“…3 However, unlike other opioids, there is no standard method of rotation to methadone or equianalgesic dose conversion ratio, making rotations to methadone challenging and potentially dangerous. 3 Many methods of methadone rotation have been proposed, including rapid conversion or stop-and-go method (i.e., stopping original opioid and starting methadone at full dose), 4 crosstapering or three-day switch (i.e., decreasing the original opioid while increasing methadone), 5,6 and ad libitum (i.e., allowing patients to self-titrate using as-needed methadone), 7 but no single method of rotation has been proven to be superior to others. A systematic review of opioid methadone rotation methods among patients with cancer-related pain identified 25 studies but found insufficient evidence to recommend one method over another.…”