| Literature DB >> 35801320 |
Niyati Arora1, Ajit Kumar1, Ajay Kumar1, Ravi Shankar Sharma1.
Abstract
Chronic pain is the leading cause of morbidity in the world and is strongly associated with physical and psychological disabilities. In this pandemic, most of the pain care centers are forced to shut their doors leaving patients in dismay and adding to their misery. A systematic review was performed following the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses statement. All research articles from March 2020 to September 15, 2020, available on PubMed, Google scholar, and EmBase were included in this study. The keywords used for data search were "chronic pain," "coronavirus," "pain management," "COVID-19," "drugs usage in covid-19," "recommendation," and "guidelines". This review summarizes findings from the current literature available worldwide from different databases regarding guidelines to practice during chronic pain in coronavirus disease (COVID) crisis. This article acts as a specimen on how to handle future pandemics. We concluded that chronic pain management is a fundamental right and telemedicine is the silver lining that can be used for primary, follow-up consultation and to address mental health issues in chronic pain patients. Outpatient department visits should be scheduled using "forward triage." Pain Interventions should be carried out if urgent or semi-urgent with necessary precautions. Reopening of elective procedures with COVID testing can be planned, considering pain interventions to be usually percutaneous, of short duration, and involving office procedures with minimal aerosol generation. Drugs contrib- uting to immune suppression, for example, strong opioids and steroids, should be avoided. Regenerative therapy can be used instead during pain interventions. Physicians are expected to follow the recommended government guidelines before prescribing any drugs.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35801320 PMCID: PMC9361133 DOI: 10.5152/TJAR.2022.1328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim ISSN: 2149-276X
Figure 1.Literature search algorithm.
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Available in the databases on September 15, 2020 | Conference abstracts |
| Published in peer-reviewed journal dissertations in English | Running commentary |
| Explicitly discuss the management of chronic pain in the COVID-19 crisis | Letter to the editor |
| COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019. |
Overview of Retrieved Articles on Chronic Pain in COVID-19
| Author | Date of Publishing | Title | Article Type | Most Important Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Harsha Shanthanna et al. | March 2020 | Recommendation on chronic pain practice during the COVID-19 pandemic | A joint statement by the American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) and European Society of Regional Anaesthesia and Pain Therapy (ESRA) |
Chronic pain patients have a high susceptibility to infection due to old age and immune suppression Dose management of opioids and steroids in view of immune suppression Elective, in-person patient visits, or elective procedures to be postponed “Urgent” and “semi-urgent” pain patient procedures to be performed during the COVID-19 pandemic Use telemedicine to evaluate and continue prescriptions Procedural precautions and conduct of procedure for low-risk and high-risk COVID-19 patients |
| Brook Calton | March 2020 | Telemedicine in the time of coronavirus | COVID-19 article |
Telemedicine setup, rules, and scope in United States Patient considerations to use telemedicine Clinician considerations to use telemedicine |
| H. Shanthanna et al. | April 2020 | Caring for patients with pain during the COVID-19 pandemic: consensus recommendations from an international expert panel | Original article |
Immune suppression with opioids and steroid use Integrating biopsychosocial model in COVID-19 times Planning in-person visits Role of telemedicine Precautions during procedures Urgency to perform intrathecal pump refill or malfunction and neurostimulator removal in case of infection. |
| COL (ret) Steven P. Cohen et al. | April 2020 | Pain management best practices from multispecialty organizations during the COVID-19 pandemic and public health crises | Official Journal of the American Academy of Pain Medicine |
Provide a framework for pain practitioners and institutions in alliance with CDC guidelines for health care set-ups Use of 3-layered masks by patients and HCWs at all times Use of N95 for emergent patients and high-risk patients and during procedures that cause aerosolization High-risk patient to be attended only in emergent and urgent condition with consultation and procedure in separate rooms and later sanitation Limited staffing to avoid “unnecessary exposure” Reinforcement of telemedicine Screening of patients before OPD visit Triage to see patients in-person based on acuity, comorbid psychiatric and social considerations, pain level and accompanying functional impairment |
| Christopher Eccleston | May 2020 | Managing patients with chronic pain during the COVID-19 outbreak: considerations for the rapid introduction of remotely supported (eHealth) pain management services | Topical review |
Definitions and terminology used in remotely supported pain management, for example, telehealth, telemedicine, e-health, m-health, virtual reality, augmented reality, digital therapeutics (DTx) Distance assessment and treatment using technology Evidence for efficacy and harm of telemedicine and DTx interventions Practical recommendations for the rapid introduction of remotely supported pain management |
CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; HCW, Health care workers.
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| Flaminia COLUZZI | May 2020 | Managing chronic pain patients at the time of COVID-19 pandemic | Editorial article |
Drug-dose alteration for opioids, steroids, and NSAIDS during COVID-19 Device therapy involving intrathecal pumps and neuromodulatory devices |
| Babita Ghai et al. | June 2020 | Telemedicine for chronic pain management during COVID-19 pandemic | Special article |
Scope of telemedicine in India Telemedicine guidelines as published by NITI AAYOG with BOARD OF GOVERNORS in supersession of the Medical Council of India Advantages and limitations of telemedicine Challenges of telemedicine in India |
| F. Puntillo et al. | July 2020 | Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on chronic pain management: looking for the best way to deliver care | Review article |
Chronic pain patients features and challenges of pain treatment outside and during the COVID-19 pandemic Recommendations for best practice management of pain patients Use of telemedicine during coronavirus infection pandemic |
| Timothy Deer, MD | August 2020 | Emergence from the COVID-19 pandemic and the care of chronic pain: guidance for the interventionalist | COVID-19 article |
American Society of Pain and Neuroscience (ASPN) COVID-19 Task Force to evaluate the policies set forth by federal, state, and local agencies to reduce or eliminate elective procedures for pain patients Sets forth a strategy for the interventional pain centers to reemerge from the current pandemic and to set a course for future events Focuses on screening and testing patients before in-person visits/procedures in the wake of “reopening” Utilization of telemedicine for pre- and post-procedure evaluations |
| Siddharth Verma et al. | August 2020 | Indian society for the study of pain position statement for pain medicine practice during the COVID pandemic | Review article |
Discusses burden of pain in COVID-19 Setting up OPD/pain clinic Pain center/clinic reopening checklist for OPD/procedures during COVID-19 pandemic Pain triage: how to differentiate between red flag situations, emergent, urgent, and elective chronic pain conditions based on acuity, comorbid psychiatric (e.g., severe pain-related depression) and social (e.g., single mother of young children with limited resources) considerations Use of telemedicine for triaging Advantages and challenges of telemedicine in Indian setup Resume pain practice with the following goals: avoid deterioration of function; reliance on opioids; or avoidance of unnecessary visits that increase the risk of exposure Interventional pain procedures in low-risk/COVID positive/high risk patients Use of drugs in COVID-19: NSAIDs, STEROIDS, OPIOIDS |
| Salah N. El-Tallawy et al. | August 2020 | Pain management during the COVID-19 pandemic | Review article |
Telemedicine as a valuable tool Allows 2-way communication Facilitate follow-up visit Less efficacious for primary visit and physical examination Recommendations for the outpatient pain clinics- patient classified to Level 1, 2, and 3 Recommendations for in-patients to avoid provider to patient and vice-versa spread of infection Multimodal drug therapy would improve outcome with less side-effects NSAIDs, opioids, steroids Transdermal patch discouraged Intrathecal pump refill of opioid is classified as level 3 Interventional pain therapy in COVID-19 Management of pain in patients with COVID-19 |
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| Helen Gharaei, and Sudhir Diwan | August 2020 | COVID-19 pandemic: implications on interventional pain practice—a narrative review | Focused review article |
Immune suppression increases risk of COVID-19 Immune suppression due to cortisol depends on the type and dose of steroids used Short-acting steroid with the lowest effective dose or use of LA alone without steroids or using another analgesic is more reasonable during COVID-19 time Local anaesthetics used in combination with additive drugs like epinephrine, alpha-2 agonist (clonidine, dexmedetomidine), neostigmine, sodium bicarbonate, adenosine, magnesium, hyaluronidase, etanercept, and tocilizumab is encouraged Dextrose and normal saline both have analgesic properties and should be used as an option Regenerative medicine, for example, mesenchymal stem cells and platelet-rich plasma (PRP) are effective in treating discogenic pain, radicular pain, facial joint pain, and sacroiliac joint pain |
| Christopher Gharibo et al. | August 2020 | Triaging interventional pain procedures during COVID-19 or related elective surgery restrictions: evidence-informed guidance from the ASIPP | Guidelines |
Triaging interventional pain procedures during the COVID-19 pandemic The recommendations have been developed using the principles of best evidence synthesis developed by the Cochrane review, incorporating multiple guidelines modified by ASIPP: COVID-ARMS flow chart to mitigate risks of COVID-19 morbidity during interventional pain encounters COVID-ASIPP Risk Mitigation and Stratification (COVID-ARMS) risk stratification of patients presenting for interventional pain procedures based on age, pulmonary, cardiac, renal, hepatic, and immune status. Obesity and diabetes are also considered and patient is classified as low, moderate, or high risk If patient’s residence status is nursing home or assisted living facility or incarceration during the past 30 days, they are considered as high-risk patient. Rating for strength of recommendation into strong moderate and weak ASIPP guidance for triaging pain interventions with examples |
NSAIDS, Non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; ASIPP, The American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Triage of Patients into 3 Different Levels
| Level 1 |
Patients with mild to moderate pain Clear etiology, pathogenesis, and diagnosis Had relatively well-controlled comorbidities This group of patients can receive pain medication at home, along with telemedicine/eHealth support |
| Level 2 (e.g., COVID-19-suspected patients) |
Level 1 patients who have been exposed to COVID-19-positive individuals Recently traveled to or from an epidemic area, as determined by the World Health Organization (WHO) Have symptoms suggestive of COVID-19, including fever, night sweats, respiratory symptoms, and others Those patients who should self-quarantine at home and should strongly consider getting tested for COVID-19 |
| Level 3 |
Those with severe pain and/or suspicion of emergency conditions (i.e., spinal fracture, cauda equina syndrome) Those patients who are to receive immediate treatment in the clinic or should be admitted as in patients for further testing and treatment |
COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019.