Title: Pain Overview Drug treatment of Neuropathic Pain
1Pain Overview Drug treatment of Neuropathic Pain
2Opioids for neuropathic painEisenberg E, et al.
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2006,
Issue 3
- Short-term studies provide only equivocal
evidence regarding the efficacy of opioids - Intermediate-term studies demonstrate significant
efficacy of opioids over placebo for neuropathic
pain, which is likely to be clinically important - Reported adverse events of opioids are common but
not life-threatening. Further RCTs are needed to
establish their long-term efficacy, safety
(including addiction potential), and effects on
quality of life
3Antidepressants Saarto T and Wiffen PJ. Cochrane
Database of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 3
- Conclusions
- Effect mainly demonstrated in treatment of
diabetic neuropathy and postherpetic neuralgia - Benefit is usually seen after a few days
treatment - Best evidence available is for amitriptyline
- Usefulness limited by side-effects
- Limited data for the effectiveness of SSRIs
- Advise initiate treatment with amitriptyline and
switch to an alternative TCA if pain relief
achieved but side-effects are a problem - If side-effects still a problem a trial of SSRI
may yield benefit
4AnticonvulsantsWiffin P, et al. Cochrane Review
Database of Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 3
- Conclusions
- The type of pain which responds well to
anticonvulsants is neuropathic pain - Approximately two-thirds of patients who take
either carbamazepine or gabapentin can expect to
achieve good pain relief (but NNTs minor NNHs) - The evidence here does not support the use of
anticonvulsants as usual first choice
5Carbamazepine Wiffin PJ, et al. The Cochrane
Database of systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 3
- Twelve RCTs of carbamazepine in neuropathic pain
(n359) - Combined NNT for moderate relief in any
neuropathic pain 2.5 (95 CI 1.8 to 3.8) - NNH for minor harm 3.7 (95 CI 2.4 to 7.8)
- NNH for major harm not significant
- Concludes
- Use of carbamazepine for neuropathic pain has
stood the test of time but the evidence is
limited and of mainly poor quality
6GabapentinWiffin PJ, et al. The Cochrane
Database of systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 3
- Fourteen RCTs of gabapentin in neuropathic pain
(n1398) - Combined NNT for improvement 4.4 (95 CI 3.5 to
5.7) - NNH for minor harm 3.7 (95 CI 2.4 to 5.4)
- NNH for major harm not significant
- Concludes
- Gabapentin is effective for a variety of
neuropathic pain, however, needs to be considered
alongside other treatments such as carbamazepine
and tricyclic antidepressants (effective and
affordable alternatives)
7Pregabalin Regional Drug and Therapeutics
Centre. New Drug Evaluation No. 66 November 2004
- Pregabalin is structurally related to gabapentin
- licenced for peripheral neuropathic pain - No trials comparing pregabalin with carbamazepine
or gabapentin - No evidence patients who fail to respond to
gabapentin will respond to pregabalin - Amitriptyline and carbamazepine remain first line
choices for treatment of neuropathic pain
8Topical Capsaicin Mason L, et al. BMJ 2004 328
9914
- 6 DBRCTs, 656 people, were pooled for neuropathic
conditions. Relative benefit vs. placebo was 1.4
(95 CI 1.2 to 1.7), NNT6 - 3 DBRCTs, 368 people, were pooled for
musculoskeletal conditions. Relative benefit was
1.5 (1.1 to 2.0), NNT8 - One third of patients on active treatment had
local adverse reactions - Although topically applied capsaicin has
moderate to poor efficacy ..it may be useful
.for a small number of patients unresponsive to,
or intolerant of, other treatments.
9Neuropathic Pain- Summary
- If patient has symptoms of neuropathic pain an
early trial of adjuvant therapy is appropriate - Most adjuvant drugs are not licensed for this
indication but this is not a barrier to use - Best evidence for amitriptyline as first line
treatment of neuropathic pain - Best evidence for anticonvulsants is for
carbamazepine (unlicenced but need not preclude
use) - The evidence for gabapentin and pregabalin is
limited