Title: Pain Management and Palliative Care in HIVAIDS Patients
1Pain Management and Palliative Care inHIV/AIDS
Patients
- Timothy L. Sternberg, DMD, MD
- Director, Center for Pain Management
- University of Florida/Shands Jacksonville
2Disclosure of Financial Relationships
- This speaker has no significant financial
relationships with commercial entities to
disclose.
This slide set has been peer-reviewed to ensure
that there are no conflicts of interest
represented in the presentation.
3Pain Palliative Care in HIV/AIDSObjectives
- 1. Pain incidence and prevalence
- 2. Barriers to effective pain symptom
management - 3. Assessing pain in HIV AIDS
- 4. HIV/AIDS specific painful syndromes
- 5. General pain management guidelines
- 6. Specific treatment strategies
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5HIV/AIDS Pain Etiologies
- HIV tissue damage
- Opportunistic Infections
- Malignancies
- Side effect of treatment
- Incidental to HIV disease
-
6Is pain in HIV/AIDS patients common?
- Not a concern to most patients who just want
their disease cured. - Only common in terminal AIDS.
- Only common with high viral loads.
- Common in all stages of the disease.
- No Adequately treated with current available
care. -
7Prevalence of Pain in HIV/AIDS
- 28 asymptomatic HIV seropositive men
- 56 AIDS-related complex
- 80 AIDS
- (Singer, 1993)
- 97 terminal
- (Singh 1992)
- 57-61 hospitalized AIDS patients
- 2nd most common admitting problem
- (Lebovits 1989, 1994)
8Prevalence of Pain in HIV/AIDS
- Average 2.5 different pains
- Severity 5.4 (average) 7.4 (worse) / 10 NRS
- Prevalence correlated
- CDC category
- Number of current HIV related symptoms
- Treatment for HIV related infections
- Absence of antiretroviral therapy
- Intensity correlated
- Females
- Non-Caucasions (Breitbart
1996)
9Prevalence of Pain in HIV/AIDS
- Pre-HAART 56-80
- Prevalence Post-HAART
- Estimate of 30
- (Newshan, Bennett, Holman, 2000)
-
10Prevalence of Pain in HIV/AIDS
- Prevalence and Intensity associated with
- Greater impairment functional ability
- Physical symptom distress
- Psychological morbidity
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12Barriers to Pain Management
- Pain generally under-treated in HIV/AIDS pts
- Particularly patients with IV drug abuse hx
- Only 15 ambulatory AIDS pts received adequate
analgesia - Only 6 with severe pain Rxd opioids
- Under-treatment 85 (cancer 42)
- Women minorities more likely under-treated
- (Brietbart 1994)
13Barriers to Pain Management
- Patient related barriers
- Clinician related barriers
- System related barriers
- HIV specific barriers
14What is the most common barrier to adequate pain
management in HIV/AIDS?
- Fear of addiction
- Poor compliance
- Governmental restrictions
- Poor patient assessment
- Inadequate application of knowledge and
therapeutic modalities currently available
15Barriers to Pain Management
- Patient related barriers
- Fear of addiction
- Misconceptions about tolerance
- Concern about side effects
- Fear of correlation with disease progression
- Poor compliance with antiviral medications
16Barriers to Pain Management
- Clinician related barriers
- Misconceptions of addiction, dependence, and
tolerance - Inadequate training
- Inadequate patient assessment
- Poor pharmacologic knowledge
- Inadequate application of knowledge and
therapeutic modalities currently available
17Barriers to Pain Management
- System related barriers
- Regulatory issues
- Pharmacy restrictions
- Governmental restrictions
- Economic issues
18HIV/AIDS Specific Barriers
- Many African Americans consider Hospice second
class care - Unfamiliarity with medical system
- Inner city prevalence of illicit drug use
- Continued illicit drug use
- Poverty
- Poor access to phones, refrigerators, housing
- Poor compliance with antiviral therapy
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20Assessing Pain in HIV AIDS
- Pain history
- Intensity
- Location
- Qualities
- Radiation
- Work-up possible etiologies
- Rule out infections and malignancies
- Consider multiple concurrent etiologies
- Thorough HP
- Eval psychological/emotional/social factors
-
21Characterizing Pain in HIV/AIDS
- Nociceptive
- Somatic
- w, w/o inflammation
- Visceral
- Neuropathic
- Central
- Peripheral
- Sympathetic
-
22Assessing Pain in HIV AIDSEtiologies
- HIV related
- tissue damage
- infection
- tumors
- HIV treatment
- Medications
- Chemotherapy, radiation
- Unrelated to HIV
-
23Which locations are relatively unaffected by HIV
related pain?
- Head and face
- Chest
- Abdomen
- Pelvis
- Musculoskeletal system
24Common Painful HIV/AIDS Syndromes
- Headaches 46
- Oral cavity 53
- Throat pain 20
- Chest pain 41
- Abdominal pain 12-26
- Anorectal pain 34
- Peripheral neuropathy 25 (10-50)
- Musculoskeletal system 72
- Herpes zoster/PHN 5
- Social pain
- Psychological pain
25HIV/AIDS Headache Syndromes
- HIV specific
- Aseptic meningitis with acute infection
- CNS lymphoma
- Metastatic Kaposis sarcoma
- Infections HSV, CMV, Toxoplasmosis, TB, Syphilis
- HIV encephalitis
- HIV treatment
- Zidovudine
- Efavirenz
- Emtricitabine
- Stavudine
- Tenofovir
- Concurrent illness
- Tension-type, Migraines
- Sinus infections
26HIV/AIDS Oral-pharyngeal Syndromes
- Candidiasis 28-75
- Necrotizing gingivitis
- HSV, CMV, HIV, EBV ulcers
- Recurrent aphthous ulcers
- Zalcitabine ulcers
- Kaposis sarcoma
- Dental abscesses
-
27Oral-pharyngeal Candidiasis
28HIV/AIDS Oral-pharyngeal Syndromes
- Interferes with oral hygiene
- More oral pharyngeal pathology
- Interferes with nutritional intake
- Wasting syndrome
-
29AIDS/HIV Related Oral Pathology
30HIV/AIDS Chest Pain Syndromes
- Incidence 41
- Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia
- Retrosternal, burning
- Esophagitis (/- dysmotility)
- Candidiasis
- HSV, CMV, HIV ulcerations
- GERD
- Herpes Zoster- Post Herpetic Neuralgia
-
31Herpes Zoster- Post Herpetic Neuralgia
32HIV/AIDS Abdominal Pain Syndromes
- Nausea
- NRTIs zidovudine, didanosine, emtricitabine,
lamivudine, tenofovir - Diarrhea
- Infectious
- NRTIs tenofovir, emtricitabine,
- CMV ileitis, colitis
- Visceromegaly (didanosine)
- Pancreatitis (pentamidine, ddI, ddC, )
- Acalculous cholecystitis
- Schlerosing cholangitis (AIDS cholangitis)
- CMV bowel perforation
- Tumor Kaposis, Lymphoma
-
33HIV/AIDS Anorectal Pain Syndromes
- Affect 34 AIDS/ARC males
- Infections/STDs
- Trauma
- Fistulae/fissures/abscesses
- Rectal cancers
- KS, NHL, SSC
34HIV/AIDS Anorectal Pain Syndromes
35HIV/AIDS Gynecologic Pain Syndromes
- STDs
- Herpes simplex ulceration
- Human papilloma virus
- Cervical cancer
- Pelvic inflammatory disease
36HIV/AIDS Gynecologic Pain Syndromes
37HIV/AIDS Pain SyndromesPeripheral Neuropathies
- Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
- Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
- Mononeuritis multiplex
- Radiculitis
- VZV Herpes Zoster post-herpetic neuralgia
- CMV
- HIV
- Distal symmetrical peripheral neuropathy
- HIV (AIDS associated distal sensory neuropathy)
- Toxic (Antiretroviral toxic neuropathy)
- Vitamin deficiencies
-
38Distal Symmetrical Peripheral Neuropathy
- Most common HIV/AIDS neuropathy
- Usually late complication
- Sensory predominantly small fiber
- Pain, paresthesias soles of feet
- Signs large fiber
- Reduced Achilles DTR/vibration sense
- Etiology HIV infection or treatment
- AIDS Associated Distal Sensory Neuropathy
- Antiretroviral toxic neuropathy (NRTIs)
- Risk Factors
- age, high viral load, low CD4 count, cumulative
NRTI dose -
39Common Painful HIV/AIDS Syndromes
Musculoskeletal system
- Arthropathies
- Reactive arthritis
- Reiters syndrome
- Non-specific arthralgias
- Psoriatic arthritis
- HIV arthritis
- Septic arthritis
40Common Painful HIV/AIDS Syndromes
Musculoskeletal system
- Myopathies
- Inflammatory polymyositis
- Subacute proximal weakness and myalgia
- HIV and other virus, infection vs. inflammation
- Zidovudine
- Necrotizing non-inflammatory myopathy
- Zidovudine
- Infectious Myositis
- Toxoplasmosis
- Microsporidiosis mysositis
41HIV/AIDS Social Pain
- Young
- Family estrangement
- Social stigma
- STD's
- Drug use
- HIV
- Homosexual
- Poor coping mechanisms
- Limited support
42Unos Cuantos Piquetitos(A Few More
Sticks)Frida Kahlo
43Pain Palliative Care in HIV/AIDS Management
Options
- Cognitive-behavioral interventions
- Systemic pharmacotherapy
- General pain management medications
- HIV/AIDS specific pain medications
- Interventional techniques
- Surgical techniques
- Physical Modalities
- Electro-stimulation therapy
44 General Pain Management Principles
- Thorough assessment
- Somatic nociceptive vs. neuropathic pain
- Intensity, quality, timing
- Exacerbating and relieving factors
- Treatment history
- Pharmacologic history
- Psychosocial modifiers
45Systemic Pharmacotherapy General Management
Principles
- By the patient
- By the syndrome
- By the clock
- By the analgesic ladder
- Consider drug interactions
46General Pharmacotherapeutic Principles WHO
Analgesic Ladder in HIV/AIDS
47Nociceptive Neuropathic Analgesic Ladder
48Optimal Use of AnalgesicsWorld Health
Organization Step Ladder
- Begin with non-opiate, nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDS) - Add a weak opiate, such as codeine or
hydrocodone (with or without an adjuvant) - Move to a stronger opiate, such as oxycodone,
morphine (with or without an adjuvant) - Complementary, non-pharmacologic strategies
- Interventional strategies
49WHO Analgesic Ladder in HIV/AIDS
- Non-opioid analgesic
- Acetaminophen
- Tramadol
- NSAID
- Weak opioids
- Propoxyphene
- Hydrocodone
- Strong opioids
- Oxycodone
- Morphine
- Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)
- Fentanyl (Duragesic)
50Non-Opioid Analgesics
51NSAIDs Side Effects
- Gastric irritation/ulceration
- Prolong bleeding time, esp. ASA
- CNS stimulation
- Hepatic dysfunction
- Renal dysfunction
- Elevated BP
- Edema
- Allergic Rxn's
52Opioid Analgesics
53Opioid Analgesics
54Opioid Side Effects
- Respiratory System
- -depresses ventilation
- GI System
- - N/V
- - Constipation
- Biliary muscle spasm
- GU System
- -urinary retention
- -urinary urgency
- Cutaneous System
- -vasodilation
- -flushing
- -pruritis
CNS -euphoria -dysphoria -confusion -sedation -mi
osis
CV System -Orthostatic hypotension
-Venodilation -Bradycardia
(tachycardia with meperidine)
55Analgesic Ladder for Neuropathic Pain
Opioid analgesic Topical capsaicin,
lidocaine TCA/SRRI, anticonvulsant, topical
agent
Anti-arrhythmic Topical capsaicin,
lidocaine TCA/SRRI, anticonvulsant analgesic
I certainly
Anti-epileptics TCA/SNRI /- analgesic
Tricyclic Antidepressant Serotonin/NE Reuptake
Inhibitor /- analgesic
56Anti-neuropathic Pain MedicationsFirst Line
57Anti-neuropathic Pain MedicationsSecond Line
58Antineuropathic Medications Efficacy
Oral agents TCAs (2.64) opioids (2.67)
gabapentin (4.29) tramadol (4.76) pregabalin
(4.93) Topical agents aspirin/diethyl ether
(1.83) lidocaine patch (2) capsaicin
(3.26) (Numbers needed to treat) e.g., PHN
59Systemic Pharmacotherapy Antiretroviral-Analgesic
Interactions
- Fentanyl Clearance decreased by ritonavir
- Methadone Withdrawal reported with nevirapine,
efavirenz - Phenytoin, Carbamazepine reduced levels/efficacy
of NNRTIs/protease inhibitors - TCAs/trazadone inhibited metabolism by
ritonavir - Benzodiazepines Enhanced sedation with
ritonavir, protease inhibitors
60Are treatment with opioids in a patient with a
past history of addiction contra-indicated?
61Opioid Treatment with Chemical Addiction
- Diagnose pain syndrome and pathway
- Differentiate dependence, tolerance, addiction,
and pseudo-addiction - Maximize non-opioid medications
- One clinic - one doctor - one pharmacy - one
month - Written agreements
- Long-acting or controlled release formulations
62My Nurse and I Frida Kahlo
63 Specific TreatmentHeadache Syndromes
- Primary headaches
- - Abortive acetaminophen, NSAID's
- Migraines triptans (5HTS antagonists)
- - Prophylactic TCA's, b-blockers, Ca
channel blockers - Zizovudine/NRTI associated HA
- - Resolves with discontinuance
- Cerebral toxoplasmosis
- - sulfadiazine 1-4 gm/d
- with pyrimethamine (Daraprim) 50-75 mg/d
- Cryptococcal meningitis
- - fluconozole (Diflucan) 12 mg/kg/d, then 6
mg/kg/d - Cerebral lymphoma
- - steroids/radiation
64Specific Treatment Oral-pharyngeal Syndromes
Candidiasis
- Nystatin
- (Mycostatin) 100,000 u/ml, 5 ml qid swish and
swallow - Vaginal suppositories, Dissolve in mouth qid
- Clotrimazole
- (Mycelex) troches 10 mg, Dissolve in mouth 5x/d
- Ketoconazole
- (Nizoral) 200 mg, 1 qd, Maintenance
- Hepatoxicity
- Fluconozole
- (Diflucan) 100 mg, 2 stat, then 1 qd
- Less toxic, expensive
- Itraconazole (Sporanox)
- Soln 10mg/ml, 10 ml bid swish and swallow
- 100 mg tabs bid
- Hepatoxicity
65Specific Treatment Oral-pharyngeal Syndromes
- Aphthous ulcer stomatitis
- Nonsteroidal aphthasol (Amlexanox) 5 qid
- Non steroidal Orabase qid
- Triamcinolone (Kenalog in Orabase) 0.1 qid
- Dexamethasone (Decadron) elixir 0.5mg/5ml rinse
and expectorate qid - Diphenhydramine/AlOH,MgOH (Benadryl/Maalox) 30/60
ml 5 mg swish and swallow tid before meals - Diphenhydramine/sucrulfate (Benadryl/Carafate)
30/60 ml 5 mg swish and swallow tid before meals - Periodontal/periapical abscesses
- Dental treatment
- Pen VK 250-500 mg qid
- Erythromycin 250 mg qid
- Cephalexin (Keflex) 250-500 mg qid
66Specific Treatment Oral-pharyngeal Syndromes
- Primary (acute) herpetic (HSV) gingivostomatitis
- acyclovir (Zorivax) 200 mg tabs, 2 tid x 7days
- Recurrent herpes simplex
- penciclovir (Denavir) cream 1 q2h x 4d
- docosanol (Abreva) cream (OTC) 5x/d x 4d
- Shingles (HVV) acute herpes zoster
- acyclovir (Zorivax) 800 mg caps, 1 5x/d x 7days
- valacyclovir (Valtrex) caps 500 mg 2 tid x 7 d
- Sympathetic plexus (stellate ganglion) blocks
-
67Stellate Ganglion Block
68 Specific TreatmentChest Pain Syndromes
- Pneumocytis carinii pneumonia
- - TMP/SMX
- Candidiasis
- Ketoconazole (Nizoral) 200 mg qd maintenance
- Fluconozole (Diflucan) 100 mg, 2 stat, then 1 qd
- less toxic, expensive
- Herpes simplex esophagitis
- - Acyclovir (Zorivax) 200 mg tabs, 2 tid x 7days
- Herpes zoster/PHN - Acyclovir, TCA's,
Gabapentin - Epidural steroid injections
- Sympthetic (stellate ganglion) blocks
69 Specific Treatment Esophagitis
- Underlying cause
- CMV esophagitis- Ganciclovir (Cytovene) 1000 mg
tid - Topical lidocaine
- Proton pump inhibitors
- Pro-kinetic agents
- metoclopramide (Reglan) 10 mg tid
- Coating agents
- sucralfate (Carafate) 1 gm b.i.d.
70Specific Treatment H. Zoster/PHNEpidural
Steroid Injection
71Specific Treatment Abdominal Pain Syndromes
- Infectious diarrhea
- Ciprofaxin 500 mg bid x 5d, TMP/SMX DS bid x 5d,
or Metronidazole 500 mg tid x 10 d - Fluids
- Loperamide (Imodium) 2 mg p each stool
- Antispasmotics
- Cholangitis/cholecystis
- Cefuroxime /or piperacillin /or mexolcillin
- Endoscopic sphincterotomy? (sclerosing
cholangitis) - CMV iliitis/colitis
- Ganciclovir (Cytovene), 1000 mg tid
- Antispasmotics
- Drug induced pancreatitis and visceromegaly
- pentamidine, didanosine, deoxycytidine
associatedresolve with discontinuance - Celiac plexus block
72Specific Treatment Anorectal Syndromes
- Clindamycin aminoglycoside
- Sitz baths
- ID, surgery
- Topical lidocaine (2-5 gel)
- Glycerin/petrolatum/shark liver oil (Preparation
H) - Hydrocortisone 1
- Witch Hazel (50) (Tucks pads)
73Specific TreatmentPeripheral Neuropathies
- Acute or Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating
Polyneuropathy - Plasmapheresis
- Steroids
- Zidovudine
- Distal Symmetrical Polyneuropathy
- TCA's (amitriptyline, nortriptyline,
desipramine), SNRI's - Anticonvulsants (gabapentin, carbamazepine)
- Tramadol
- Opioids
- Vitamin B E supplementation
- Topical capsaicin or lidocaine (Lidoderm)
- Sympathetic neurolysis
74What medications are not effective in treating
neuropathic pain?
- TCAs (e.g., amitriptyline, nortriptyline, etc)
- SSRI antidepressants (e.g. Prozac, Paxil, etc.)
- SNRIs (e.g., Cymbalta, Effexor)
- Opioids
- Anti-epileptic medications (e.g. gabapentin)
- 6. Topical lidocaine and capsaicin
75Treatment Peripheral NeuropathiesEfficacy
Antineuropathic Medications
Oral agents TCAs (2.64) opioids (2.67)
gabapentin (4.29) tramadol (4.76) pregabalin
(4.93) Topical agents aspirin/diethyl ether
(1.83) lidocaine patch (2) capsaicin
(3.26) (Numbers needed to treat) e.g., PHN
76Specific Treatment Musculoskeletal system
- Non-specific arthralgias
- NSAIDs
- Non-opioid analgesic
- Reactive arthritis
- Methotrexate (Rheumatrex) 2.5-10 mg/wk
- Intra-articular steroid injections
- Myopathies
- NSAIDs
- Non-opioid analgesic
- AZT
- Steroids
- Zidovudine myositis discontinue if possible
77Specific Treatment ArthriditesHip and SIJ
Intra-articular Injections
78SummaryPain Palliative Care in HIV/AIDS
- Recognition
- Prevalence
- Barriers
- Common HIV painful syndrome
- Thorough assessment
- Nociceptive vs. neuropathic
- Dx specific process
- Systemic pharmacotherapy
- NSAIDs, opioids, anti-neuropathic medications
- Syndrome specific therapy
- Reassessment, adjustment, and empathy
79The End