mg q4h (60mg/24h)
• Give 1st MST 60mg WITH last IR dose (overlap 4hrs)
• Stop IR after MST taken (MST starts working ~4hrs)
Do not initiate fentanyl transdermal therapy in opioid-naïve patients.
Only convert to a fentanyl patch after the patient has been on regular, stable opioid therapy and has achieved steady-state opioid levels.
During dose titration, use an immediate-release opioid alongside the fentanyl patch to manage breakthrough pain and ensure adequate analgesia before completing the conversion.
High opioid requirements with poor response suggest neuropathic component or opioid rotation failure. Consider methadone rotation (NMDA antagonism), ketamine infusion, or adjuvants (gabapentinoids).
Pain has physical, psychological, social, and spiritual dimensions ("total pain"). High opioid needs often indicate "total pain" requiring multidisciplinary team (psychology, physiotherapy, social work, spiritual care) alongside pharmacotherapy.
Default Ratios Used in the Calculator
| Opioid | Route | Ratio to PO Morphine |
|---|---|---|
| Morphine | PO | 1.0 |
| Morphine | SC/IV | 2.0 |
| Oxycodone | PO | 1.5 |
| Oxycodone | SC/IV | 3.0 |
| Tramadol | PO | 0.2 |
| Tramadol | IV | 0.2 |
| Codeine | PO | 0.1 |
| Dihydrocodeine | PO | 0.1 |
| Fentanyl Patch | TD | 2.4 |
| Fentanyl | SC/IV | 0.1 |
Worked Example
Example inputs:
- Primary: 40 mg PO oxycodone / 24 hours
- Additional: 20 mg SC morphine / 24 hours
Step 1 – Primary PO Morphine:
40 mg × 1.5 = 60 mg PO morphine
Step 2 – Total PO Morphine:
Additional SC morphine: 20 mg × 2.0 = 40 mg PO morphine
Total PO morphine = 60 + 40 = 100 mg / day
Step 3 – Convert to SC oxycodone:
Ratio for SC oxycodone = 3.0
Output Dose =
100
3.0
≈ 33.3 mg SC oxycodone / day
- Faculty of Pain Medicine, ANZCA. (2021). Opioid dose equivalence.
- Wilcock, A., Howard, P., & Charlesworth, S. (2022). PCF 8: Palliative care formulary.
- Davis, M. P., et al. (2024). Opioid analgesic dose conversion ratios. Support Care Cancer.
- Adams, M. C. B., et al. (2025). NIH HEAL morphine milligram equivalent calculator. PAIN.
- Faculty of Pain Medicine. (n.d.). Opioid rotation guidelines.
- Bhatnagar, M., & Pruskowski, J. (2024). Opioid equivalency. In StatPearls.
- MD Anderson Cancer Center. (n.d). Peri-operative pain management.
- Australian Journal of General Practice. (2024). Morphine toxicity and opioid rotation.
- Doulton, B. (2014). Pharmacologic management of breakthrough cancer pain. Can Fam Physician.
- Fraser Health Authority. (n.d.). Principles of opioid management.
- Caraceni, A., et al. (2023). Parenteral opioids in cancer pain management.
- Webber, K., et al. (2014). Breakthrough pain assessment.
- Chou, R., et al. (2023). ASCO opioid guidelines for cancer pain.
- Mercadante, S., et al. (2024). Methadone rotation for refractory pain.
- Prommer, E. (2024). Methadone vs other opioids for bone pain.
- Saunders, C. (2010). Total pain management.
- IASP Task Force. (n.d.). Multidisciplinary pain management.
- Twycross, R., & Wilcock, A. (2014). Alternative routes to oral opioid administration. Pain Medicine.
- NHS England North West. (2020). Palliative care pain & symptom control guidelines.
- Twycross, R., et al. (2022). Palliative Care Formulary, 7th ed.
- NHS Specialist Pharmacy Service. (2021). Fentanyl patch conversion guidelines.
- Faculty of Pain Medicine, ANZCA. (2021). Opioid patch overlap protocols.
- Correll, D. J., et al. (2004). Burst ketamine to reverse opioid tolerance.