MME Calculator (Morphine Milligram Equivalent)
Estimate total daily MME from an opioid regimen. Educational use only.
Medication Regimen
Some opioids and routes require special handling. These settings change only the calculation, not clinical decisions.
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Total MME/day
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MME contributors
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Highest contributor
Understand your regimen (educational)
- See which medication contributes most
- Export a breakdown for discussion with a clinician
Conversion Factors Reference
| Opioid | Route/Form | Conversion Factor | Notes |
|---|
MME Breakdown
| Medication | Daily Dose | Factor | MME/day | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 0.0 | |||
MME Calculator: Morphine Milligram Equivalent per Day
The MME Calculator estimates the total daily morphine milligram equivalent (MME) from an opioid regimen [web:1][web:2]. This educational tool helps students, patients, caregivers, and clinicians understand opioid potency relative to morphine, but it does not provide medical advice or dosing recommendations [web:9].
How It Works
MME calculation converts different opioids to a common reference (morphine) using established conversion factors [page:1]. The basic formula for each medication line is:
\[ DailyDose = Strength \cdot Units \cdot DosesPerDay \]
\[ MME_{line} = DailyDose \cdot Factor \]
\[ TotalMME = \sum MME_{line} \]
Example: A patient takes oxycodone 10 mg tablets, 2 tablets every 6 hours (4 times daily). Daily dose = 10 mg × 2 × 4 = 80 mg oxycodone. Using a conversion factor of 1.5 [page:1], the MME = 80 × 1.5 = 120 MME/day.
Special Handling
- Methadone: Conversion factors are nonlinear and dose-dependent, ranging from 3:1 to 12:1 or higher [web:6][web:9]. The calculator applies tiered factors based on daily methadone dose [page:1].
- Fentanyl patches: Dosed in mcg/hr, converted using a factor of 2.4 per mcg/hr (assumes 72-hour patch duration) [page:1][web:5]. Example: A 50 mcg/hr patch = 50 × 2.4 = 120 MME/day.
- PRN medications: For "as-needed" opioids, enter expected doses per day or compute a range (min–max) [web:8].
Why MME Has Limits
MME conversions are approximations and do not account for patient variability, incomplete cross-tolerance, genetics, pharmacokinetics, or route-specific absorption [page:1][web:1]. Equianalgesic tables are derived from limited clinical data and may not apply to all patients [web:6]. Methadone and transdermal fentanyl require particular caution due to their complex pharmacology [web:6][web:7]. Buprenorphine, as a partial agonist, is not standardized for MME and is not included in most calculations [page:1].
Safety Notes
The CDC recommends caution when considering opioid dosages ≥50 MME/day and advises avoiding ≥90 MME/day unless clinically justified [web:9][page:1]. Higher MME levels are associated with increased overdose risk, especially when combined with CNS depressants (benzodiazepines, alcohol, sedatives) [web:8]. This calculator is for educational purposes only and should never replace clinical judgment or consultation with a licensed healthcare provider [web:1].
Frequently Asked Questions
About OmniCalculator.Space
This MME Calculator is provided by OmniCalculator.Space, a resource for educational calculators across health, finance, and science. For questions or feedback, visit our contact page. Explore more tools on our health calculators page or learn about our mission on the about page.
Disclaimer: This tool is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Do not start, stop, adjust, or substitute opioid medications without consulting a licensed clinician. MME conversions are approximations and do not replace clinical judgment. For authoritative clinical guidance, consult resources such as the CDC Opioid Resources and medical pharmacology references.