Effectiveness of long-term opioid therapy for chronic non-cancer pain.
Laxmaiah Manchikanti,Ricardo Vallejo,Kavita N. Manchikanti,Ramsin M Benyamin,Sukdeb Datta,Paul J. Christo +5 more
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TL;DR: A paucity of literature exists concerning both controlled and observational literature for multiple drugs and multiple conditions of chronic non-cancer pain, and only one drug, tramadol, is effective for pain relief and improvement of functional status.
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Abstract: Background Opioids have been utilized for thousands of years to treat pain and their use continues to escalate. It is estimated that 90% of the patients who present to pain centers and receive treatment in such facilities are on opioids. However, in contrast to increasing opioid use and the lack of evidence supporting long-term effectiveness in chronic non-cancer pain, is the escalating misuse of prescription opioids, including abuse and diversion. There is also uncertainty about the incidence and clinical salience of multiple, poorly characterized adverse drug events, including endocrine dysfunction, immunosuppression, infectious disease, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, overdoses, deaths, and psychosocial and economic implications. Study design A comprehensive review of the literature. Objective The objective of this comprehensive review is to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and safety of chronic opioid therapy in chronic non-cancer pain. Methods A comprehensive review of the literature relating to chronic opioid therapy in chronic non-cancer pain. The literature was collected from various electronic and other sources. The literature that was evaluated included randomized trials, observational studies, case reports, systematic reviews, and guidelines. Outcome measures Pain relief was the primary outcome measure. The secondary outcome measures were functional improvement and adverse effects. Short-term effectiveness was considered to be less than 6 months; long-term effectiveness was considered to be at least one year. Results Given the complexity and widespread nature of opioid therapy, there is a paucity of qualitative and/or quantitative literature. The available evidence is weak for pain relief combined with improvement in functional status. Only one drug, tramadol, is effective for pain relief and improvement of functional status. Limitations This is a narrative review without application of methodologic quality assessment criteria. Even so, a paucity of literature exists concerning both controlled and observational literature for multiple drugs and multiple conditions of chronic non-cancer pain. Conclusions This comprehensive review illustrates the lack of literature on long-term opioid therapy; thus, opioid therapy should be provided with great restraint and caution, based on the weak evidence available.
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TL;DR: The current state of knowledge regarding the growing problem of opioid abuse and misuse; known risk factors; and methods of predicting, assessing, monitoring, and addressing opioid Abuse and misuse in patients with chronic noncancer pain are reviewed.
Interventions for treating pain and disability in adults with complex regional pain syndrome
TL;DR: There is a critical lack of high quality evidence for the effectiveness of most therapies for CRPS, and low quality evidence suggests that physiotherapy or occupational therapy are associated with small positive effects that are unlikely to be clinically important at one year follow up when compared with a social work passive attention control.
Acute Pain Management in Opioid-Tolerant Patients: A Growing Challenge:
C A Huxtable,L. J. Roberts,Andrew A. Somogyi,Andrew A. Somogyi,Pamela E. Macintyre,Pamela E. Macintyre +5 more
TL;DR: In Australia and New Zealand, in parallel with other developed countries, the number of patients prescribed opioids on a long-term basis has grown rapidly over the last decade, often presenting clinicians with greater challenges than those faced when treating the opioid-naive as discussed by the authors.
224
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