| Literature DB >> 29026331 |
Abstract
This review provides an overview of the clinical issue of poorly controlled postoperative pain and therapeutic approaches that may help to address this common unresolved health-care challenge. Postoperative pain is not adequately managed in greater than 80% of patients in the US, although rates vary depending on such factors as type of surgery performed, analgesic/anesthetic intervention used, and time elapsed after surgery. Poorly controlled acute postoperative pain is associated with increased morbidity, functional and quality-of-life impairment, delayed recovery time, prolonged duration of opioid use, and higher health-care costs. In addition, the presence and intensity of acute pain during or after surgery is predictive of the development of chronic pain. More effective analgesic/anesthetic measures in the perioperative period are needed to prevent the progression to persistent pain. Although clinical findings are inconsistent, some studies of local anesthetics and nonopioid analgesics have suggested potential benefits as preventive interventions. Conventional opioids remain the standard of care for the management of acute postoperative pain; however, the risk of opioid-related adverse events can limit optimal dosing for analgesia, leading to poorly controlled acute postoperative pain. Several new opioids have been developed that modulate μ-receptor activity by selectively engaging intracellular pathways associated with analgesia and not those associated with adverse events, creating a wider therapeutic window than unselective conventional opioids. In clinical studies, oliceridine (TRV130), a novel μ-receptor G-protein pathway-selective modulator, produced rapid postoperative analgesia with reduced prevalence of adverse events versus morphine.Entities:
Keywords: acute pain; analgesics; chronic pain; opioid; surgical procedures
Year: 2017 PMID: 29026331 PMCID: PMC5626380 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S144066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1Proportion of patients with postoperative pain in inpatient and outpatient settings by pain severity.
Note: Incidence, patient satisfaction, and perceptions of post-surgical pain: results from a US national survey. Gan TJ, Habib AS, Miller TE, White W, Apfelbaum JL.Current Medical Research and Opinion. Jan 2014. Reprinted by permission of the publisher (Taylor & Francis Ltd, http://www.tandfonline.com).13
Figure 2Incidence of chronic pain at 4, 12, and 24 months after surgery.
Note: Reprinted with permission from Montes A, Roca G, Sabate S, et al., Genetic and Clinical Factors Associated with Chronic Postsurgical Pain after Hernia Repair, Hysterectomy, and Thoracotomy: A Two-year Multicenter Cohort Study. Anesthesiology. 122(5):1123–41. http://anesthesiology.pubs.asahq.org/Article.aspx?articleid=2135169.40
Summary of prospective clinical studies (≥50 patients) in which acute pain was found to be a risk factor for the development of persistent postoperative pain
| Study | Surgical model | n | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fletcher et al | 18 different surgery types | 3120 | Percentage of time in severe pain on day 1 (OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.16–1.46; |
| Hoofwijk et al | Outpatient surgery (10 specialties) | 908 | Acute postoperative pain (OR 1.62, 95% CI 1.02–2.58) |
| Peters et al | Elective surgery (10 specialties) | 625 | High level of acute pain (score ≥40 on 100 mm VAS, OR 3.21, 95% CI 1.64–6.3; |
| Choinière et al | Cardiac surgery | 1,247 | Moderate–severe acute pain on postoperative day 3 (adjusted OR 2.67, 95% CI 1.74–4.11) |
| van Gulik et al | Cardiac surgery via sternotomy | 146 | Severe pain (NRS ≥4) on postoperative day 3 (OR 2.89, 95% CI 1.15–7.23, |
| Setälä et al | Sternotomy | 100 | High pain score on postoperative day 1 was the most significant independent risk factor ( |
| Niraj et al | Thoracotomy | 306 | 82% of patients with ≥5 episodes of severe pain within 72 hours of surgery had persistent postsurgical pain at 6 months |
| Hetmann et al | Thoracotomy | 106 | Postoperative pain was significant in univariate analysis (OR 1.43, 95% CI 1.05–1.95, |
| Gotoda et al | Thoracotomy | 85 | Pain on postsurgery day 1 (accounted for 12.4% of variance; |
| Bisgaard et al | Laparoscopic cholecystectomy | 150 | Total and maximum pain during the first week ( |
| Aasvang et al | Herniotomy | 464 | 30-day postoperative pain intensity ( |
| Callesen et al | Groin-hernia repair | 466 | High cumulative pain scores 1 week after surgery ( |
| Veal et al | Orthopedic surgery | 87 | Average pain levels rated as moderate–severe at 10 days ( |
| Sayers et al | Hip replacement | 321 | Acute postoperative pain at rest (β=0.2, |
| Thomazeau et al | Knee replacement | 104 | High-intensity acute postoperative pain trajectory ( |
| Lavand’homme et al | Knee arthroplasty | 112 | Higher acute-pain scores for maximal pain for days 1–8 ( |
| Masselin-Dubois et al | Total knee and hip arthroplasty and breast surgery | 189 | Pain intensity on day 2 (OR 2.88, 95% CI 1.29–6.38; |
| Theunissen et al | Hysterectomy | 428 | Acute postsurgical pain on day 4 ( |
| Pokkinen et al | Hysterectomy | 242 | More severe pain in the first 20 postoperative hours was associated with a higher likelihood of persistent pain 6 months after hysterectomy |
| Pinto et al | Hysterectomy | 186 | Acute postsurgical pain intensity at 48 hours ( |
| Brandsborg et al | Hysterectomy | 90 | High acute postoperative pain intensity ( |
| VanDenKerkof et al | Gynecologic | 433 | Moderate/severe in-hospital pain (RR 3, 95% CI 1–9.4) |
| Wang et al | Breast cancer surgery | 19,813 (30 studies) | Acute postoperative pain (OR 1.2, 95% CI 1.03–1.3 for each 1 cm on 10 cm VAS) |
| Andersen et al | Breast cancer surgery | 537 | Acute postoperative pain (OR 2.8, |
| Bruce et al | Breast surgery | 362 | Acute postoperative pain at rest (OR 1.34, 95% CI 1.12–1.6; |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio; RR, relative risk; VAS, visual analog scale; NRS, numeric rating scale.