| Literature DB >> 24790459 |
Abstract
Cancer pain is a serious health problem, and imposes a great burden on the lives of patients and their families. Pain can be associated with delay in treatment, denial of treatment, or failure of treatment. If the pain is not treated properly it may impair the quality of life. Neuropathic cancer pain (NCP) is one of the most complex phenomena among cancer pain syndromes. NCP may result from direct damage to nerves due to acute diagnostic/therapeutic interventions. Chronic NCP is the result of treatment complications or malignancy itself. Although the reason for pain is different in NCP and noncancer neuropathic pain, the pathophysiologic mechanisms are similar. Data regarding neuropathic pain are primarily obtained from neuropathic pain studies. Evidence pertaining to NCP is limited. NCP due to chemotherapeutic toxicity is a major problem for physicians. In the past two decades, there have been efforts to standardize NCP treatment in order to provide better medical service. Opioids are the mainstay of cancer pain treatment; however, a new group of therapeutics called coanalgesic drugs has been introduced to pain treatment. These coanalgesics include gabapentinoids (gabapentin, pregabalin), antidepressants (tricyclic antidepressants, duloxetine, and venlafaxine), corticosteroids, bisphosphonates, N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists, and cannabinoids. Pain can be encountered throughout every step of cancer treatment, and thus all practicing oncologists must be capable of assessing pain, know the possible underlying pathophysiology, and manage it appropriately. The purpose of this review is to discuss neuropathic pain and NCP in detail, the relevance of this topic, clinical features, possible pathology, and treatments of NCP.Entities:
Keywords: cancer pain; coanalgesics; neuropathy
Year: 2014 PMID: 24790459 PMCID: PMC4000251 DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S60995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Onco Targets Ther ISSN: 1178-6930 Impact factor: 4.147
Terms used for classification of pain-related symptoms
| Hyperalgesia | Attenuated pain response to a painful stimulus |
| Hypoalgesia | Diminished response to a painful stimulus |
| Allodynia | Pain that is associated with an unpainful stimulus (light touch, mild temperature) |
| Dysesthesia | An abnormal sensation that is developed by a normal stimulus |
Etiopathogenic disorders associated with neuropathic pain syndromes*
| Toxicity | Chemotherapy, radiotherapy, arsenic/lead exposure, statin and isoniazid usage |
| Trauma | Phantom limb pain, postmastectomy pain, postthoracotomy pain, or any pain in major surgical regions |
| Compression | Nerve-entrapment syndromes like carpel tunnel syndrome, direct tumor compression, especially in tumor metastasis |
| Ischemia | Pain in diabetic food ulcers, vasculitis-associated neuropathy, Buerger’s disease |
| Infection | Postherpetic neuralgia, human immunodeficiency virus-associated neuropathy, herpes zoster-associated leprosy |
| Congenital diseases | Storage diseases, Fabry’s disease, amyloidosis |
| Autoimmune disorders | Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, multifocal motor neuropathy, vasculitic neuropathy, and paraneoplastic syndromes like Eaton–Lambert syndrome, multiple sclerosis |
| Metabolic disorders | Diabetic neuropathy, uremic neuropathy, alcohol toxicity, beriberi |
Note:
Some of these mechanisms usually coexist in neuropathic pain syndromes.
Acute cancer pain syndromes
| Pain related to diagnostic approaches |
| • Biopsy (bx)-associated pain like bone marrow bx, transrectal prostate bx, or puncture-associated like lumbar puncture or arterial blood gas sampling, etc |
| • Paracentesis-associated pleurodesis; nephrostomy, biliary stent implantation, etc |
| • Pathologic fractures due to bony metastasis |
| • Intestinal/biliary/ureteric obstruction and/or perforation; visceral organ perforation like gastric or colonic tumor |
| Pain related to treatment (chemotherapy) |
| • Pain due to oral mucositis |
| • Acute polyneuropathy |
| • All-trans retinoic acid-induced bone pain |
| • Intrathecal chemotherapy induced headache (cerebrospinal fluid leakage or chemical meningitis) |
| • Fluoropyrimidine-induced angina |
| • Vasospasm (oxaliplatin) |
| • Steroid-induced perineal burning |
| • Painful hand–foot syndrome |
| • Locoregional chemotherapy pain |
| • Bone pain due to colony-stimulating factors |
| • Immunotherapy-associated myalgias (interferon) |
| • Analgesia-associated opioid-hyperalgesia syndrome or injection-side pain |
| Pain related to treatment (radiotherapy) |
| • Mucositis |
| • Early brachial plexopathy |
| • Radiation enteritis |
| • Acute myelopathy |
Chronic cancer pain syndromes
| Pain related to tumor itself – somatic pain | Pain related to tumor itself – visceral pain | Neuropathic pain syndromes | Pain related to treatment – chemotherapy | Pain related to treatment – surgery | Pain related to treatment – radiotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor-related bone pain: directly due to metastasis itself or oncogenic hypophosphatemic osteomalacia | Peritoneal carcinomatosis | Leptomeningeal metastases | Painful peripheral neuropathy | Postmastectomy pain | Late-onset brachial plexopathy |
| Tumor-related soft-tissue pain like pleural pain/ear pain/eye pain | Malignant perineal pain | Lumbosacral radiculopathy/plexopathy | |||
| Paraneoplastic syndromes: hypertrophic osteoarthropathy, muscle cramps, Raynaud’s phenomenon | Brachial plexopathy |
Common neuropathic syndromes associated with cancer
| Chemotherapy-induced neuropathy |
| Tumor invasion: leptomeningeal metastases |
| Neuralgias: trigeminal neuralgia or postherpetic neuropathy |
| Glossopharyngeal neuralgia |
| Radiculopathies and plexopathies: lumbosacral radiculopathy/plexopathy |
| Cervical radiculopathy/plexopathy |
| Brachial plexopathy |
| Painful peripheral mononeuropathies |
| Paraneoplastic sensory neuropathies |
| Horner’s syndrome |
| Enteric neuropathies |
| Eaton–Lambert myasthenic syndrome |
| Postsurgery neuropathies |
| Postradiotherapy neuropathies |
| Paraneoplastic motor neuropathy |
| Paraneoplastic visceral neuropathy |
Common chemotherapeutic agents involved in neuropathy process
| Drug | Type | Onset, duration, recovery |
|---|---|---|
| Cisplatin | Chronic | 1–6 months for onset |
| Carboplatin | Chronic | Years for recovery (more than 80%) |
| Oxaliplatin | Acute or chronic Cold-induced | Acute: even during infusion |
| Taxanes | Chronic, rarely acute More with dose-dense taxane treatment | Onset within weeks |
| Vincristine | Subacute | Onset usually after 3 months |
| Vinblastine | Subacute | Recovery after 3 months of drug cessation |
| Bortezomib | Onset any time, mainly subacute or chronic | Dose reduction is recommended |
| Thalidomide | Dose-dependent | Recovery at 2 years or no recovery |
| Ixabepilone | Subacute or chronic | Onset is acute or subacute |
| Eribulin | Subacute or chronic | Quick recovery in mild cases Long-term data needed |
Adverse effects of opioids
| Emesis | Bronchoconstriction |
| Constipation | Respiratory depression |
| Sedation | Delirium |
| Cough suppression | Seizures |
| Sedation | Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema |
| Pruritus | Immunodeficiency |
| Dry mouth | Allodynia |
Analgesic recommendations and warnings*
| Drug group | Drug | Level of recommendation | Dose and titration | Common side effects | Precautions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opioids | Morphine | First-line | 10–30 mg po in opioid-naïve patients every 4 hours | Constipation, nausea, vomiting, pruritus, sedation, somnolence, micturition problems, dizziness, myoclonus | Respiratory arrest |
| Oxycodone | First-line | 5–15 mg po every 4–6 hours | Hepatic insufficiency | ||
| Hydrocodone | First-line | 2–4 mg every 3–4 hours | Renal insufficiency | ||
| Transdermal fentanyl | First-line | 12–25 μg every 72 hours, not recommended for opioid-naïve patients or acute pain | Methadone: high variability in half-life and pharmacodynamics; highest risk among opioids in terms of overdose, accumulation | ||
| Methadone | Second-line/third-line | 2.5–10 μg po every 4–8 hours | |||
| Tramadol | Second-line | 50–100 mg every 4–6 hours (IR) | |||
| Codeine/acetaminophen | Second-line, not recommended in chronic cancer pain | 30–60 mg po every 4–6 hours (according to codeine content) | |||
| Tapentadol | 50–100 mg every 6 hours (IR) | ||||
| Antidepressants – tricyclic | Nortriptyline | First-line | Start as 10–25 mg bedtime Usually effective as 50–150 mg Titration by 25 mg every 5–7 days | Dry mouth, constipation, dizziness, urinary retention | Cardiac disease |
| Desipramine | First-line | Start as 10–25 mg at bedtime Usually effective as 50–150 mg at bedtime | |||
| Amitriptyline | Second-line/third-line | Start as 10–25 mg at bedtime effective as 50–150 mg | |||
| Antidepressants – SNRIs | Duloxetine | First-line, effective in prevention of oxaliplatin-associated neuropathic pain | Start as 20–30 mg daily Usually effective in 60–120 mg daily doses | Nausea | Hepatic dysfunction |
| Venlafaxine | First-line | 225 mg twice daily, 37.5–75 mg daily increase after toleration | Nausea | Hepatic dysfunction | |
| Antidepressants – norepinephrine–dopamine inhibitors | Bupropion | Third-line | Start as 75 mg twice daily Usually effective in 300–450 mg three times daily doses | Weight loss | Seizures |
| Antiepileptics – gabapentinoids | Gabapentin | First-line | Start as 100–300 mg twice daily Usually effective in 300–1,200 mg three times daily doses 2–3 step/week titration | Sedation, dizziness, edema | |
| Pregabalin | First-line | Start as 25–75 mg twice daily Usually effective in 150–300 mg three times daily doses 2–3 step/week titration | Sedation, dizziness, edema | Renal insufficiency | |
| Topical antineuralgics | Topical lidocaine | First-line in cases with allodynia (level B) | 1–3 patches daily 2 weeks | No systemic side effects Local irritation | None |
| Topical capsaicin | Second-line/third-line | 8% capsaicin, 1 patch dailyUsually effective – 3–4 patches daily | Local irritation | Application-related severe pain | |
| Cannabinoids | Nabiximols | Third-line | Start as 0.5–1 mg once a day, titration maximum to 3 mg | Dizziness, somnolence, and dry mouth |
Note:
It should be kept in mind that most of the analgesic trials on pain were for nonmalignant pain syndromes.
Abbreviations: po, per os (by mouth); IR, immediate release; ER, extended release; SNRIs, serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors.
Nonpharmacological treatment approaches in neuropathic pain
| Interventional approaches | Rehabilitative approaches | Psychological approaches | Neurostimulation | Integrative/alternative approaches |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neural blockade – neurolysis | Exercise | Cognitive behavioral therapy | Transcutaneous | Acupuncture/acupressure |
| Implant therapy – intrathecal drug delivery | Hydrotherapy | Relaxation therapy, guided imagery, other types of stress management | Transcranial | Massage |
| Injection therapies | Psychoeducational interventions | Implanted | ||
| Radiotherapy-ablation therapies |