| Literature DB >> 28025375 |
Brian M Bruel1, Allen W Burton2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The increasing incidence of cancer survivorship has shifted treatment of cancer-related pain from short-term analgesia to long-term chronic pain management. As a result, alternatives to oral analgesics, such as intrathecal therapy, may be beneficial for patients with cancer-related pain. The authors review the use of intrathecal therapy in the management of cancer-related pain.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer Survivors; Chronic Pain; Intrathecal Implantable Drug Delivery System; Morphine; Opioid; Ziconotide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28025375 PMCID: PMC5654346 DOI: 10.1093/pm/pnw060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Med ISSN: 1526-2375 Impact factor: 3.750
Intrathecal agents used in the management of neuropathic and nociceptive pain [27,28]
| Drug | Mechanism of Action | PACC Recommendation | Common Adverse Effects | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opioids
Morphine Hydromorphone Fentanyl Sufentanil | μ-opioid receptor agonist | Neuropathic: morphine first-line Nociceptive: morphine, hydromorphone, and fentanyl first-line | Sedation, respiratory depression, urinary retention, nausea, pruritus, cognitive impairment | IT morphine is FDA approved Lipophilic opioids (fentanyl and sufentanil) are generally added when first-line treatments have failed |
| Ziconotide | N-type voltage-sensitive calcium channel antagonist | First-line for neuropathic and nociceptive pain | Cognitive effects, psychiatric effects, ataxia, nausea, elevated creatine kinase, hypotension | IT ziconotide is FDA approved |
| Local anesthetics Bupivacaine | Blocks neural sodium channels | Neuropathic: first-line in combination with morphine | Motor weakness, hypotension, urinary retention | Chemical sympathectomy caused by IT bupivacaine may promote GI motility |
| Clonidine | α2-adrenergic agonist | Neuropathic: second-line in combination with hydromorphone or morphine; third-line as monotherapy Nociceptive: third-line in combination with opioids | Ataxia, sedation, auditory disturbance | Abrupt discontinuation associated with serious withdrawal syndrome |
| Baclofen | GABA receptor agonist | Neuropathic: fifth-line Not recommended for nociceptive pain | Puncture headache, seizure, delirium, transient global amnesia | Abrupt discontinuation may be life threatening Has been associated with development and progression of scoliosis |
FDA = US Food and Drug Administration; GABA = gamma-aminobutyric acid; GI = gastrointestinal; IT = intrathecal; PACC = Polyanalgesic Consensus Conference.
Adapted with permission from Brogan S, Junkins S. J Support Oncol 2010;8(2):52-9.[27].
Randomized, controlled trials and prospective, observational studies of intrathecal therapy for cancer-related pain
| Study | Participants | Follow-up | Intervention | Efficacy | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Smith et al., 2002 [ R, active- control; follow-up studies published in 2005 [ | Patients with advanced cancer and refractory pain were randomized to receive either CMM (n = 99) or IDDS plus CMM (n = 101); all participants had a mean VAS score of ≥5 despite 200 mg/d of oral morphine or the equivalent | 4 weeks | Patients with an implantable device received IT morphine or hydromorphone; other IT agents were used if morphine failed to produce adequate pain relief Patients did not necessarily receive the treatment to which they were randomized; therefore, an | As As | Adding IT therapy to CMM for patients with advanced cancer and refractory pain improved pain management and alleviated common opioid-related side effects |
Staats et al., 2004 [ R, DB, PBO-C | Patients with refractory pain due to cancer or AIDS were randomized to receive ziconotide (n = 71) or placebo (n = 40); all participants had a mean VASPI score of ≥50 mm despite a regimen of systemic or IT analgesics | 11 days | IT ziconotide was titrated over 5-6 days followed by a 5-day maintenance phase for responders and crossover of nonresponders to the opposite cohort | Mean VASPI scores improved by 53% in the ziconotide group compared with 18% in the placebo group ( | IT ziconotide demonstrated significant improvements in patients with cancer- or AIDS-related refractory pain |
| Rauck et al,
2003 [ | 119 patients with refractory cancer pain (inadequate efficacy and/or intolerable adverse effects with conventional pharmacologic treatment) | Up to 16 months | Patients received IT morphine sulfate via a patient-activated drug delivery system | Overall success (≥50% reduction in NAS pain score, use of systemic opioids, and/or opioid complication severity index) was reported in 83% of patients at Month 1, 90% of patients at Month 2, 85% of patients at Month 3, and 91% of patients at Month 4 Significant reduction in pain intensity scores and systemic opioid consumption were observed through Month 13 | Use of a patient-activated drug delivery system resulted in effective analgesia and fewer adverse effects |
| Mercadante et al, 2007 [ | 55 patients with advanced cancer and refractory pain (≥3 opioids and 2 routes of administration, including IV) | Up to 6 months or until death | IT morphine + levobupivacaine | Mean NRS pain score decreased from 8.0 at baseline to 3.9 at Month 1, Month 3, and the final assessment before death Mean systemic opioid dose (oral morphine equivalent) decreased from 566 mg/d at baseline to 70 mg/d at Month 1, 60 mg/d at Month 3, and 184 mg/d at the final assessment before death | IT combination therapy with morphine + levobupivacaine provided rapid, sustained analgesia with a decrease in AEs and oral opioid consumption until death in patients with refractory pain due to advanced cancer |
| Mitchell et al, 2015 [ | 22 patients with refractory cancer-related pain received IDDS implant | Up to 6 months | IT levobupivacaine + morphine | BPI score for “worst pain within the last 24 hours” was significantly reduced from baseline throughout the study ( Average BPI score improved by 66% ( | IT therapy provided long-term pain control in patients with difficult-to-control cancer-related pain |
| Sjoberg et al, 1991 [ | 52 patients with refractory cancer pain | Up to 6 months | IT morphine + bupivacaine | Continuous pain relief (VAS score of 0-2 out of 10) was reported in 85% of patients Breakthrough pain (VAS score of 3-8) not always relieved by escalating treatment was reported in 15% of patients | IT combination therapy with morphine + bupivacaine was a useful tool in the treatment of refractory cancer pain in patients with advanced disease |
| Sjoberg et al, 1994 [ | 53 patients with refractory cancer pain | Up to 6 months | IT morphine + bupivacaine | Significant reduction from baseline VAS scores ( Significant decrease in nonopioid analgesic and sedative consumption ( | IT combination therapy with morphine + bupivacaine (dose ratio of 1:10) was highly effective for managing refractory cancer-related pain |
| Alicino et al,
2012 [ | 20 patients with disseminated cancer with bone metastasis involving vertebral bodies and refractory pain (VASPI score at rest >70 mm or severe AEs with systemic opioid treatment) | 28 days | IT ziconotide + morphine | Mean VASPI score decreased from 90 mm at baseline to 34 mm at Day 28 (mean % change, 62%) Pain control was good in 5 surviving patients at Month 3 | IT combination therapy with ziconotide + morphine allowed safe and rapid control of cancer-related pain that was refractory to oral opioids |
| Dupoiron et al, 2012 [ | 77 patients with refractory pain due to incurable cancer; all patients had a NAS score of >6 despite 200 mg/d of oral morphine or the equivalent | 90 days | IT ziconotide + morphine, ropivacaine, and/or clonidine | Mean NRS pain score decreased from 8.1 at baseline to 4.1 after 30 days; improvement sustained at Month 2 (4.3) and Month 3 (4.1) | Ziconotide, in combination with other intrathecal agents, improved pain management in patients with refractory cancer-related pain |
| Brogan et al, 2015 [ | 98 patients with refractory cancer-related pain received IDDS implant; 58 patients had follow-up data | 14-82 days (mean, 42 d) | IT agents included morphine, hydromorphone, fentanyl, bupivacaine, clonidine, baclofen, and ziconotide (91% of patients received either morphine or hydromorphone; 16% received ziconotide) | Mean NRS pain score decreased from 8.3 at baseline to 5.0 at follow-up; the proportion of patients with severe pain (NRS score ≥7) decreased from 84% to 35% Analgesic efficacy of breakthrough pain medication improved from 47% pain reduction at baseline to 65% pain reduction at follow-up Mean systemic opioid dose (oral morphine equivalent) decreased from 805 mg/d to 128 mg/d overall | IT therapy that included PCA provided improved pain control and reduced systemic opioid consumption |
AE = adverse event; BPI = Brief Pain Inventory; CCM = conventional medical management; DB = double-blind; IDDS = intrathecal drug delivery system; IT = intrathecal; IV = intravenous; NAS = numeric analog scale; NRS = numeric rating scale; OL = open-label; PBO-C = placebo-controlled; PCA = patient-controlled analgesia; R = randomized; VAS = visual analog scale; VASPI = visual analog scale of pain intensity.
Adapted with permission from Deer TR, et al. Pain Physician 2011;14(3):E283-E312.[39].
Figure 1Mean reduction in VAS score with CMM alone versus CMM and IDDS [44].
Patients with cancer-related pain that was refractory to systemic morphine (200 mg/d) received CMM alone or IDDS plus CMM. CMM was based on previously published guidelines; IDDS was initiated with morphine but could be switched to other agents if necessary for pain reduction. Reduction in VAS pain score from baseline to Week 4 (as randomized and as treated) is presented. In the analysis of all patients as treated, the difference between nonimplanted and implanted patients is significant (P = 0.007). In the analysis of patients randomized to IDDS as treated, the difference between nonimplanted and implanted patients is also significant (P = 0.01).
Error bars are ±2 standard errors.
CMM = conventional medical management; IDDS = intrathecal drug delivery system; VAS = visual analog scale.
Reprinted with permission from Smith TJ, et al. J Clin Oncol 2002;20(19):4040-9.[44]
Figure 2Mean percentage change in VASPI score: pooled analysis of patients with cancer-related pain in two placebo-controlled clinical trials of ziconotide [76].
Patients with pain related to cancer or AIDS received either a “fast” or “slow” titration schedule of ziconotide. The fast titration regimen consisted of a ziconotide 0.4 mcg/h starting dose with upward titration every 12 hours to the maximum tolerated dose over 5 to 6 days [31,76]. The slow titration schedule used a starting ziconotide dose of 0.1 mcg/h with upward titration by 0.05 to 0.1 mcg/h no more than once every 24 hours to a maximum allowable dose of 0.9 mcg/h over 21 days [33,76]. VASPI score was assessed at baseline and at the end of the titration period.
*P = 0.023 vs placebo.
VASPI = visual analog scale of pain intensity.