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Pharmacotherapy Eric J. Visser Pharmacotherapy Eric J. Visser

Pharmacotherapy Eric J. Visser - PowerPoint Presentation

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Pharmacotherapy Eric J. Visser - PPT Presentation

Lets review the drug cupboard Paracetamol Does it work Not sure how paracetamol works COX2 cannabinoid serotonin Mainstay analgesic in most chronic pain protocols Not ID: 1046217

amp pain opioid chronic pain amp chronic opioid tramadol acute opioids effective effects lbp tapentadol nnt transdermal radicular paracetamol

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1. PharmacotherapyEric J. Visser

2. Lets review the drug cupboard

3. Paracetamol Does it work?Not sure how paracetamol works? - COX-2, ‘cannabinoid’, serotonin? Mainstay analgesic in most chronic pain protocolsNot much good for MSS pain? - exception: older patients?Adverse effects (liver, warfarin; NSAID-like?)Rx for acute LBP - especially as combination drug with NSAID/coxib, tramadol, codeine (NNT 3) Machado GC et al. Efficacy and safety of paracetamol for spinal pain and osteoarthritis: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised placebo controlled trials. BMJ 2015 Mar 31;350:h1225. doi: 10.1136/bmj.h1225.

4. Tramadol Good for acute & chronic LBP1/3rd opioid, 1/3rd SSRI (serotonin), 1/3rd SNRI (nor adrenaline) 1st line for acute & chronic LBP (NNT 4) Effective for neuropathic pain (NNT 4) Respiratory depression & constipationOK with TCAs, SSRIs, SNRIs; ‘sensible doses’; no seizuresAccumulates in renal impairmentPro-drug, 11 active metabolites Won’t work in 10% of patients (like codeine, cytochrome P450 2D6) 

5. Tapentadol SRLike tramadol without the serotonin‘Weak’ opioid (S8) & NARI in one molecule -noradrenaline is main pain-inhibiting neurotransmitter2nd line for chronic pain? Effective in nociceptive & neuropathic pain (NNT 4) Constipation Side effects than tramadol? Minimal accumulation in renal impairmentOK with TCAs, SSRIs, SNRIsTapentadol SR 50 mg ~ 10 mg oxycodone po ~ 20 mg morphine po 

6. NSAIDs & coxibsEffective (NNT 3) Rapid-acting formulations ARE better Rx acute pain flare-ups (days-fortnight)Do NOT use long-term for chronic pain Renal & gastric risk (NSAIDs) (PPI)Hypertension & cardiovascular riskNaproxen-best cardiovascular risk (MI)Celecoxib-best overall risk profile (gut, bleeding, CVS)

7. Antidepressants & anticonvulsantsTCAs: NOT effective for CLBPDuloxetine (SNRI): moderately effective (noradrenaline effect) - chronic LBP - neuropathic pain (NNT 4) (radicular leg pain?)Gabapentinoids (pregabalin, gabapentin)Not effective for LBP Radicular leg pain?

8. Opioids for CLBP?Opioids don’t work well in CLBP (NNT = 8, NNH = 4) (Level I)Adverse effects (tolerance, hyperalgesia, overuse, addiction)Poor risk vs benefitOpioids ‘contraindicated’ in CNSLBP (especially < 60s) Consider in > 60s with spondylosis (more side effects?)Opioid prescribing is always an ongoing therapeutic trial (90 days)3Ts: tramadol SR, tapentadol SR, transdermal buprenorphineCeiling dose is ≤ 90 mg oral morphine equivalents/day (no more)Chaparro LE et al. Opioids compared with placebo or other treatments for chronic low back pain: an update of the Cochrane Review. Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2014 1;39(7):556-63. 8

9. Transdermal buprenorphine patchMu partial agonist, kappa antagonistNo ceiling effect for analgesiaUse it like any other opioidSafer respiratory profileSafer renal profile (no accumulation)Better dose control....only 1 patch per week

10. What about Bob?Above the ceiling doseBob has ‘’opioid non-responsive pain’’ Taper & cease Opioid rotation - tapentadol (wean morphine slowly-may get withdrawal) - oxycodone/naloxone CR - transdermal buprenorphine patch

11. Radicular (neuropathic) leg painAnalgesics don’t work? (level I)TCAs, opioids & NSAIDs don’t work Pregabalin? Duloxetine? 2nd line, tramadol SR or tapentadol SR3rd line, transdermal buprenorphine Oral steroids? Natural history; improvement in 3-6 months Pinto RZ et al. Drugs for relief of pain in patients with sciatica: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2012 Feb 13;344:e497. doi: 10.1136/bmj.e497.

12. Acute-on-chronic LBP flare-upsRx as per acute LBP guidelinesComfort measures (heat)Continue baseline analgesiaCelecoxib 100-200 mg bd for ≤ 4 days? Paracetamol w/ tramadol IR (or codeine?) prn Short-term IR opioid? (oxycodone) (≤ 4 days)Orphenadrine (?) or baclofen for muscle spasms (avoid diazepam)Four-hour rule for prn analgesia: ≤ 4/24 prn, ≤ 4 x daily, ≤ 4 days

13. SummaryAn inconvenient truthPharmacotherapy: part of a multimodal pain Mx approachNot much works for CLBP or radicular leg painAvoid opioids in CNSLBP (HARM > help) - consider in > 60s with spondylosis; or spondylitis - 3Ts: tramadol, tapentadol, transdermal buprenorphine - opioid ceiling dose = 90 mg oral morphine/eq per day - ‘opioid-non responsive pain’ (taper & cease, opioid rotation)Radicular pain: pregabalin, duloxetine, tramadol, tapentadol? Acute pain: celecoxib, paracetamol-combo prn Start low & go slow (side effects) 

14. Thank you

15. Pharmacotherapy for chronic NSLBPLearning objectivesPharmacotherapy must always be part of a multimodal pain Mx approachCLBP is often a ‘mixed’ pain (nociceptive & neuropathic pain elements)Analgesics are NOT that effective for CLBP Analgesics are NOT that effective for radicular leg pain Opioids are (essentially) contraindicated in CNSLBP (especially in < 60s)Exceptions: > 60s with ‘degenerative’ spinal pain (spondylosis), or patient w/ ‘inflammatory spinal pain’ (spondylitis)Preferred opioids, 3Ts: tramadol, tapentadol, transdermal buprenorphineMx acute-on-chronic LBP flare-ups (multimodal, COX-2, paracetamol-analgesic combo)Avoid benzodiazepines Always titrate medications: ‘’start low and go slow’’

16. Visser MED 200 UNDA pain pharmacology 201516 Classical side effects (respiratory, sedation, dizziness, nausea, constipation) Overuse (chemical-coping, addiction) (+ reward centre, dopamine) Opioid-induced hyperalgesia & tolerance (the pain gets worse) Endocrine changes (testosterone, osteoporosis) Immune modulation (activates glia via Toll-like receptors) Cortical changes on fMRI (cognitive, anxiety, mood, motivation) Increased all cause mortality Poor QoL, social & health outcomes>150mg oral morphine equivalents per day = really bad outcomesAdverse effects of long-term opioids