| Literature DB >> 29765246 |
Diana S Meske1, Oluwadolapo D Lawal1, Harrison Elder1, Valerie Langberg2, Florence Paillard1, Nathaniel Katz1,3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Opioids have been used for millennia for the treatment of pain. However, the long-term efficacy of opioids to treat chronic non-cancer pain continues to be debated. To evaluate opioids' efficacy in chronic non-cancer pain, we performed a meta-analysis of published clinical trials for μ-opioid receptor agonists performed for US Food and Drug Administration approval.Entities:
Keywords: EERW trials; evidence-based medicine; long-term efficacy; non-cancer pain; opioid analgesics; opioid efficacy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29765246 PMCID: PMC5939920 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S160255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Study design and subject disposition by study
| Author, year | Drug, pain type | No of sites, | Opioid naive patients, n (%) | Patients enrolled in the OLP, n | Discontinued during OLP, % | OLP duration | Duration of study drug tapering | Patients randomized in each arm of RBTP, n | RBTP dosing regimen and duration | Post-randomization discontinuations, % | Concomitant analgesics allowed? | Rescue medication allowed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hale et al, | Oxymorphone ER, CLBP | 30, USA | 0 (0) | 251 | 43 | Up to 1 month | No taper (4-day extended access to rescue opioid) | Oxymorphone ER: 70 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Oxymorphone ER: 30 | No | Yes |
| Katz et al, | Oxymorphone ER, CLBP | 29, USA | 205 (100) | 326 | 37 | Up to 1 month | No taper (4-day extended access to rescue opioid) | Oxymorphone ER: 105 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Oxymorphone ER: 32 | No | Yes |
| Vorsanger et al, | Tramadol ER, CLBP | 30, USA | Not stated | 619 | 38 | 3 weeks | Not stated | Tramadol ER 300 mg: 127 | Adjustable dose 12 weeks | Tramadol ER 300 mg: 33 Placebo: 48 | No | Not stated |
| Hale et al, | OROS Hydromorphone ER, CLBP | 66, USA | 0 (0) | 459 | 42 | Up to 1 month | 2 weeks | Hydromorphone ER: 133 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Hydromorphone ER: 51 | No | Yes |
| Katz et al, | EMBEDA®; MS-sNT (morphine sulfate and naltrexone hydrochloride ER capsules), OA | Not stated, USA | 254 (73.8) | 547 | 37 | Up to 45 days | 2 weeks | MS-sNT: 170 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | MS-sNT: 36 | No | Yes |
| Schwartz et al, | Tapentadol ER, DPNP | 93, USA and Canada | 255 (65.5) | 588 | 33 | 3 weeks | 3 days | Tapentadol ER: 196 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Tapentadol ER: 32 | No | No |
| Friedmann et al, | Remoxy (Oxycodone ER), OA | 61, USA | Not stated | 558 | 26 | 2 weeks | Up to 15 days | Oxycodone ER: 203 | Adjustable for first 4 weeks then fixed for 8 weeks | Oxycodone ER: 34 | No | Not stated |
| Steiner et al, | Buprenorphine transdermal system (BTDS), CLBP | 86, USA | 541 (100) | 1024 | 47 | Up to 27 days | No taper | BTDS: 257 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | BTDS: 33 | No | Yes |
| Rauck et al, | Zohydro (Hydrocodone ER), CLBP | 59, USA | 0 (0) | 510 | 41 | Up to 6 weeks | 2 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 151 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 18 | No | Yes |
| Vinik et al, | Tapentadol ER, DPNP | 80, USA and Canada | 218 (68.5) | 459 | 22 | 3 weeks | 3 days | Tapentadol ER: 166 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Tapentadol ER: 28 | No | Yes |
| Wen et al, | Hysingla ER (Hydrocodone bitartrate ER), CLBP | 102, USA | 329 (56) | 905 | 35 | Up to 45 days | 2 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 296 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 23 | No | Yes |
| Katz et al, | Xtampa ER (Oxycodone ER), CLBP | 46, USA | 192 (49.3) | 740 | 47 | Up to 6 weeks | Up to 20 days | Xtampa ER: 193 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Xtampa ER: 37 | No | Yes |
| Hale et al, | Hydrocodone ER, CLBP/OA | 71, USA | 147 (50) | 389 | 24 | Up to 6 weeks | 2 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 146 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 36 | Yes | Yes |
| Hale et al, | Hydrocodone ER, CLBP | 78, USA | 215 (58) | 625 | 41 | Up to 6 weeks | 2 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 191 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Hydrocodone ER: 18 | Not stated | Yes |
| Rauck et al, | Buccal buprenorphine, CLBP | 60, USA | 420 (100) | 749 | 39 | Up to 8 weeks | No taper | Buccal Buprenorphine: 209 | Fixed dose 12 weeks | Buccal Buprenorphine: 24 | No | Yes |
Notes:
Number of sites initiated.
Concomitant analgesics were not allowed during the dosed titration. The paper does not state anything about concomitant analgesics for the period following this.
Abbreviations: CLBP, chronic low back pain; DPNP, diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain; ER, extended release; OA, osteoarthritis; OLP, open label phase; RBTP, randomized blinded treatment phase.
Figure 2Change in PI from randomization baseline to week 12 with active study opioid drug versus placebo.
Notes: The standardized mean difference effect size was −0.416 and p<0.001, with a lower bound estimate of −0.521 and an upper bound −0.312.
Abbreviation: PI, pain intensity.
Summary of secondary endpoints
| Secondary endpoint | Study drug vs placebo | |
|---|---|---|
| Responder rate for ≥30% improvement | 0.166 (0.028) | <0.001 |
| Responder rate for ≥50% improvement | 0.137 (0.022) | <0.001 |
| PGIC (“Very much improved” and “Improved”) | 0.163 (0.029) | <0.001 |
| PGASM (“Excellent” and “Very good”) | 0.194 (0.056) | <0.001 |
| Patients discontinued due to an AE | 0.021 (0.008) | 0.011 |
Note:
Values are the risk difference (RD) estimates (SE).
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; PGASM, patient global assessment of study medication; PGIC, patient global impression of pain; SE, standard error.
Figure 3Percentage of patients with ≥30% or ≥50% improvement with active study drug versus placebo.
Notes: The graph shows the mean (SD) percent of patients with improvement, from each study that reported these data. A binary random-effects meta-analysis using the restricted maximum likelihood method was performed showing a statistically significant difference between active study drug and placebo for both ≥30% and ≥50%.
Summary of AEs
| Reference | Study drug/placebo | Patients with ≥1 AE, n (%) | Patients with ≥1 SAE, n (%) | Patients who discontinued due to an AE, n (%) | Patients who discontinued due to opioid withdrawal, n (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hale et al, | Study drug: | 31 (44.3) | 2 (2.9) | 7 (10.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Placebo: | 27 (37.5) | 0 (0.0) | 8 (11.1) | 5 (6.9) | |
| Katz et al, | Study drug: | 61 (58.1) | 2 (1.9) | 9 (8.6) | 1 (1.0) |
| Placebo: | 44 (44.0) | 3 (3.0) | 8 (8.0) | 2 (2.0) | |
| Vorsanger et al, | Study drug: | 79 (62.2) | ND | 13 (10.2) | ND |
| Placebo: | 72 (57.1) | ND | 18 (14.3) | ND | |
| Hale et al, | Study drug: | 64 (48.1) | 1 (0.8) | 7 (5.3) | 3 (2.3) |
| Placebo: | 73 (54.9) | 4 (3.0) | 3 (2.3) | 7 (5.3) | |
| Katz et al, | Study drug: | 91 (53.2) | 6 (3.5) | 18 (10.6) | ND |
| Placebo: | 84 (48.6) | 3 (1.7) | 13 (7.5) | ND | |
| Schwartz et al, | Study drug: | 139 (70.9) | 10 (5.1) | 22 (11.2) | ND |
| Placebo: | 100 (51.8) | 3 (1.6) | 11 (5.7) | ND | |
| Friedmann et al, | Study drug: | ND | 5 (2.4) | 43 (21.0) | ND |
| Placebo: | ND | ND | ND | ND | |
| Steiner et al, | Study drug: | 140 (54.5) | 3 (1.2) | 40 (15.6) | ND |
| Placebo: | 146 (51.6) | 2 (0.7) | 20 (7.1) | ND | |
| Rauck et al, | Study drug: | 91 (60.3) | ND | 2 (1.3) | 0 (0.0) |
| Placebo: | 67 (44.4) | ND | 5 (3.3) | 7 (4.6) | |
| Vinik et al, | Study drug: | 23 (13.9) | 8 (4.8) | 19 (11.4) | 4 (2.4) |
| Placebo: | 13 (8.6) | 9 (5.9) | 12 (7.9) | 5 (3.3) | |
| Wen et al, | Study drug: | 136 (45.9) | 2 (0.7) | 17 (5.7) | ND |
| Placebo: | 103 (35.3) | 4 (1.4) | 10 (3.4) | ND | |
| Katz et al, | Study drug: | 125 (64.8) | 2 (1.0) | 15 (7.8) | 3 (1.6) |
| Placebo: | 95 (48.5) | 2 (1.0) | 10 (5.1) | 1 (0.5) | |
| Hale et al, | Study drug: | 93 (63.7) | 3 (2.1) | 9 (6.2) | ND |
| Placebo: | 95 (48.5) | 2 (1.0) | 10 (5.1) | 1 (0.5) | |
| Hale et al, | Study drug: | 106 (55) | 3 (1.6) | 11 (5.8) | ND |
| Placebo: | 88 (49) | 3 (1.7) | 7 (3.9) | ND | |
| Rauck et al, | Study drug: | 38 (16.6) | 3 (1.4) | 13 (5.7) | 3 (1.3) |
| Placebo: | 40 (17.2) | 1 (0.5) | 7 (3.0) | 1 (0.4) |
Notes:
Only data for the 300 mg doses of tramadol were used in this meta-analysis.
Abbreviations: AE, adverse event; ND, no data; SAE, serious AE.