| Literature DB >> 26417202 |
Brittany B Dennis1, Monica Bawor2, Leen Naji3, Carol K Chan4, Jaymie Varenbut5, James Paul6, Michael Varenbut7, Jeff Daiter7, Carolyn Plater7, Guillaume Pare8, David C Marsh9, Andrew Worster10, Dipika Desai11, Lehana Thabane12, Zainab Samaan13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While a number of pharmacological interventions exist for the treatment of opioid use disorder, evidence evaluating the effect of pain on substance use behavior, attrition rate, and physical or mental health among these therapies has not been well established. We aim to evaluate these effects using evidence gathered from a systematic review of studies evaluating chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) in patients with opioid use disorder.Entities:
Keywords: chronic pain; guidelines; meta-analysis; opioid substitution therapy; opioid use disorder; systematic review
Year: 2015 PMID: 26417202 PMCID: PMC4573077 DOI: 10.4137/SART.S30120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse ISSN: 1178-2218
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Description of study design characteristics.
| AUTHOR LAST NAME | YEAR OF PUBLICATION | NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS | STUDY DESIGN | INTERVENTION(S) EVALUATED | HOW WAS CHRONIC PAIN MEASURED? | HOW WAS CHRONIC PAIN DEFINED | PATIENTS ON PRESCRIBED OPIOIDS OR ADJUNCT PAIN TREATMENTS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peles | 2005 | 170 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | BPI | Current pain that lasted for at least 6 months | Not reported |
| Dhingra | 2012 | 489 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | BPI | “Clinically significant pain” was defined by an average pain intensity during the past week of >5 or an average pain interference score during the past week of >5. | 82% of the sample is receiving an adjunct pain therapy (not reported by pain status) |
| Barry | 2009 | 150 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | BPI | Respondents’ answers to BPI items were used to classify them into one of three pain groups: a) “chronic severe pain” (ie, pain lasting at least 6 months with moderate to severe pain intensity or significant pain interference, respondents who had pain lasting at least 6 months and who scored 5 or higher on the item pertaining to the worst pain intensity in the last 7 days or on any of the items relating to pain interference in the last 7 days were considered to exhibit chronic severe pain; b) “some pain” (ie, pain reported in past week but not CSP); and c) “no pain” (ie, no pain reported in the past week and no CSP). | Not reported |
| Bounes | 2013 | 151 | Cohort study (prospective or retrospective) | Low-dose methadone (<60 mg/day), Low-dose buprenorphine (<16 mg/day) | A Visual Analog Scale (VAS) or Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) was used to assess and quantify the intensity of acute pain at the time of admission, after pain management, and just before hospital discharge. | Acute pain scores rated from 0 to 10 were obtained indiscriminately from one or the other measurement tool. Acute pain exposure was defined as a pain score greater than 0 at the time of admission on any of the rating scales. | Patients without pain: 0% |
| Chakrabarti | 2010 | 69 | Cross-sectional | High-dose Suboxone® (buprenorphine ≥16 mg/day + naloxone) | EQ-5D: a measure of health status from the EuroQol | Degree of pain 1 week before induction, measured as pain or discomfort experienced “today” and coded as 0 = no pain, 1 = some pain, or 2 = extreme pain | Not explicitly reported (although they removed any patients with prescription medications which may interfere with dosing) |
| Dennis | 2014 | 235 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | Self-report | Participants were categorized as having chronic and/or comorbid pain if they indicated they were currently experiencing or have been diagnosed with chronic pain | Participants on prescribed opioids were removed from analyses |
| Dreifuss | 2013 | 360 | Cross-sectional | High-dose Suboxone® (buprenorphine ≥16 mg/day + naloxone) | The pain and analgesic use history opiate | Not described | Not reported (only brief discussion in study selection criteria that they included patients currently prescribed opioids with approval of attending physician) |
| Dunn | 2014 | 227 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | BPI | Chronic pain was defined as endorsing question 1 of the BPI, which asked, “Have you had pain other than everyday kinds of pain today?” | Not reported |
| Fox | 2012 | 82 | Cohort study (prospective or retrospective) | High-dose buprenorphine (≥16 mg/day), low-dose buprenorphine (<16 mg/day) | BPI | The Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) asked: “Please rate your pain during the last week by selecting the one number that best describes your pain on the average.” Participants were given a visual analog scale from 0 to 10, with 0 labeled as “no pain” and 10 as “pain as bad as you can imagine.” Similar to prior studies, participants reporting pain scores of ≥5 at the initial interview were considered to have “baseline pain”; those reporting pain scores of ≥5 at all follow-up visits were considered to have “persistent pain” | No participants were on prescribed opioids for pain |
| Jaimison | 2000 | 248 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day), low-dose methadone (<60 mg/day) | Self-reported measure (Survey created for study) | Not described | 77% of sample report being prescribed medications for pain, itemized list of different adjunct therapies is provided (summarized for patients with and without pain). Although no adjusted analyses are performed to evaluate the mediating effects of these on study outcomes |
| Neumann | 2013 | 54 | Randomized controlled trial | Low-dose methadone (<60 mg/day), low-dose Suboxone® (buprenorphine <16 mg/day + naloxone) | Confirmed by clinical examination and diagnostic imaging | The diagnosis of a chronic pain condition originating from the spine or large joints was confirmed by clinical examination and the use of diagnostic imaging (eg, radiographs, computed tomography scan, magnetic resonance imaging) | Not reported (patients advised not to continue taking prescribed opioids during course of study) |
| Potter | 2015 | 252 | Cohort study (prospective or retrospective) | Low-dose Suboxone® (buprenorphine <16 mg/day + naloxone) | BPI | Not described | Not reported (only brief discussion in study selection criteria that they included patients currently prescribed opioids with approval of attending physician) |
| Rosenblum | 2003 | 390 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | BPI | To operationally define a subpopulation of patients with chronic pain that was relatively likely to be clinically significant, an index of “chronic severe pain” was defined as a score of 5 or higher on the BPI item “worst pain in the past week” or of 5 or higher on the BPI pain interference scale, and pain duration for at least 6 months. | Not reported by pain status |
| Trafton | 2004 | 251 | Cross-sectional | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day), low-dose methadone (<60 mg/day), high-dose levoacetylmethadol (LAAM) (≥85 mg/day), low-dose levomethadyl acetate hydrochloride (LAAM) (<85 mg/day) | SF-36V Quality-of-Life Index | Reported pain levels were taken from answers to the SF-36V question “How much body pain have you experienced in the last 4 weeks?” | Not reported |
Figure 2Types of pain measures used across studies.
Figure 3Outcomes evaluated across studies.
Summary of findings for illicit opioid use outcome.
| AUTHOR LAST NAME | WAS ILLICIT OPIOID ABUSE AN OUTCOME? | WAS ILLICIT OPIOID USE BEHAVIOR THE PRIMARY OUTCOME OF THE STUDY? | HOW WAS ILLICIT OPIOID ABUSE MEASURED? | DEFINITION OF ILLICIT OPIOID USE | OUTCOMES BY CHRONIC PAIN STATUS | STATISTICAL ANALYSIS | PROPORTION OF OPIOID USE OUTCOMES SHOWING PAIN TO IMPACT ILLICIT OPIOID USE BEHAVIOR | STUDY FINDINGS: DID PATIENTS CHARACTERIZED AS HAVING PAIN ALSO HAVE SIGNIFI-CANTLY HIGHER RATES OF ILLICIT OPIOID USE? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peles | Yes | No | Urine toxicology screening | Participants were categorized as using opioids if ≥1 urine test in the month preceding the survey was positive. | Chronic pain 15 (16%) positive, non-chronic pain 20 (26.3%) | Chi-square | 0 | No |
| Dhingra | Yes | No | Urine toxicology screening, Self-report | A positive urine toxicology screen or indication by self-report as assessed by the ASI past 30 day drug use history. | In univariate analyses, neither UDS nor self-reported drug use on the ASI was statistically associated with clinically significant pain. (report | 0 | No | |
| Barry | Yes | No | Self-report | Participants reported any use in the past week, this was then analyzed as a binary variable. | The pain groups reported comparable levels of psychoactive substance use, illegal drug use and non-medical use of prescription drug in the past week. No specific percentages are reported per group. | ANOVA | 0 | No |
| Chakrabarti | Yes | No | Urine toxicology screening | Participants showing a single positive opioid urine screen were found to be a positive for illicit opioid use behaviour, confirmed by urinalysis. | Opioid-positive urine (%)reported by Degree of pain Week 4 Week 8 Week 12 | Chi-square | 0 | No |
| Dennis | Yes | Yes | Urine toxicology screening | Continued opioid abuse (COA) was determined by calculating the percentage of positive opioid urine screens provided by participants (number of positive opioid urine screens/total number of opioid urine screens). High COA percentage is indicative of a high number of positive opioid urine screens or, alternatively, a higher rate of illicit opioid consumption. | Mean percentage of positive opioid urine screens among pain patients: 23.99 (SD 27.14) | Univariate analysis using only COA outcome as the predictor of comorbid pain in a logistic regression model | 1/1 | Yes |
| Dreifuss | Yes | Yes | Urine toxicology screening, self-report, addiction severity tool score | The Substance Use Report, corroborated by weekly urine drug screens, was administered weekly during treatment and every two weeks during follow-up, and was used as the primary measure to determine “successful outcome.” | Successful with chronic pain: 79 (44.6%) | Chi-square | 0 | No |
| Dunn | Yes | Yes | Urine toxicology screening | The mean percent of urine samples provided by each participant that tested positive for opioids, cocaine, or benzodiazepines were evaluated. | Chronic pain: 9, No chronic pain: 11 | Independent group | 0 | No |
| Fox | Yes | No | Self-report | Self-reported opioid use was obtained from the substance use survey administered at baseline and follow-up, which inquired as to substance use in the 30 days prior to baseline (heroin, methadone, opioid analgesics, cocaine, alcohol, sedatives, hypnotics, or tranquilizers) and follow-ups. These questions were adapted from the ASI. | Not reported per pain status. However, they report that any opioid use decreased from 89% at baseline to 40% at 1 month, 33% at 3 months, and 26% at 6 months. Similar patterns were observed in those with and without baseline or persistent pain, and showed no significant association between any opioid use and baseline pain (AOR = 1.06, 95% CI: 0.27–4.17, | Determined whether pain was associated with use of any opioids during the 6-month follow-up period using nonlinear mixed effects (NLME) models with self-reported use of any opioids as the dependent variable. The NLME approach accounts for non-independence of repeated measures of opioid use within individuals. | 0 | 0 |
| Neumann | Yes | No | Urine toxicology screening | Report the number of patients (%) who have an opioid positive urine screen at 24 week follow-up | Methadone: 2 (15.4%), buprenorphine: 5 (38.5%) | Fishers exact test | 0 | No |
| Potter | Yes | No | Urine toxicology screening, Addiction severity tool score | Not described well or reported by pain status. | Not reported by pain status | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Rosenblum | Yes | No | Self-report | A checklist was used to record drugs, including alcohol, that were used during the patient’s last week of active use. | Drugs used in past 3 months (%) | Mantel–Haenszel was used for ordinal variables with 3 or more categories | 0 | No |
| Trafton | Yes | Yes | Addiction severity tool score | Number of days of opioid use over last 30, as well as self-reported number of days of opioid use over lifetime. | Opiates GP:1.6 days, 1.9 years; NP: 0.8 days, 0.9 years, P: 2.3 days, 2.9 years 0.03/0.005 | The Kruskal–Wallis test was used to determine if variables significantly differed across pain severity ratings, followed by multiple | 2/3 | Yes |
Figure 4Meta-analysis of pain and illicit opioid use.
Figure 5Meta-analysis of pain and illicit substance use.
Summary of findings for studies evaluating physical health outcome(s).
| AUTHOR LAST NAME | INTERVENTION(S) EVALUATED | PHYSICAL HEALTH OUTCOME | MEASUREMENT OF PHYSICAL HEALTH OUTCOME(S) | FINDINGS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peles | High-dose Methadone (≥60 mg/day) | The study evaluated the clinical characteristics of patients reporting pain. | All chronic illnesses were diagnosed by internal medicine physician and included 12 categories: Heart [Angina with/without MI]; Endocrinology, metabolic; Cancer; Asthma; Neurology; Digestive system; Muscles/movement; Eyes, ears; Urine system; Coagulation; Gynecological; and Immune system. Patients reporting one or more of the aforementioned illnesses were defined as chronically ill. | Participants with chronic pain were more often diagnosed with physical comorbidities relating to muscle movement, digestive, urinary as well as problems with eyes and ear function. |
| Dhingra | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day) | The primary outcome of this study was clinically significant pain, used as the dependent variable in a multi-variable logistic regression model. The study evaluated the physical health symptoms associated with chronic pain. | The study measured physical health using self-report for physical comorbidities and the patients HRQL scores | Clinically significant pain was associated with higher number of comorbid, medical conditions ( |
| Dennis | High-dose Methadone (≥60 mg/day) | The study evaluated the clinical and biological characteristics of MMT patients reporting pain. Using a univariate analysis to guide the variable selection, the authors built a multivariable logistic regression model using comorbid pain as the dependent variable. Physical health predictors included in the model were inflammatory markers (IL-6, IL-8, IL-1ra, TNF-alpha, IL-10, IL-1B, and CCL2), and the participants infectious disease status (presence of HIV or hepatitis). | Infectious disease status was measured using self-report, while inflammatory markers were measured using The iMDx™ Prep assays | Infectious disease status (HIV/hepatitis) was not associated with the presence of chronic pain. Of all inflammatory markers tested, IFN-Gamma was shown to be significantly elevated in participants reporting pain (OR]: 2.02; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.17, 3.50; |
| Jaimison | High-dose methadone (≥60 mg/day), low-dose methadone (<60 mg/day) | Evaluated physical health differences in patients reporting pain. | Self-report | Found significant differences in the major health problems reported between patients with main (34.9%) and without pain (9.4%), |
| Neumann | Low-dose Methadone (<60 mg/day), Low-dose Suboxone® (buprenorphine <16 mg/day + naloxone) | Evaluated physical health using reported side effects and percentchange in pain from baseline | Self-report | The number of patients reporting side effects did not vary significantly between patients on methadone (n = 9) and buprenorphine (n = 8); (OR:1.125 95%CI:0.209–6.04, |
| Rosenblum | High-dose Methadone (≥60 mg/day) | The study evaluated the prevalence of comorbid chronic illnesses by pain status, as well as the reported drug cravings. | Self-report | Bivariate analyses were used to compare the prevalence of pain, whereby there was a significant association between reporting chronic illness among patients with chronic severe pain. Among patients with chronic severe pain, 122 (20.5%) report having no concurrent illness (OR: 1.00), whereby 263 (43.7%) reporting having a chronic illness (OR 3.02; 95%CI 1.82,4.98). Additionally, there was a higher number of participants (N = 123, 43.1%) with chronic severe pain reporting high-levels of drug cravings (OR: 1.67; 95%CI 0.99–2.83). |
| Trafton | The study evaluated 1) the number of days of medical problems in the last 30 days, 2) physical functioning as assessed according to SF-36V, and 3) general health. | Self-report according to SF-36V | The study found significant differences across each different physical health outcome evaluated. They report the presence of pain to be associated with an increase in the number of days of reported medical problems (Pain:22.1, No Pain 7.5, | |
| Fox | Buprenorphine | The study evaluated baseline differences between patients with and without pain starting an office-based buprenorphine treatment program | Self-report | Patients with pain reported higher rates of HIV |
Figure 6Meta-analysis of pain and psychiatric comorbidity.
Summary of findings across opioid substitution therapies.
| INTERVENTION | OUTCOME | NUMBER OF STUDIES EVALUATING OUTCOME | NUMBER OF STUDIES REPORTING A RISK ASSOCIATION WITH PAIN | NUMBER OF STUDIES REPORTING A PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION WITH PAIN | FINAL ANALYSIS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Methadone | Abstinence and illicit substance use: Opioids | 8 | 2 | 0 | Not enough evidence to suggest chronic pain effects treatment |
| Abstinence and illicit substance use: Non-opioids | 6 | 2 | 2 | Not enough evidence to suggest chronic pain effects treatment | |
| Physical health | 7 | 5 | 0 | Pain increases risk for poor physical functioning | |
| Psychiatric health | 5 | 5 | 0 | Pain increases risk for poor psychiatric functioning | |
| Personal and social functioning | 2 | 2 | 0 | Pain increases risk for poor personal and social functioning outcomes | |
| Intervention adherence | 3 | 1 | 0 | No effect | |
| Intervention acceptance | 3 | 1 | 0 | No effect | |
| Resource utilization | 1 | 1 | 0 | Pain increases resource utilization among patients on MMT | |
| Buprenorphine/Naloxone | Abstinence and illicit substance use: Opioids | 4 | 0 | 0 | No Effect |
| Abstinence and illicit substance use: Non-opioids | 1 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Physical health | 1 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Psychiatric health | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| Personal and social functioning | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| Intervention adherence | 2 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Intervention acceptance | 1 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Resource utilization | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| LAAM | Abstinence and illicit substance use: Opioids | 1 | 1 | 0 | Pain increases risk for opioid abuse among patients on LAAM |
| Abstinence and illicit substance use: Non-opioids | 1 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Physical health | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| Psychiatric health | 1 | 1 | 0 | Pain increases risk for poor psychiatric functioning | |
| Personal and social functioning | 1 | 1 | 0 | Pain increases risk for poor personal and social functioning outcomes | |
| Intervention adherence | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| Intervention acceptance | 1 | 1 | 0 | Patients with pain report less acceptance of their OAT as well as negative views towards OAT in comparison to non-pain patients | |
| Resource utilization | 1 | 1 | 0 | Pain increases resource utilization among patients on LAAM | |
| Buprenorphine | Abstinence and illicit substance use: Opioids | 2 | 0 | 0 | Pain has no effect on opioid use behavior |
| Abstinence and illicit substance use: Non-opioids | 1 | n/a | n/a | n/a | |
| Physical health | 1 | 0 | 0 | Not enough evidence to suggest chronic pain impacts treatment (evaluated baseline physical health) | |
| Psychiatric health | 1 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated (evaluated baseline psychiatric health) | |
| Personal and social functioning | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated | |
| Intervention adherence | 2 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Intervention acceptance | 1 | 0 | 0 | No effect | |
| Resource utilization | 0 | 0 | 0 | Not evaluated |
Translation of evidence in the opioid maintenance treatment guidelines.
| TITLE OF GUIDELINE | INTERVENTION ASSESSED | DOES THE GUIDELINE PROVIDE SUGGESTIONS FOR MANAGING PATIENTS WITH COMORBID PAIN? | SUGGESTIONS | ARE THESE SUGGESTIONS BASED ON EVIDENCE? | EVIDENCE CITED | ARE ANY RECOMMENDATIONS MADE FOR MANAGING PAIN IN THE OPIOID MAINTENANCE TREATMENT SETTING? | DISCUSSION OF THE RISK FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH PAIN FOR THIS OST |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical practice guideline for management of substance use disorders (SUD) | Methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone | Yes | Evaluate opioid dependent patients for severe acute or chronic physical pain that may require appropriate short-acting opioid agonist medication in addition to the medication needed to prevent opioid withdrawal symptoms | No | / | No graded recommendations made | No |
| Buprenorphine/Naloxone Treatment for opioid dependence clinical Practice guidelines | Buprenorphine/naloxone | Yes | When managing patients with comorbid chronic non-cancer pain, 1) do not treat them with chronic opioid analgesic therapy for pain, non-opioid alternatives should be aggressively optimized, 2) referral to a reputable multidisciplinary chronic pain clinic regarding pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic non-opioid alternatives is recommended for patients with pain, and 3) if the decision to initiate opioid analgesics has been made, the patient should be monitored by or advice should be sought from a physician experienced in addiction medicine. | No | / | No graded recommendations made | No |
| Methadone maintenance treatment program standards and clinical guidelines | Methadone maintenance treatment | Yes | Suggest the management of mild to moderate pain in conditions such as fibromyalgia, low back pain with non-opioid treatments. For patients with severe chronic pain (nociceptive or neuropathic pain condition that usually requires opioid therapy) they suggest 1) non opioid treatments, 2) split methadone dose, 3) codeine or tramadol, and lastly 4) morphine. Suggest strong communication with community physicians managing patients pain, as well as informing non-methadone physicians to also perform routine urine drug screens. | No | / | No graded recommendations made | No |
| Methadone and buprenorphine for the management of opioid dependence | Methadone and buprenorphine | No | No suggestions made | / | / | No graded recommendations made | No |
Note: /Indicates this information is not applicable.