| Literature DB >> 34295184 |
Mansoor M Aman1, Ammar Mahmoud2, Timothy Deer3, Dawood Sayed4, Jonathan M Hagedorn5, Shane E Brogan6, Vinita Singh7, Amitabh Gulati8, Natalie Strand9, Jacqueline Weisbein10, Johnathan H Goree11, Fangfang Xing12, Ali Valimahomed13, Daniel J Pak14, Antonios El Helou15, Priyanka Ghosh16, Krishna Shah17, Vishal Patel1, Alexander Escobar18, Keith Schmidt19, Jay Shah20, Vishal Varshney21, William Rosenberg22, Sanjeet Narang23.
Abstract
Moderate to severe pain occurs in many cancer patients during their clinical course and may stem from the primary pathology, metastasis, or as treatment side effects. Uncontrolled pain using conservative medical therapy can often lead to patient distress, loss of productivity, shorter life expectancy, longer hospital stays, and increase in healthcare utilization. Various publications shed light on strategies for conservative medical management for cancer pain and a few international publications have reviewed limited interventional data. Our multi-institutional working group was assembled to review and highlight the body of evidence that exists for opioid utilization for cancer pain, adjunct medication such as ketamine and methadone and interventional therapies. We discuss neurolysis via injections, neuromodulation including targeted drug delivery and spinal cord stimulation, vertebral tumor ablation and augmentation, radiotherapy and surgical techniques. In the United States, there is a significant variance in the interventional treatment of cancer pain based on fellowship training. As a first of its kind, this best practices and interventional guideline will offer evidenced-based recommendations for reducing pain and suffering associated with malignancy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer pain; intrathecal drug delivery; ketamine; neurolysis; neuromodulation; pain pump; radiofrequency; spinal cord stimulation; vertebral augmentation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34295184 PMCID: PMC8292624 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S315585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 3.133
Figure 1PRISMA diagram.
Evidence Levels
| Evidence Level | Study Type |
|---|---|
| I | At least one controlled and randomized clinical trial, properly designed |
| II-1 | Well-designed, controlled, nonrandomized clinical trials |
| II-2 | Cohort or case studies and well-designed controls, preferably multicenter |
| II-3 | Multiple series compared over time, with or without intervention, and surprising results in noncontrolled experiences |
| III | Clinical experiences-based opinions, descriptive studies, clinical observations, or reports of expert committees |
Note: Reprinted from Am J Prev Med, 20(3 Suppl), Harris RP, Helfand M, Woolf SH, et al, Current methods of the US Preventive Services Task Force: a review of the process, 21–35, 2001, with permission from Elsevier.23
United States Preventive Services Task Force Grading
| Degree of Recommendation | Meaning |
|---|---|
| A | Extremely recommendable (good evidence that the measure is effective, and benefits outweigh the harms) |
| B | Recommendable (at least, moderate evidence that the measure is effective, and benefits exceed harms) |
| C | Neither recommendable nor inadvisable (at least moderate evidence that the measure is effective, but benefits are similar to harms and a general recommendation cannot be justified) |
| D | Inadvisable (at least moderate evidence that the measure is ineffective or that the harms exceed the benefits) |
| I | Insufficient, low quality or contradictory evidence; the balance between benefit and harms cannot be determined |
Note: Reprinted from Am J Prev Med, 20(3 Suppl), Harris RP, Helfand M, Woolf SH, et al, Current methods of the US Preventive Services Task Force: a review of the process, 21–35, 2001, with permission from Elsevier.23
Advantages and Disadvantages of Intrathecal Trialing in Cancer Pain
| Disadvantages of Intrathecal Trialing | Advantages of Intrathecal Trialing |
|---|---|
| ● Delays definitive therapy in a population with limited life expectancy | ● Payor authorization |
Recommended Intrathecal Catheter Tip Location Based on Pain Location
| Pain Location | Vertebral Body Catheter Tip Location |
|---|---|
| Brachial plexus | C3-5 |
| Arm | C3-5 |
| Breast | T1-2 |
| Upper chest wall | T3-4 |
| Visceral abdomen | T5-6 |
| Lower chest wall | T6-7 |
| Abdominal wall | T6-7 |
| Pelvis | T9-12 |
| Leg | T10 |
| Sacral | Vertebral body at level of conus |
Note: Reproduced from Chen GH, Spiegel MA, Magram YC, et al. Evaluation of fixed intrathecal bupivacaine infusion doses in the oncologic population. Neuromodulation. 2020;23(7):984–990. © 2020 International Neuromodulation Society, with permission from John Wiley and Sons.121
IDDS Pump-Related Complications
| Causes of Pump Failure |
| Change in performance or failure of the catheter |
| ● Micro-fracture |
| Unexpected battery depletion |
| Component or motor failure |
| Catheter access port failure |
Note: Reproduced with permission from Smith TJ, Staats PS, Deer T, et al. Randomized clinical trial of an implantable drug delivery system compared with comprehensive medical management for refractory cancer pain: impact on pain, drug-related toxicity, and survival. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20(19):4040–4049102 .
Diagnostic Approach to IDDS Failure
| Initial evaluation, including patient history will often identify the source of the problem |
| Verification of pump contents, volume and pump setting is the critical initial step |
| Plain x-ray (PA and Lateral to visualize the entire catheter) |
| Serial x-ray or fluoroscopy to confirm that the pump roller is moving at the expected rate |
| Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) study |
| Catheter access port aspiration |
| Nuclear medicine scan |
| Fluid collection assay |
Note: Reproduced with permission from Smith TJ, Staats PS, Deer T, et al. Randomized clinical trial of an implantable drug delivery system compared with comprehensive medical management for refractory cancer pain: impact on pain, drug-related toxicity, and survival. J Clin Oncol. 2002;20(19):4040–4049.102 .
Best Practices
| Therapy | Statement | Evidence Level | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Opioids for cancer pain | Opioids should be considered for moderate to severe cancer-related pain. | I | A |
| Opioid agent selection should be individualized to account for the variance in pain presentations and co-existing medical comorbidities. | III | B | |
| Methadone | Methadone should be considered when other opioids are ineffective, or additional NMDA or serotonin receptor modulation is desired. | II-3 | C |
| Dosing initiation is dependent on opioid tolerance with low introductory doses for naïve patients. | II-3 | B | |
| For opioid tolerant patients a conservative approach is recommended starting at 75–90% less than the calculated equianalgesic dose using 1:15 to 1:20 conversion factor. | II-3 | A | |
| Ketamine | Ketamine therapy for cancer pain should be considered on a case-by-case basis for refractory neuropathic, bone, and mucositis-related pain. | II-1 | B |
| Radiotherapy, radioisotopes, and bone-modifying agents for metastasis | External beam radiation therapy with short, fractionated regimens are favored over conventional protracted schedules for painful metastatic bone disease. Stereotactic body radiation therapy may be preferred for radio-resistant cancers or oligometastatic disease. | I | A |
| There is evidence for the use of osteoclast inhibitors, though it has not been found to be effective for some cancers, such as metastatic non-small cell lung cancer. Therefore, these agents should be used as an adjuvant treatment and considered on a case-by-case basis | II-1 | B | |
| Blocks and neurolysis | Celiac plexus neurolysis should be performed for pancreatic cancer-related abdominal pain. | I | A |
| Splanchnic nerves neurolysis should be considered in patients with intractable abdominal cancer-related pain due to advanced body and tail located pancreatic CA. | I | B | |
| Early neurolysis is associated with better outcomes | II-3 | B | |
| Superior hypogastric plexus neurolysis should be considered in patients with intractable pelvic cancer-related pain. | II | B | |
| Ganglion impar neurolysis should be considered in patients with intractable perineal cancer-related pain. | III | B | |
| Targeted drug delivery | Intrathecal drug delivery using an implantable pump should be strongly considered in patients with cancer-related pain that is not responding to conventional medical management | I | A |
| Trialing before intrathecal pump implantation for cancer-related pain should be optional and at the discretion of the physician and patient. | III | C | |
| Spinal cord stimulation | Spinal cord stimulation may be considered in patients with refractory cancer pain. | II-3 | C |
| Spinal cord stimulation may be considered on a case-by-case basis for pain that is related to cancer treatment such as chemotherapy induced neuropathy. | III | C | |
| Vertebral augmentation and radiofrequency ablation | Vertebral augmentation should be strongly considered for patients with symptomatic vertebral compression fractures from spinal metastases. | I | A |
| Percutaneous radiofrequency ablation with or without cement augmentation is indicated for treatment of severe back pain from spinal tumors and has proven to be a safe and effective palliative therapy for painful spinal metastasis. | II-2 | B | |
| Radiofrequency lesioning and nerve blocks | Consider radiofrequency lesioning of the dorsal root ganglion in the treatment of axial thoracic back pain from vertebral malignant metastases. | I | C |
| For cancer pain unresponsive to medical management, application of nerve blocks using corticosteroid or radiofrequency lesioning to a peripheral nerve, brachial plexus can be considered. | II-2 | C | |
| Surgical options | Cordotomy should be considered for uncontrolled unilateral nociceptive pain after failure of more conservative options. | II | B |
| Myelotomy is used for infra-diaphragmatic visceral pain for pain control and decrease opioid consumption. | III | C | |
| DREZ-otomy is indicated for focal limb pain and in Pancoast tumors. | III | I | |
| Cingulotomy is indicated for late-stage and uncontrolled pain refractory to other therapies | III | C |