| Literature DB >> 27822619 |
Ralf Baron1, Massimo Allegri2, Gerardo Correa-Illanes3, Guy Hans4, Michael Serpell5, Gerard Mick6, Victor Mayoral7.
Abstract
When peripheral neuropathic pain affects a specific, clearly demarcated area of the body, it may be described as localized neuropathic pain (LNP). Examples include postherpetic neuralgia and painful diabetic neuropathy, as well as post-surgical and post-traumatic pain. These conditions may respond to topical treatment, i.e., pharmaceutical agents acting locally on the peripheral nervous system, and the topical route offers advantages over systemic administration. Notably, only a small fraction of the dose reaches the systemic circulation, thereby reducing the risk of systemic adverse effects, drug-drug interactions and overdose. From the patient's perspective, the analgesic agent is easily applied to the most painful area(s). The 5% lidocaine-medicated plaster has been used for several years to treat LNP and is registered in approximately 50 countries. Many clinical guidelines recommend this treatment modality as a first-line option for treating LNP, particularly in frail and/or elderly patients and those receiving multiple medications, because the benefit-to-risk ratios are far better than those of systemic analgesics. However, some guidelines make only a weak recommendation for its use. This paper considers the positioning of the 5% lidocaine-medicated plaster in international treatment guidelines and how they may be influenced by the specific criteria used in developing them, such as the methodology employed by randomized, placebo-controlled trials. It then examines the body of evidence supporting use of the plaster in some prevalent LNP conditions. Common themes that emerge from clinical studies are: (1) the excellent tolerability and safety of the plaster, which can increase patients' adherence to treatment, (2) continued efficacy over long-term treatment, and (3) significant reduction in the size of the painful area. On this basis, it is felt that the 5% lidocaine-medicated plaster should be more strongly recommended for treating LNP, either as one component of a multimodal approach or as monotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: 5% lidocaine-medicated plaster; Allodynia; Ease of use; Efficacy; Guidelines; Localized neuropathic pain; Long-term safety; Postherpetic neuralgia; Quality of life; Reviews
Year: 2016 PMID: 27822619 PMCID: PMC5130910 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-016-0060-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Studies involving use of the 5% medicated plaster to treat painful diabetic neuropathy
| Authors and study design | No. of patients | Mean baseline pain rating | No. of plasters | Treatment duration | Main efficacy outcomes (end of observation) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| White et al. [ | 49 | 6.3 (BPI)a | 2.5 (24 h on) | 2 weeks | Pain intensity and pain relief scores improved ( |
| Argoff et al. [ | 41 | N/A | 2.7 (24 h on) | 2 weeks | Improvement in all composite measures of the NPS ( |
| Baron et al. [ | 105 | 6.9 (NRS over preceding 3 days) | Up to 4 (up to 12 h on) | 4 weeks | Treatment response (reductions in pain intensity and allodynia severity) comparable in both groups, greater improvements in quality of life (EQ-5D) in patients receiving lidocaine plaster |
All data are expressed as the mean unless otherwise stated. For studies with a control group, only lidocaine data are shown
BPI brief pain inventory, EQ-5D EuroQol-5 dimension QoL index, N/A not available, NPS neuropathic pain scale, NRS numerical rating scale
aIncludes data from patients with postherpetic neuralgia and low back pain
Studies involving use of the 5% medicated plaster to treat post-surgical, post-surgical, post-traumatic, or scar pain
| Authors and study design | No. of patients | Mean baseline pain rating | No. of plasters | Treatment duration | Main efficacy outcomes (end of observation) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Habib et al. [ | 36 | N/A | 1 (1/2 on each side of the wound) | 1 day | Significant reduction in pain scores from baseline: 19–33% on coughing over 24 h ( |
| Saber et al. [ | 15 | N/A | 1 | 3 days | Pain intensity (VRS) at discharge was lower than in control group: 3.13 with plaster vs. 4.80 without plaster ( |
| Hans et al. [ | 40 | 7.2 (VAS) | ≤3 | 12 weeks | Reduction in mean pain intensity to 4.6 (reduction of 36.1%; |
| Correa-Illanes et al. [ | 29 | 6.7 (NRS) | 1/4 or 1/2 | 13.9 weeks | Mean pain intensity decreased to 2.72 (reduction of 58.2%). Mean size of painful area decreased from 23 to 6.5 cm2 (reduction of 72.4%) |
| Nicolaou et al. [ | 58 | N/A | 1/8 to 3 | 0.25–27 months or continuing | ‘Much improvement’ or ‘very much improvement’ judged to have been made by 76% of patients, according to the CGIC |
| Correa-Illanes et al. [ | 19 | 6.7 (NRS) | 1/2 plaster in one patient, 1/4 plaster in 18 patients | Mean duration 19.5 weeks | Mean pain intensity decreased to 2.8 (reduction of 58.2%). Mean painful area decreased from 17.8 to 2.1 cm2 (reduction of 87.6%) |
| Bischoff et al. [ | 21 | 6 at rest, 7 during movement, 8 during palpation (NRS) | 1 | 14 days with either lidocaine or placebo plaster/14-day washout period/14 days with alternative plaster | Changes in pain intensity following treatment with lidocaine or placebo (summed pain intensity differences—SPID) were not significantly different |
| Likar et al. [ | 7 | 8.6 (Likert scale) | 1/2 to 2 plasters (12 h on) | 6 months | Pain intensity dropped by 6.7 points to 1.9 |
All data are expressed as the mean unless otherwise stated. For studies with a control group, only lidocaine data are shown
CGIC clinical global impression of change, N/A not available, NRS numerical rating scale, PNCCP postoperative/post-traumatic neuropathic chronic cutaneous pain, VAS visual analogue scale