| Literature DB >> 21092100 |
Melanie Plested1, Sangeeta Budhia, Zahava Gabriel.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients frequently fail to receive adequate pain relief from, or are intolerant of, first-line therapies prescribed for neuropathic pain (NeP). This refractory chronic pain causes psychological distress and impacts patient quality of life. Published literature for treatment in refractory patients is sparse and often published as conference abstracts only. The aim of this study was to identify published data for three pharmacological treatments: pregabalin, lidocaine plaster, and duloxetine, which are typically used at 2(nd) line or later in UK patients with neuropathic pain.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21092100 PMCID: PMC3003252 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-10-116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Criteria | Included | Excluded |
|---|---|---|
| Type of study | All study designs, both prospective and retrospective (except case studies for one patient) | Case studies for one patient |
| Population | Adult patients | Studies in children |
| Study size | Any | None |
| Trial length | Any | None |
| Interventions | Pregabalin | Other treatment for NeP |
| Comparator | Any/None | - |
| Language | English language only | Non-English language |
Critical appraisal
| Reporting | Did the study address a clearly defined issue? |
|---|---|
| Did the authors use an appropriate method to answer the review question? | |
| Are the main outcomes, patient population and interventions tested clearly described? | |
| Are losses to follow-up reported and clearly described? | |
| Bias and confounding effects | Were the patients recruited in an acceptable way? |
| Was any attempt to randomise or blind patents or investigators reported? | |
| Have the authors identified all/any of the confounding factors? | |
| Was the follow-up of patients complete and long enough? | |
| Usefulness of the study | Are the results useful to answer the review question? |
| Do the results fit with the evidence from other studies? | |
Figure 1Trial flow. * Includes conference searching, Google scholar and Open SIGLE. Approximately 3500 references were reviewed in Open SIGLE and approximately 5500 references were reviewed in Google scholar.
Summary of included trials
| Study reference | Study location | Type of trial* | Study duration | No. pts | Treatment and dose | Study population | % pts refractory | Reporting and definition of refractory |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pregabalin | ||||||||
| Ambesh 2008 [ | Unclear | Unclear, active controlled | Follow-up was 2-18 months | 86 | Gabapentin 300 mg tid | NeP. | 100% | Patients are "resistant to current analgesic treatment regimens or conventional pain therapies". |
| Allen 2005 [ | UK | Single-arm trial | Up to 6 months | 18 | Mean dose of pregabalin was 600 mg/day | NeP. | 100% | Patients with NeP "inadequately controlled by gabapentin". |
| Douglas 2008 [ | UK | Audit | Data reported for 3 months | 30 | Pregabalin dosing "according to BNF recommended standard regime" | NeP. | 100% | Patients who "failed to respond to or who had been unable to tolerate first and second-line neuropathic pain agents". |
| Hanu-Cernat 2005 [ | UK | Audit | Not stated | 47 | Dosing not stated | Variety of NeP conditions. | 100% | Patients with an "unsatisfactory response to drugs". |
| Stacey 2008 [ | United States | Single-arm trial | 65 weeks | 81 | Pregabalin 150 mg/day titrated up to a max of 600 mg/d | DPN, PHN** | 100% | Patients refractory to at least 6 months of usual care for NeP. |
| Toth 2007 [ | Unclear | Single-arm trial | Unclear (Av. treatment duration 26 weeks) | 33 | Average dose 375 mg of pregabalin | NeP due to PN. | 30% (only data on refractory patients-i.e. non-responders to gabapentin was extracted) | Responders and non-responders to gabapentin. |
| Duloxetine | ||||||||
*All trials are single arm, unless otherwise stated. The type of trial was as reported by the authors. (A) indicates that only a conference abstract was available. NR; Not reported. All studies were prospective in design, with the exception of two [21,32]. Studies which do not use the licensed dose of the intervention and/or do not study the use of the intervention in a licensed indication are italicised (UK license, as reported by the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for pregabalin and duloxetine and the MHRA UK license for the lidocaine plaster, which was licensed by country rather than centrally by the EMA). **Fibromyalgia patients were also enrolled in this study, however data for these patients were reported separately and were not extracted for this review. ***Patients with radiculopathy are assumed to have radiculopathy with a neuropathic component as the studies state that patients with neuropathic conditions are included.
Figure 2Number of included trials within the UK license per treatment.
NeP sub-types studied in the included trials
| Treatment | Licensed indication | Types of NeP studied within license | Types of NeP studied outside of license |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pregabalin | Peripheral and central NeP | • NeP (variety) | |
| • Polyneuropathy | |||
| • Chronic radiculopathy with a neuropathic component | |||
| • PHN | |||
| • Diabetic peripheral NeP | |||
| • Neuropathic cancer pain | |||
| • CRPS (CRPS II) | |||
| • TN | |||
| • Restless Leg Syndrome with NeP | |||
| Lidocaine plaster | PHN | • PHN | • Lower back pain with a neuropathic component |
| • CRPS | |||
| • NeP due to | |||
| • Postthoractomy | |||
| • Stump neuroma | |||
| • Intercostal neuralgia | |||
| • Abdominal neuroma | |||
| • Radiculopathy | |||
| • Meralgia paresthetica | |||
| • Diabetic polyneuropathy | |||
| • Postmastectomy | |||
| • Peripheral ischemia | |||
| Duloxetine | DPN | - | • TN |
Summary of previous, concomitant and add-on therapy
| Study reference | Previous medication | Concomitant/add-on medication |
|---|---|---|
| Pregabalin | ||
| Ambesh 2008 [ | Current analgesic treatment regimens, Conventional pain therapies | Amitriptyline |
| Allen 2005 [ | Gabapentin | NR |
| Douglas 2008 [ | Tricyclics, Gabapentin | NR |
| Hanu-Cernat 2005 [ | Gabapentin, Pregabalin | NR |
| Stacey 2008 [ | Anticonvulsants, Gabapentin, NSAIDs/Cox IIs, Opoid analgesics, Pregabalin, SSRI, SNRI, Tramadol, Tricyclics | Tricyclics, Gabapentin |
| Toth 2007 [ | Gabapentin | NR |
| Galer 2003 [ | Topical lidocaine plaster | Anticonvulsants, Acetaminophen, Conticosteroids, Opioids, Tricyclics. |
| Duloxetine | ||
Efficacy outcome reporting for each included intervention
| Intervention | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Pain Scores-No. studies (no. patients receiving the intervention) | |||
| No. studies reporting data for any pain intensity outcome | 7 | 3 | 1 |
| McGill questionnaire | 2* (109) | ||
| Pain reduction measured by VRS | 2* (81) | ||
| Pain intensity measured by NRS | 1* (30) | 1NR (32) | |
| Pain intensity measured by BPI | 2* (73) | ||
| Pain score measured by NPS-10, NPS-8 and NPS-4 | 1* (71) | ||
| Pain intensity measured by present pain intensity (PPI) | 1* (81) | ||
| Percentage pain score reduction | 1NR (16) | ||
| Pain severity measured by VAS | 1* (18) | ||
| Quality of life-No. studies (no. patients receiving the intervention) | |||
| No. studies reporting data for any quality of life outcome | 4 | 1 | 0 |
| SF-MPQ total, sensory and affective score | 1* | ||
| Quality of life measured by the SF-12 | 1* (55) | ||
| Sleep interference measured by NRS | 1* (55), 1NS (30) | ||
| Quality of sleep measured by VRS | 1* (28) | ||
| Quality of sleep (instrument not reported) | 1* (3) | ||
| Inference of mood measured by VRS | 1* (28) | ||
| Daily activity measured by VRS | 1* (28) | ||
| Function interference measured by NRS | 1* (30) | ||
| Psychological stress measured by the Short Questionnaire on Current Burden | 1* (55) | ||
| Pain associated distress measured by NRS | 1* (30) | ||
| PGIC | 1* (18) | ||
| Responders-No. studies (no. patients receiving the intervention) | |||
| No. studies reporting data for any pain relief outcome | 4 | 4 | 0 |
| Complete pain relief | 1 (53) | 2 (48) | |
| range of percentages reported | 25% | 13-22% | |
| A lot of pain relief | 2 (48) | ||
| range of percentages reported | 25-34% | ||
| Moderate pain relief | 2 (48) | ||
| range of percentages reported | 33-44% | ||
| Pain reduction of ≥ 50% | 3 (158) | 2 (7) | |
| range of percentages reported | 33-49% | 100% | |
| Pain reduction 10-50% | 2 (105) | 1 (33) | |
| range of percentages reported | 17% | NR | |
| Non-responders | 3 (132) | 2 (52) | |
| range of percentages reported | 26-46% | 6-20% | |
*Statistically significant; NS-not statistically significant; NR-statistical significance not reported.
+Numbers of patients receiving the intervention of interest.
aTwo case studies of 3 and 4 patients: the former reported all patients achieved 50% reduction in pain score, the latter reported improvements in all patients in an inconsistent manner.
bOne study reported that 4 of 24 patients achieved pain relief of 10-25%. The second study reported 38 out of 78 evaluable patients experienced ≥ 30% reduction in pain from baseline.
cOne study stated that patients experienced pain relief of 10%-50%, however it was unclear whether this referred to all patients.
Figure 3SF-MPQ total, sensory and affective scores for pregabalin [29] p values are compared to baseline
Figure 4Quality of life outcomes measured by the NRS (sleep and function interference, pain associated distress) for pregabalin [22,41]. p values are compared to baseline. Freynhagen 2007, baseline N = 53, endpoint N = 50; Douglas 2008, baseline N = 30, endpoint N = 30
Any AE
| Study Name | No. of patients | No. with any AE | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pregabalin | |||
| Obermann 2008 | 53 | 22 | |
| Sommer 2007 | 7 | 4 | |
| Hanu-Cernat 2005 | 24 | Intolerable side effects occurred in five patients. | |
| Lidocaine plaster | |||
| Hines 2002 | 4 | 0 | |
| Devers 2000 | 16 | 1 | |
| Galer 1999 | 32 | No significant difference between lidocaine patch and placebo (p ≥0.492) for AEs that were reported by at least 5% of the subjects in either treatment group. | |
| Galer 2003 | 20 | 5 | |
| Duloxetine | |||
| Restivo 2008 | 18 | 3 | For both treatment groups of duloxetine (60 mg/day and 120 mg/day). |