| Literature DB >> 34909469 |
Bradley Sainsbury1, Jared Bloxham1, Masoumeh Hassan Pour1, Mariela Padilla2, Reyes Enciso3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic neuropathic pain (NP) presents therapeutic challenges. Interest in the use of cannabis-based medications has outpaced the knowledge of its efficacy and safety in treating NP. The objective of this review was to evaluate the effectiveness of cannabis-based medications in individuals with chronic NP.Entities:
Keywords: Cannabidiol; Cannabis; Meta-Analysis; Neuropathic Pain; Systematic Review
Year: 2021 PMID: 34909469 PMCID: PMC8637910 DOI: 10.17245/jdapm.2021.21.6.479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dent Anesth Pain Med ISSN: 2383-9309
Electronic database search strategies
| Electronic database | Search strategy |
|---|---|
| MEDLINE via PubMed (searched up to 2/5/2020); re-run on 2/1/2021 search strategy: | Language: limited to English |
| The Web of Science (searched up to 2/5/2020); re-run on 2/1/2021 search strategy: | TOPIC: (neuralgia OR neuropathy OR neuropathic OR (nerve AND (injury OR lesion)) OR (post-herpetic neuralgia) OR (post-traumatic neuropathy)) AND TOPIC: (marijuana OR marihuana OR cannabis OR cannabidiol OR cannabinoid* OR hash* OR hemp OR nabilone OR dronabinol OR nabiximols OR Sativex OR levonantradol OR sativa OR tetrahydrocannabinol OR delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol OR delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol) AND TOPIC: random* Limits: Article, Review, Proceedings, Early Access |
| The Cochrane Library (searched up to 2/5/2020); | ((neuralgia OR neuropathy OR neuropathic OR (nerve AND (injury OR lesion)) OR (post-herpetic neuralgia) OR (post-traumatic neuropathy)) AND (marijuana OR marihuana OR cannabis OR cannabidiol OR cannabinoid OR hash OR hemp OR nabilone OR dronabinol OR nabiximols OR Sativex OR levonantradol OR sativa OR tetrahydrocannabinol OR delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol OR delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol OR THC)) AND (random OR randomly OR randomized) |
| EMBASE (searched up to 2/5/2020); | #1 neuralgia OR neuropathy OR neuropathic OR (nerve AND (injury OR lesion)) OR (post-herpetic neuralgia) OR (post-traumatic neuropathy) |
Fig. 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) Flow Diagram [42]. RCT, randomized controlled trials, PDF, portable document format.
Summary of eligible studies
| Reference | Year, Country | Study design, Total sample size | Interventions, sample size per group | Delivery | Tx duration | Washout period for crossover studies | Gender (M/F) | Age (Mean ± SD or range in years) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abrams, et al. 2007 [ | 2007, | DBRPCT parallel design | ∙ 3.56% THC cigarettes (n = 27) | Smoked | 5 d | N/A | 48M/7F | Tx group: 50 ± 6 |
| Almog, et al. 2020 [ | 2020, | Crossover DBRPC | ∙ 0.5 mg single inhalation of Δ9-THC | Inhaler | 3 x 150 min sessions | 2 d washout | 8F/19M | 48.3 ± 11.9 |
| Berman, et al. 2004 [ | 2004, | DBRPCT Crossover | ∙ Sativex (THC 2.7 mg & CBD 2.5 mg per 100 mL) spray | Spray | 14 d | No washout | 46M/2F | Mean: 39 |
| Eibach, et al. 2020 [ | 2020, | RDBPC Crossover | ∙ 400 mg/daily oral dose CBDV dissolved in sesame oil | Oil | 4 weeks | 3 weeks washout | 31M/1F | CBDV: 52.31 ± 8.06 |
| Ellis, et al. 2009 [ | 2009, | DBRPCT Crossover | ∙ 1% to 8% THC cigarettes 5xday | Smoked | 5 d | 2 weeks washout | 34M/0F | 48.8 ± 6.8 |
| Karst, et al. 2003 [ | 2003, | Crossover study | ∙ CT-3, 10 mg oral capsules (synthetic THC analog without the psychotropic effects) | Oral capsules | 1 week washout | 1 week | 13M/8F | 29-65 |
| Nurmikko, et al. 2007 [ | 2007, | DBRPCT parallel | ∙ Sativex (THC 2.7 mg & CBD 2.5 mg per 100mL) spray (n = 63) | Spray | 5 weeks | N/A | 50M/74F | Tx group: 52.4 ± 15.8 |
| Selvarajah, et al. 2010 [ | 2010, | DBRPCT parallel | ∙ Sativex (THC 2.7 mg & CBD 2.5 mg per 100mL) spray (n = 15) | Spray | 10 weeks | N/A | 18M/11F | Tx group: 58.2 ± 8.8 |
| Serpell, et al. 2013 [ | 2013, | DBRPCT parallel | ∙ Sativex (THC 2.7 mg & CBD 2.5 mg per 100mL) spray (n = 128) | Spray | 14 weeks | N/A | 96M/150F | Tx group: 57.6 ± 14.4 |
| Svendsen, et al. 2004 [ | 2004, | RDBPCT Crossover | ∙ Dronabinol 2.5 mg capsules (n = 24) | Oral capsules | 18-21 d | 21 d | 10M/14F | Median: 50 |
| Wade, et al. 2002 [ | 2002, | DBRPC Crossover | ∙ 2.5 mg THC & 2.5 mg CBD spray | Spray | 2 weeks | None | 10M/10F | Mean: 48 |
| Wallace, et al. 2015 [ | 2015, | DBRPC Crossover | ∙ 7% THC Vaporized cannabis | Vaporized | 4 x 4 hours | 2 week | 9M/7F | 56.9 ± 8.2 |
| Ware, et al. 2010 [ | 2008, | RDBPCT Crossover | ∙ 2.5% THC | Inhaled - pipe | 5 d | 9 d | 11M/12F | 45.4 ± 12.3 |
| Wilsey, et al. 2008 [ | 2008, | RDBPC Crossover | ∙ 7% THC | Inhaled cigarettes | 3 x 6-hour sessions | 3 d | 20M/18F | Mean: 46 |
| Wilsey, et al. 2013 [ | 2013, | DBRPCT Crossover | ∙ 3.53% THC | Inhaled vapor | 3 x 6-hour sessions | 3 d | 28M/11F | 50 ± 11 |
| Wilsey, et al. 2016b [ | 2016, | DBRPCT Crossover | ∙ 0% delta 9-THC, | Inhaled vapor | 3 x 8-hour sessions | 3 d | 29M/13F | 46.4 ± 13.6 |
| Wilsey, et al. 2016a [ | 2016, | RPCT Crossover | ∙ 6.7% THC cannabis | Inhaled vapor | 3 x 8-hour sessions | 3 d | 29M/13F | Mean: 46.4 |
Abbreviations: CBD, cannabidiol; CBDV, cannabidivarin; CRPS, Complex Regional Pain Syndrome; d, day; DBRPCT, Double-blind Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial; F, female; N, participants; n, participants; NP, Neuropathic pain; M, male; RPCT, Randomized Placebo-Controlled Trial; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol; y, years.
Diagnosis of neuropathic pain and inclusion criteria
| Reference | Dx of NP | Inclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abrams, et al. | (1) Adults with HIV infection and symptomatic HIV-SN | (1) Average daily pain score of at least 30 mm on the 100 mm VAS during the outpatient pre-intervention phase. | |
| Almog, et al. | The diagnoses of NP and CRPS were made by an investigating physician according to IASP 2008 [ | (1) Adult patients (18 years of age or above), | |
| Berman, et al. | (1) At least one avulsed brachial plexus injury | (1) Men/women 18 + | |
| Eibach, et al. | The diagnosis of HIV-associated sensory neuropathy was confirmed by a clinician based on: | (1) 18 - 65 years old | |
| Ellis, et al. | (1) HIV-DSPN diagnosed by a board-certified clinical neurologist included: | (1) Average score of 5 or higher on the pain intensity subscale. | |
| Karst, et al. | Presentation and examination consistent with hyperalgesia and allodynia. Diagnoses included: | (1) Stable levels of pain medications for at least 2 months, | |
| Nurmikko, et al. | (1) Unilateral peripheral NP and allodynia | (1) Age 18 or over, male or female | |
| Selvarajah, et al. | Patients with chronic painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy (Neuropathy Total Symptom Score 6 [ | (1) At least 6 months of pain | |
| Serpell, et al. | (1) Had mechanical allodynia within the territory of the affected nerve(s) confirmed by either a positive response to stroking the allodynic area with a brush or to force applied by a monofilament. | (1) Aged 18 or older, | |
| Svendsen, et al. | (1) Diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (clinical definite multiple sclerosis and laboratory supported definite multiple sclerosis), | (1) Age between 18 and 55 years, | |
| Wade, et al. | (1) Eligible patients had to have a neurological diagnosis and to be able to identify troublesome symptoms which were stable and unresponsive to standard treatments. | ||
| Wallace, et al. | (1) Diabetes mellitus type 1 or type 2, who had stable glycemia (HbA1c ≤11%) and were maintained by diet or a stable regimen of diabetic therapy for at least 12 weeks before the evaluation. | (1) Participants were men and women. | |
| Ware, et al. | (1) NP of at least three months in duration caused by trauma or surgery, with allodynia or hyperalgesia, | (1) Men and women aged 18 years or older. | |
| Wilsey, et al. | (1) Patients with CRPS type I, spinal cord injury, peripheral neuropathy, or nerve injury. | (1) Previous cannabis exposure was required of all participants. | |
| Wilsey, et al. | NP disorder: | (1) Required to refrain from smoking cannabis or taking oral synthetic THC medications for 30 days before study sessions to reduce residual effects; each participant underwent urine toxicology screening to confirm this provision as much as was feasible. | |
| Wilsey, et al. | Individuals with injury and disease of the spinal cord | (1) Age >18 and <70 yrs. | |
| Wilsey, et al. | NP as defined by Leeds Assessment of Neuropathic Symptoms and Signs [ | (1) 18-70 yrs. | |
Abbreviations: CRPS, complex regional pain syndrome; Dx, diagnosis; HbA1C, glycated hemoglobin; HIV-DSPN, human immunodeficiency virus associated distal sensory predominant polyneuropathy HIV-SN, human immunodeficiency virus associated sensory neuropathy, hr, hour; NP, neuropathic pain; NRS, numeral rating scale; PNP, peripheral neuropathic pain; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol; VAS, visual analog scale; yrs, years.
Summary of Risk of bias for eligible studies
| Study | Random Seq. Generation | Allocation Concealment | Blinding participants/personnel | Blinding assessors/statistician | Incomplete Outcome Data | Selective Reporting | Other potential bias | Overall Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abrams, et al. 2007 [ | - | - | ? | ? | - | - | ? | ? |
| Almog, 2020 [ | - | - | ? | - | - | - | + | + |
| Berman, et al. 2004 [ | - | - | ? | ? | - | - | + | + |
| Eibach, et al. 2020 [ | - | - | ? | ? | ? | - | ? | ? |
| Ellis, et al. 2009 [ | - | - | + | - | - | - | ? | + |
| Karst, et al. 2003 [ | - | - | - | ? | - | - | + | + |
| Nurmikko, et al. 2007 [ | - | - | - | + | - | - | + | + |
| Selvarajah, et al. 2010 [ | ? | - | ? | ? | - | - | ? | ? |
| Serpell, et al. 2013 [ | - | - | - | ? | + | - | + | + |
| Svendsen, et al. 2004 [ | - | - | ? | - | - | - | ? | ? |
| Wade, et al. 2002 [ | - | - | - | ? | ? | - | + | + |
| Wallace, et al. 2015 [ | - | - | ? | - | - | - | ? | ? |
| Ware, et al. 2010 [ | - | ? | ? | ? | - | - | ? | ? |
| Wilsey, et al. 2008 [ | - | - | ? | ? | - | - | ? | ? |
| Wilsey, et al. 2013 [ | - | - | ? | ? | ? | - | ? | ? |
| Wilsey, et al. 2016b (exploratory) [ | - | - | ? | - | - | - | ? | ? |
| Wilsey, et al. 2016a (preliminary) [ | ? | + | + | + | ? | - | ? | + |
KEY: + High risk of bias; - Low risk of bias; ? Unclear risk of bias
Analysis of risk of bias for included studies
| RISK OF BIAS | SUMMARY |
|---|---|
| Random sequence generation | Random sequence generation methods were found to be low risk of bias in fifteen studies as a computerized random generator [ |
| Allocation concealment | Allocation concealment was identified as low risk in fifteen trials. The interventions were prepared and packaged by a third party in identical packaging in seven [ |
| Blinding of participants/personnel | Blinding of participants and personnel was identified as low risk in four studies [ |
| Blinding assessors/statistician | Blinding of assessors and statisticians was identified as low risk in five studies with the key for study assignment withheld from investigation until analysis was completed [ |
| Incomplete outcome data | Twelve of the studies were assigned low riskof bias for incomplete outcome data; these studies had no missing outcome data reported [ |
| Selective reporting | A low risk of bias was assigned to all studies [ |
| Other potential sources of bias | An unclear risk of bias was assigned to eleven [ |
| Overall bias | Overall, the risk of bias was unclear in nine of the seventeen RCTs (52.9%) [ |
Abbreviations: RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Fig. 2Summary of risk of bias of eligible randomized controlled trials.
Fig. 3Results of meta-analysis comparing cannabis to placebo intervention for neuropathic pain patients. Subgroup analyses for differences of change in pain intensity from baseline for (a) THC and THC/CBD studies and (b) CBD and synthetic cannabis interventions; (c) Percent reduction in pain intensity with THC. A p ≤ 0.05 denotes a statistically significant difference. CBD, cannabidiol; CBDV, cannabidivarin; CI, confidence interval; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol.
Fig. 4Subgroup analyses for differences in number of responders with (a) 30% reduction and (b) 50% reduction in pain intensity from baseline (score 0-100). CBD, cannabidiol; CBDV, cannabidivarin; CI, confidence interval; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol.
Fig. 5Subgroup analyses for (a) differences of change in Pain Disability Index from baseline on a 0-70 scale; (b) differences in post-treatment McGill Pain Questionnaire Visual Analog Scale score on a 0-100 scale. CBD, cannabidiol; CBDV, cannabidivarin; CI, confidence interval; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol; VAS, visual analog scale.
Fig. 6Subgroup analyses for differences in post-treatment SF-36 subscales with (a) THC/CBD and (b) dronabinol. Higher SF-36 scores represent favorable quality of life. CBD, cannabidiol; CI, confidence interval; SF-36, 36 item short form survey; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol.
Quality of the Evidence (GRADE [45]) for THC/CBD and THC interventions
| THC/CBD Interventions compared to Placebo for Neuropathic pain | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outcomes | No of Participants (studies) Follow up | Quality of the evidence (GRADE) | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | |
| Risk with Placebo | Risk difference with THC/CBD (95% CI) | ||||
| Change in pain intensity from baseline | 522 (5studies) | ⊕⊕⊕⊝ | The mean change in pain intensity from baseline in the intervention groups was -6.624 lower (-9.154 to -4.094 lower) | ||
| Responders with 30% reduction in pain intensity | 359 (2studies) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝ | RR 1.756 (1.161 to 2.656) | 157 per 1000 | 119 more per 1000 (from 25 more to 260 more) |
| Change in pain disability index | 219 (2studies) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝ | The mean change in pain disability index in the intervention groups was 3.646 lower (7.380 lower to 0.087 higher) | ||
| McGill pain questionnaire VAS pain | 71 (2studies) | ⊕⊕⊝⊝ | The mean McGill pain questionnaire VAS pain in the intervention groups was 1.005 higher (19.137 lower to 21.147 higher) | ||
Abbreviations: CBD, cannabidiol; CI, confidence interval; GRADE, grading of recommendations assessment, development and evaluation; RR, Risk ratio; THC, tetrahydrocannabinol; VAS, visual analog scale.