| Literature DB >> 27240869 |
Bettina S Husebo1,2, Wilco Achterberg3,4, Elisabeth Flo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27240869 PMCID: PMC4920848 DOI: 10.1007/s40263-016-0342-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CNS Drugs ISSN: 1172-7047 Impact factor: 5.749
Fig. 1a The case of Mr. K. b Conclusion of the case of Mr. K. MOBID-2 Mobilization-Observation-Behavior-Intensity-Dementia-2 Pain Scale
Defined PICO-based search strategy, and listed exclusion criteria
| Population | Patients with Alzheimer’s disease or undefined dementia |
| Intervention | Pain treatment defined as a pharmacological intervention in which the medications employed are named and dosages listed |
| Comparison | All studies using standard care as usual group comparison or other valid comparison alternatives before/after comparison |
| Outcome | Only studies employing quantitative measures and analyses were included. Outcomes included assessment of pain (yes/no or pain intensity) as well as assessment of pain-related behavior, e.g., neuropsychiatric symptoms |
| Exclusion criteria | (1) Qualitative studies, (2) single case studies and those including less than ten patients, (3) methodology papers, (4) study protocols, (5) animal studies, (6) non-pharmacological studies, (7) deep brain stimulation and other experimental studies, and (8) conference abstracts. On the basis of these exclusion criteria, the authors screened potential manuscripts at the abstract level and applied the review protocol of described inclusion and exclusion criteria on selected full texts; we also searched through the reference lists of the full-text publications |
PICO problem/population, intervention, comparison and outcomes
Fig. 2PRISMA based flow chart over the literature search, selection and review process
Clinical studies investigating the efficacy of analgesic treatment on pain intensity or typical behavior of pain in people with advance dementia
| Pain medication | Authors, year, nationality, gradea | Population | Method | Outcomes | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paracetamol/acetaminophen | Chibnall et al. [ | 25 NH patients with moderate-to-severe dementia (degenerative 13, AD 4, multi-infarct dementia 4) | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial; 4 weeks placebo, 4 weeks treatment | DCM | Patients were more active and spent more time in social surroundings and interacting with others ( |
| Buffum et al. [ | 39 NH patients with dementia (AD/VaD) and pain rel. degenerative joint disease; mean MMSE 4.3 and GDS 5.7 | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover 4-week trial investigating scheduled (650 mg × 4/day) vs. as-needed acetaminophen administration | DS-DAT | No differences were found between scheduled or as-needed acetaminophen application; 2600 mg/day acetaminophen is inadequate for NH patients with degenerative joint disease | |
| 1 % solution of lidocaine, a local anesthetic | Benedetti et al. [ | 28 people with AD; mean 74 years; baseline MMSE 22–25, after 1 year 13–20 | Placebo-related analgesic study with open (expected)/hidden (unexpected) paradigm lidocaine gel | NRS–self rating | People with dementia/reduced FAB show reduced placebo effect of analgesic treatment [post hoc Tukey test, |
| Morphine | Manfredi et al. [ | 47 people with dementia (unknown type) from one NH (1999–2001); mean 86 years; MMSE <20; CMAI ≥40 | All patients received placebo for 4 weeks followed by treatment with oxycodone 20 mg/day or morphine 20 mg/day | CMAI; no pain tool | 25 patients completed the study; no differences in agitation between placebo and opioid phases, though patients ≥85 years old ( |
| Klapwijk et al. [ | 24 dying patients with most severe dementia (type unknown); two NHs; median age 91 years | Observational study of the last days of life; small sample size; pain instruments not validated for EoL care | PAINAD | Mean 4.3 observations per patient; all participants received morphine (dosage not available). Low symptom burden but direct effect of morphine was not estimated | |
| Vitamin D | Björkman et al. [ | 202 NH patients with pain and dementia (type unknown); mean 85 ± 7 years; CPS 4.9 ± 1.4, range 1–6 | Randomized, double-blind placebo-controlled 6-month trial with vitamin D supplement in three groups: 0, 400 or 1200 IU cholecalciferol | RAI | 38–84 % of the patients were in pain; vitamin D deficiency was not associated to pain or pain behavior; prevalence of painlessness or pain scores not changed after vitamin D treatment |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, CMAI Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory [86], CPS Cognitive Performance Scale, DCM Dementia Care Mapping, DS-DAT Discomfort Scale–Dementia of Alzheimer Type [87], EoL end-of-life, EOLD-CAD End-of-Life in Dementia–Comfort Assessment in Dying [88], FAB Frontal Assessment Battery [89], GDS Global Deterioration Scale [90], I Italy, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination [95], NH nursing home, NL Netherlands, NRS Numerical Rating Scale, PAINAD Pain Assessment in Advanced Dementia [91], RAI Resident Assessment Instrument, rel related to, VaD vascular dementia
aQuality grade according to the Oxford grading of evidence
Clinical studies investigating the efficacy of analgesic combination therapy in people with advance dementia
| Pain medication | Authors, year, references, nationality, gradea | Population | Method | Outcomes | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paracetamol/acetaminophen, NSAIDs, oral or parenteral opioid | Hendriks et al. 2014–2015, [ | 330 dying people with dementia from 34 NHs (2007–2011); 43 % had AD | 2 weeks after death retrospective questionnaire to investigate association between QoL and pain | 11-item QUALID; no pain tool | In the last week of life, 52 % were found to be in pain; no differences between patients between advanced and less advanced dementia; 77 % received opioids (90 mg/24 h; 88 % by injection); 43 % opioid monotherapy, 57 % opioids + paracetamol. Cannot determine the most effective treatment of symptoms |
| Paracetamol, morphine, buprenorphine, and/or pregabalin | Husebo et al. 2011–2014, [ | 352 NH patients with advanced dementia (type unknown) and agitation from 60 NH clusters | CRCT over 12 weeks; NH clusters were randomized to an SPTP | CMAI | Agitation reduced in the SPTP group (average reduction 17 % ( |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADL Activities of Daily Living [52], CMAI Cohen-Mansfield Agitation Inventory [86], CRCT cluster randomized clinical trial, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination [95], MOBID Mobilization-Observation-Behavior-Intensity-Dementia [42], N Norway, NH nursing home, NL Netherlands, NPI-NH Neuropsychiatric Inventory–Nursing Home version [92], NSAID nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, QoL quality of life, QUALID Quality of Life in Late-Stage Dementia [93], SPTP stepwise protocol of treating pain
aQuality grade according to the Oxford grading of evidence
Responsiveness of pain assessment instruments to assess change in pain intensity after initiated pain treatment in people with dementia
| Author, year, reference | Pain tool | Setting and participants | Method | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morello et al. 2007, [ | EPCA-2 | 340 NVC-OP, living in NHs | Randomized study: 284 people were treated for pain (112 received opioids; 171 received non-opioids; 57 did not receive any analgesics); investigators not blinded | ES and SRM were correlated with changes in EPCA-2 scores and GCS, opioid and non-opioid dosages and demonstrated satisfactory responsiveness of the EPCA-2 |
| Cohen-Mansfield 2008, [ | PAINEa PADEa PAINADb
| 36 people with dementia (MMSE ≤20) | Before and after pain treatment evaluation by self-report and proxy rating; pain treatment with acetaminophen ( | It is suggested that PAINE and PADE had strongest detection in treatment effects |
| Rat et al. 2011, [ | Algoplus®c | 109 inpatients; MMSE <15, with acute pain lasting <2 weeks | Multicenter, cross-sectional study including five settings. Algoplus® sensitivity to change was tested by movement-induced change during movement before and after starting with WHO level I–III analgesics or non-pharmacological treatment; investigators blinded | 109 acute pain patients received level I drug (37 %), II drug (30 %), III drug (23 %), others (3 %). Paired comparisons by Wilcoxon’s signed-rank found Algoplus® scores before (3.1 ± 1.3) and after treatment (1.6 ± 1.1) comparable with changes on VAS and NRS |
| Husebo et al. 2014, [ | MOBID-2 Pain Scale | 352 people with advanced dementia | Multicenter, cluster randomized trial including 18 NHs; SPTP with paracetamol, morphine, buprenorphine and/or pregabalin; assessments at baseline, week 2 and 4; investigators blinded | SEM and SDC in connection with MOBID-2 Pain Scale measures indicate that the tool is responsive to a decrease in pain after SPTP. Satisfactory test–retest reliability demonstrated. Change scores ≥3 on total and subscales are clinically relevant and beyond measurement error |
CNPI Checklist of Nonverbal Pain Indicators [94], EPCA-2 Elderly Pain Caring Assessment 2 [43], ES effect size, GCS global Clinical Score, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination [95], MOBID Mobilization-Observation-Behavior-Intensity-Dementia [42], NH nursing home, NRS Numerical Rating Scale, NVC-OP non-verbally communicating older patients (age ≥65 years), OPBAI Observational Pain Behavior Assessment Instrument [96], PADE Pain Assessment for the Dementing Elderly [97], PAINAD Pain Assessment in Advanced Dementia [91], PAINE Pain Assessment in Noncommunicative Elderly persons [98], SDC smallest detectable change, SEM standard error of measurement, SPTP stepwise protocol of treating pain, SRM standard response mean, VAS Visual Analog Scale, WHO World Health Organization
aInformant rating
bObservation rating
cAcute pain tool
| This systematic review adds to previous reviews of the assessment and treatment of pain in people with dementia, with a particular focus on studies investigating the direct efficacy of analgesics on pain intensity. |
| The review underlines current challenges: thorough pain assessment is poorly implemented, observational pain instruments are rarely tested for responsiveness; therefore, sound evaluation of pain management strategies is lacking and evidence for efficacy and safety of analgesics is largely missing. |