| Literature DB >> 30974857 |
Augusto Caraceni1, Morena Shkodra2.
Abstract
More than half of patients affected by cancer experience pain of moderate-to-severe intensity, often in multiple sites, and of different etiologies and underlying mechanisms. The heterogeneity of pain mechanisms is expressed with the fluctuating nature of cancer pain intensity and clinical characteristics. Traditional ways of classifying pain in the cancer population include distinguishing pain etiology, clinical characteristics related to pain and the patient, pathophysiology, and the use of already validated classification systems. Concepts like breakthrough, nociceptive, neuropathic, and mixed pain are very important in the assessment of pain in this population of patients. When dealing with patients affected by cancer pain it is also very important to be familiar to the characteristics of specific pain syndromes that are usually encountered. In this article we review methods presently applied for classifying cancer pain highlighting the importance of an accurate clinical evaluation in providing adequate analgesia to patients.Entities:
Keywords: breakthrough pain; cancer pain; neuropathic pain; pain assessment; pain classification; pain syndromes
Year: 2019 PMID: 30974857 PMCID: PMC6521068 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11040510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Syndromic classification of pain caused directly by the solid tumor.
| Neoplastic damage to bone and joints | 1. Base of the skull syndrome. Headache due to calvarial, maxillary, or mandibular lesion |
| 2. Vertebral syndromes, including sacrum | |
| 3. Pelvic, long bones, direct infiltration of a joint | |
| 4. Generalized bone pain: due to multiple bone metastasis due to bone marrow infiltration/expansion | |
| 5. Chest wall pain from rib lesion | |
| 6. Pathologic fracture of: long bone vertebrae pelvis rib other | |
| Neoplastic damage to viscera | 7. Esophageal mediastinal pain. |
| 8. Shoulder pain from diaphragmatic infiltration pain from distention of hepatic capsule obstruction of biliary tract left upper quadrant pain from splenomegaly | |
| 9. Epigastric pain from pancreas or other upper abdominal neoplasm “Midline rostral retroperitoneal syndrome” | |
| 10. Diffuse abdominal pain from abdominal or peritoneal disease: with obstruction without obstruction | |
| 11. Suprapubic pain from infiltration of bladder. Perineal pain from infiltration of rectum or perirectal tissue (including vagina) | |
| 12. Obstruction of ureter | |
| Neoplastic damage to soft tissue and miscellaneous | 13. Damage to oral mucous membranes. Infiltration of skin and subcutaneous tissue |
| 14. Infiltration of muscle and fascia of in the chest or abdominal wall. Infiltration of muscle and fascia in the limbs | |
| 15. Infiltration of muscle and fascia in the head and neck | |
| 16. Retroperitoneal tissue infiltration excluding rostral retroperitoneal syndrome | |
| 17. Pleural infiltration | |
| Lesions of Nervous Tissue | 18. Peripheral nerve syndromes due to paraspinal mass due to chest wall mass due to retroperitoneal mass other than paraspinal due to other soft tissue or bony tumor peripheral polyneuropathy |
| 19. Radiculopathy or cauda equina syndrome due to vertebral lesion due to leptomeningeal metastases due to other intraspinal neoplasm | |
| 20. Plexopathy cervical plexopathy brachial plexopathy lumbosacral plexopathy sacral plexopathy | |
| 21. Cranial neuropathy due to base of the skull tumor due to leptomeningeal metastases due to other soft tissue or bony cranial tumor | |
| 22. Pain due to central nervous system lesion due to myelopathy intracerebral lesion | |
| 23. Headache due to intracranial hypertension | |
| 24. Neck, back pain or headache due to leptomeningeal disease |
Most common pain syndromes in patients with hematological malignancies.
| Pain Type | Pain Origin and Syndromes | |
|---|---|---|
| Nociceptive | Deep somatic | Bone marrow expansion and osteolysis. Spleen and liver capsulae distension by tumor infiltration and organ enlargement; intracranial hypertension (meningeal and/or brain tumor involvement) |
| Superficial somatic | Mucositis, cutaneous lesions | |
| Visceral | Infiltration and/or compression of viscera cava by abdominal nodes, spleen, and liver enlargement | |
| Neuropathic | Peripheral neuropathic | Neuropathies due to para-proteins. Amyloidosis. Plexopathy by tumor invasion and/or node enlargement compression (lymphomas) |
| Central Neuropathic | CNS damage and/or tumor involvement | |
| Mixed | Neuropathic + somatic | Meningosis, peripheral nerve damage, and/or tumor involvement |
Figure 1NeuPSIG grading system [50].
Figure 2Edmonton Classification System for cancer pain.