| Literature DB >> 33850929 |
Hong Xiao1, Ke Ma2, Dong Huang3, Xian-Guo Liu4, Tang-Hua Liu5, Qing Liu6, Guang-Zhao Liu7, Tao Song8, Wei Tao9, Da-Sheng Wu10, Yun-Xia Wang11, Xiao-Qiu Yang12, Xiao-Mei Zhang13, Hui Liu14, Yan-Qing Liu15.
Abstract
Neuropathic pain (NPP) is a kind of pain caused by disease or damage impacting the somatosensory system. Ion channel drugs are the main treatment for NPP; however, their irregular usage leads to unsatisfactory pain relief. To regulate the treatment of NPP with ion channel drugs in clinical practice, the Chinese Association for the Study of Pain organized first-line pain management experts from China to write an expert consensus as the reference for the use of ion channels drugs . Here, we reviewed the mechanism and characteristics of sodium and calcium channel drugs, and developed recommendations for the therapeutic principles and clinical practice for carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, lidocaine, bulleyaconitine A, pregabalin, and gabapentin. We hope this guideline provides guidance to clinicians and patients on the use of ion channel drugs for the management of NPP. ©The Author(s) 2021. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Bulleyaconitine A; Carbamazepine; Expert consensus; Gabapentin; Guideline; Ion channel drug; Lidocaine; Neuropathic pain; Oxcarbazepine; Pregabalin
Year: 2021 PMID: 33850929 PMCID: PMC8017507 DOI: 10.12998/wjcc.v9.i9.2100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Clin Cases ISSN: 2307-8960 Impact factor: 1.337
Pharmacodynamics of ion channel drugs
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| T max | Within 12 h | 4.5 h | 5 min | 1 h | 3 h | |
| C max | 0.5-25 μg/mL | 31.5 μmol/L | 2-5 mg/lanalgesic use | 3.83-9.46 μg/mL | 2.7-2.99 mg/L | |
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| 25-65 h (single dose); 12-17 h (long-term oral) | 2 h; 9 h (MHD) | 10 min (single dose); 1.5-2 h (continuous infusion) | 4 h | 5-6.5 h | 6.5 h |
| Bioavailability | 58%-85% | > 95% | 100% | 90% | 47%-60% | |
| Effect-onset time | 8-72 h | 1-3 h | 5 min (onset); 1 h (maintain) | Within 30 min (acute toothache); 5 h (maintain); 1 wk (diabetic neuropathy) | 24-28 h (repeated administration); no capping effect | |
| Metabolism | Liver | Liver | Liver (mainly) | Liver (less) | No metabolism in the body | |
| Excretion | Kidney (72%); Feces (28%) | Kidney (> 95%) | Kidney (mainly) | Kidney (92-99%) excreted as drug prototype | Kidney (mainly) excreted as drug prototype | |
BLA: Bulleyaconitine A; C max: Maximum concentration; iv: Intravenous; MHD: Monohydroxycarbazepine; t1/2: Half life time; T max: Peak time.
Guidelines/expert consensus recommendations for ion channel drugs
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| Finnerup | 2016 | IASP | Topical use of lidocaine for PHN (first-line medication); Carbamazepine and oxcarbazepine for TN (first-line medication) | Gabapentin and pregabalin for NPP (first-line medication) |
| Attal | 2010 | EFNS | Same with IASP (2010) | Gabapentin and pregabalin for diabetic neuralgia, PHN, central pain (first-line medication); Gabapentin not recommended for HIV neuralgia, post-traumatic neuralgia |
| CASP neuropathic pain treatment expert group[ | 2013 | CASP | Same with IASP (2010); Bulleyaconitine A and lidocaine infusion is effective for NPP; Local anesthetics recommended for nerve block and intrathecal drug infusion | Same with IASP (2010) |
| Moulin | 2014 | CPS | Topical use of lidocaine (second-line medication) | Same with IASP (2010) |
| Sumitani | 2018 | JSPC | Carbamazepine for TN (first-line medication); Oxcarbazepine is not approved in Japan | Same with IASP (2010) |
CASP: Chinese Association for the Study of Pain; CPS: Canadian Pain Society; EFNS: European Federation of Neurological Societies; HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus; IASP: International Association for the Study of Pain; JSPC: Japanese Society of Pain Clinicians; NPP: Neuropathic pain; PHN: Postherpetic neuralgia; TN: Trigeminal neuralgia.