| Literature DB >> 29860585 |
Patrick D Dißmann1, Maxime Maignan2, Paul D Cloves3, Blanca Gutierrez Parres4, Sara Dickerson5, Alice Eberhardt6.
Abstract
Trauma pain represents a large proportion of admissions to emergency departments across Europe. There is currently an unmet need in the treatment of trauma pain extending throughout the patient journey in emergency settings. This review aims to explore these unmet needs and describe barriers to the delivery of effective analgesia for trauma pain in emergency settings. A comprehensive, qualitative review of the literature was conducted using a structured search strategy (Medline, Embase and Evidence Based Medicine Reviews) along with additional Internet-based sources to identify relevant human studies published in the prior 11 years (January 2006-December 2017). From a total of 4325 publications identified, 31 were selected for inclusion based on defined criteria. Numerous barriers to the effective treatment of trauma pain in emergency settings were identified, which may be broadly defined as arising from a lack of effective pain management pan-European and national guidelines, delayed or absent pain assessment, an aversion to opioid analgesia and a delay in the administration of analgesia. Several commonly used analgesics also present limitations in the treatment of trauma pain due to the routes of administration, adverse side effect profiles, pharmacokinetic properties and suitability for use in pre-hospital settings. These combined barriers lead to the inadequate and ineffective treatment of trauma pain for patients. An unmet need therefore exists for novel forms of analgesia, wider spread use of available analgesic agents which overcome some limitations associated with several treatment options, and the development of protocols for pain management which include patient assessment of pain.Funding: Mundipharma International Ltd.Entities:
Keywords: Ambulance; Analgesia; Emergency; Pain; Trauma
Year: 2018 PMID: 29860585 PMCID: PMC6251834 DOI: 10.1007/s40122-018-0101-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Ther
Inclusion and exclusion criteria used in the literature review
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
Publications were included which: 1. Discussed the prevalence or incidence of pain in emergency settings 2. Discussed pain in relation to time and duration of pain before relief in emergency settings 3. Reported treatment pathways for mild, moderate, and severe trauma pain in emergencies. This could be recorded also as “pain induced by trauma”, “trauma-induced pain”, or “acute pain from fractures” 4. Captured treatment patterns and pain management of patients with moderate-to-severe trauma pain 5. Described the limitations of current treatments for trauma pain in emergency settings 6. Discussed the burden of trauma pain in an emergency setting on healthcare providers | Publications were excluded which: 1. Did not report on pain or treatments for pain 2. Focused on long-term chronic pain 3. Related solely to the treatment of trauma pain in specific patient groups, including: pediatrics, elderly, pregnant, or patients with reduced consciousness (papers that included subgroups of populations [e.g., elderly or pediatric patients] within a range of individuals were not excluded) 4. Focused on the treatment of pain from major trauma 5. Did not have a European focus |
Fig. 1Schematic of publications included in the literature review for trauma pain
Fig. 2Treatment pathway and barriers to effective management of trauma pain in Europe. ED emergency department, HCP healthcare professional, IN intranasal, IV intravenous. Barriers to effective management of trauma pain are detailed in boxes
Fig. 3Pathway for the treatment of pain
(adapted from the WHO cancer pain ladder) [50]