| Literature DB >> 25479959 |
Bart Morlion1, Katri Elina Clemens, Will Dunlop.
Abstract
In patients managed with opioids for chronic pain, opioid-induced bowel dysfunction—specifically, opioid-induced constipation (OIC)—is a common side effect, which has a significant impact on quality of life (QoL). The most recent developments for management of OIC are opioid antagonists, including naloxone, a competitive antagonist of peripheral opioid receptors that reverses opioid-induced peripheral gastrointestinal (GI) effects. A prolonged-release formulation of naloxone is available in combination with oxycodone (OXN PR). To review the specific role of OXN PR in the management of chronic pain and OIC and its impact on QoL and healthcare costs, a review of available relevant literature was conducted. Healthcare costs can be up to ten times higher for patients with GI events than for those without. Assessment of QoL in patients with OIC is essential, and multiple tools for its evaluation are available. The Bowel Function Index (BFI), a tool that was specifically developed and validated to measure bowel function in patients with OIC, can be an indication of QoL. In patients with moderate-to-severe chronic pain, randomized trials have demonstrated that OXN PR has equal analgesic efficacy and safety, but results in improved bowel function, compared with prolonged-release oxycodone (Oxy PR) alone. In conclusion, randomized studies using the BFI, as well as real-world clinical practice observations, have demonstrated improved QoL for patients taking OXN PR. This combination should allow more patients to benefit from the analgesic efficacy of opioid therapy and should minimize the side effects of constipation that correspond to improvements in QoL and healthcare offsets.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25479959 PMCID: PMC4281369 DOI: 10.1007/s40261-014-0254-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Drug Investig ISSN: 1173-2563 Impact factor: 2.859
Fig. 1Primary and secondary symptoms and complications of opioid-induced bowel dysfunction. Adapted from Holzer [27]. GERD gastroesophageal reflux disease
Example instruments and tools available for measurement of quality of life in patients with pain and constipation
| General health-related measures |
| Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form (SF-36) [ |
| Medical Outcomes Study 12-Item Short-Form (SF-12) [ |
| Nottingham Health Profile [ |
| World Health Organization Quality of Life (WHOQOL) pain subscale [ |
| Utility measuresa |
| EuroQoL [ |
| Health Utilities Index (HUI) [ |
| Cancer pain-specific tools |
| Functional Living Index-Cancer (FLIC) [ |
| Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G) [ |
| European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC-QLQ) [ |
| Gastrointestinal-specific tools for constipation |
| Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale (GSRS) [ |
| Elderly Bowel Symptom Questionnaire (EBSQ) [ |
| Patient Assessment of Constipation Symptoms (PAC-SYM) [ |
| Specific quality of life for constipation |
| Patient Assessment of Constipation Quality of Life (PAC-QoL) [ |
| Opioid-induced constipation-specific tools |
| Bowel Function Index (BFI) [ |
aSF-36 may be used as a utility measure
bDeveloped for use in international clinical trials
cA 12-item self-report instrument divided into abdominal, rectal and stool domains designed to assess symptom frequency and severity, and validated for use in patients with opioid-induced constipation
dIncludes four subscales: worries and concerns, physical discomfort, psychosocial discomfort and satisfaction
eThe BFI is owned by Mundipharma Laboratories GmbH, Switzerland (2002); the BFI is the subject of a European Patent Application (Publication No. EP 1,860,988) and corresponding patents and patent applications in other countries
Fig. 2Mean cost per patient per month for opioid-treated patients with and without constipation [74]
Overview of quality-of-life-based outcomes using the Bowel Function Index (BFI) in prolonged-release (PR) oxycodone/naloxone (OXN) clinical trials
| Trial design | Population | Measure | Results | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | 12-week, phase III RCT Combined OXN PR vs Oxy PR Primary objective: constipation as measured by BFI | Moderate-to-severe non-malignant pain | BFI PAC-SYM | Significant improvement for OXN PR vs Oxy PR in BFI at 4 weeks (treatment difference: −14.9; Clinically relevant improvement in PAC-SYM Most common AEs were GI (24 % for OXN PR vs 16 % for Oxy PR) | Lowenstein et al. [ |
| 2. | 12-week, phase III RCT Combined OXN PR vs Oxy PR Primary objective: constipation as measured by BFI | Moderate-to-severe non-cancer pain | BFI PACOI | Significant improvement for OXN PR vs Oxy PR in BFI at 4 weeks (treatment difference: −15.2; Significant improvement in PACOI at 4 weeks ( Most common AEs were GI (19 % for OXN PR vs 30 % for Oxy PR) | Simpson et al. [ |
| 3. | 12-week, phase III RCT Combined OXN PR vs Oxy PR vs PBO Primary objective: analgesic efficacy Constipation, as measured by BFI, was an exploratory analysis | Moderate-to-severe non-malignant lower back pain | BFI BPI-SF (modified)a | Clinically relevant improvement in BFI Mean BFI reduction vs baseline at 12 weeks: −23 for OXN PR vs −11 for Oxy PRb Significant improvement in BPI-SF for OXN PR ( Most common AEs were GI (23 % for OXN PR vs 27 % for Oxy PR) | Vondrackova et al. [ |
| 4. | 12-week, phase II RCT Oxy PR + naloxone PR vs Oxy PR Primary objectives: constipation, as measured by BFI, and analgesic efficacy, including optimal dose identification (oxycodone to naloxone ratio) | Severe chronic non-cancer pain and cancer pain (2.5 % of patients) | BFI | Significant improvement in BFI at 4 weeks (treatment difference: −16.2; Similar overall AEs between groups (62–70 %) | Meissner et al. [ |
| 5. | Pooled analysis of trial 1 (Lowenstein et al. [ Primary objective: analgesic efficacy Constipation, as measured by BFI, was an secondary end point | Moderate-to-severe non-malignant pain | BFI | Significant improvement in BFI at 12 weeks (−15.1; Most common AEs were GI (21 %) | Lowenstein et al. [ |
| 6. | Long-term (≤52 weeks) open-label extension of trial 3 (Vondrackova et al. [ OXN PR No primary end point was set. Analgesic efficacy and constipation, as measured by BFI, were assessed as two separate analysesc | Moderate-to-severe non-cancer pain | BFI | BFI reduction vs baseline at 12 months (−15) Most common AEs were infections and infestations (40 %) | Sander-Kiesling et al. [ |
AE adverse event, BFI Bowel Function Index, BPI Brief Pain Inventory, GI gastrointestinal, Oxy oxycodone, PACOI Patient Assessment of Opioid-Induced Constipation (sum score of the rectal and stools subscale score of PAC-SYM), PAC-SYM Patient Assessment of Constipation Symptoms, PBO placebo, RCT randomized controlled trial, SF Short Form
aBPI interference of pain with sleep item
bSubgroup of patients with BFI ≥50 at baseline; no statistical analysis was conducted on this patient population
cResults for BFI analysis are reported here
Fig. 3Mean Bowel Function Index score over time in patients treated with prolonged-release (PR) oxycodone/naloxone and oxycodone PR (pooled analysis of two randomized phase III trials) [87]
| Opioid induced constipation is a medical condition that causes a substantial burden to the patient and the healthcare system. |
| In clinical studies, oxycodone/naloxone has been shown to improve bowel function and is estimated to be cost-effective according to health economic models. |