Title: PAIN MANAGEMENT IN CHILDREN WITH CANCER
1PAIN MANAGEMENT IN CHILDREN WITH CANCER
- Dr. John J. Collins AM, MB BS, PhD, FFPMANZCA,
FRACP - Head of Department
- Pain Medicine Palliative Care
- The Childrens Hospital at Westmead
- Sydney, Australia
2OBJECTIVES
- DISCUSS
- The symptoms of children with cancer
- Standards for cancer pain management
- Clinical and translational research
- Analgesic prescription at end of life
- Strategies for the management of intractable pain
in children
3PREVALENCE AND CHARACTERISTICS OF SYMPTOMS IN
CHILDREN WITH CANCER AGED 10-18 (n159)
- Degree when symptom was present
- Overall
Intensity Frequency
Distress - Symptom prevalence () Mod-V
Sev () A lot-AA
() QB-VM () - Lack of energy 49.7 61.6
40.9 21.4 - Pain 49.1 80.8
35.9 39.1 - Feeling drowsy 48.4 64.0
34.6 18.6 - Nausea 44.7 65.9
23.0 36.6 - Cough 40.9 47.7
23.0 16.3 - Lack of appetite 39.6 66.3
39.7 35.8 - Feeling sad 35.8 59.6
17.5 39.5 - Feeling nervous 35.8 56.1
28.1 23.7 - Worrying 35.4 66.1
28.6 27.2 - Feeling irritable 34.6 63.6
30.9 34.7 - Percentage moderate to very severe Percentage a
lot to almost always Percentage quite a bit
to very much. - NE, not evaluated
4EXPECTED STANDARDS OF PAEDIATRIC CANCER PAIN
MANAGEMENT
- 1998 WHO monograph Establishing universal
standards, irrespective of cancer treatment
options - 2011 WHO monograph
- The pharmacological management of children with
persisting pain due to medical illness
5EXPECTED STANDARDS FOR ACUTE PAIN MANAGEMENT
- ASSOC. PAEDIATRIC ANAESTHETISTS GREAT BRITAIN
IRELAND www.apagbi.org.uk/docs/APA_Guidelines_on_
Pain_Management.pdf - AMERICAN PAIN SOCIETY
- http//www.ampainsoc.org/advocacy/pediatric2.htm
- AUST. NZ COLLEGE OF ANAESTHETISTS NHMRC
- www.anzca.edu.au/resources/books_and_publications/
acutepain_update.pdf
6EXPECTED INTERNATIONAL NATIONAL STANDARDS for
PROVIDING PALLIATIVE CARE
American Academy of Pediatrics Pediatrics 106
(2) 351-357, 2000 www.palliativecare.org.au
Eur J Pall Care, 2007 14 (3), 109-111
7CLINICAL RESEARCH PAEDIATRIC CANCER PAIN
MANAGEMENT
AUTHOR YEAR OUTCOME TYPE OF STUDY
Collins et al 1998 The epidemiology of intractable pediatric cancer pain Survey
Collins et al 1999 The management of intractable pediatric cancer pain Survey
Collins et al 2000 PCA morphine/hydromorphone for mucositis pain in children with cancer Randomised, 3 period cross-over
Collins et al 2000- 2002 The epidemiology of pain and other symptoms in children with cancer Validation study
Drake et al 2000 Opioid rotation in paediatrics Survey
Friedrichsdorf et al 2005 Breakthrough cancer pain in children Survey
8TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH PAEDIATRIC CANCER PAIN
MANAGEMENT
- Basic sciences have shown cancer induced bone
pain (CIBP) is distinct from other chronic pain
states, such as inflammatory or neuropathic pain -
- A. Delaney, S. M. Fleetwood-Walker, L. A.
Colvin, M. Fallon. British Journal of Anaesthesia
2008 101(1)87-94 - A translational medicine approach may allow
improved understanding of the underlying
mechanisms of CIBP to improve cancer pain
management in children
9TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH PAEDIATRIC CANCER PAIN
MANAGEMENT
- MECHANISMS of CIBP
- Tumour type, site extent of bony destruction
may influence the mechanisms of CIBP - 1. PERIPHERAL FACTORS
- Direct effects -pressure/compression
nerves -sensitization periosteal afferents - -peripheral nerve sensitisation due to
cytokines - -osteoblast inflammatory response ?cytokines
? ?osteoclast activity - ? nerve injury ? PAIN
-
-
10TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH PAEDIATRIC CANCER PAIN
MANAGEMENT
- MECHANISMS of CIBP
- 2. CENTRAL EFFECTS
- Changes in the endogenous opioid system ? mu
opioid receptors in DRG higher doses of opioid
needed - Sensitisation of Wide Dynamic Range (WDR)
neurones in the spinal cord with ?responsiveness
to mechanical thermal stimuli
11COMBINATION ANALGESIC THERAPY
-
- A combination analgesic therapeutic approach to
cancer pain management, may be the most
appropriate approach -
- Gordon-Williams, R.M., Dickenson, A.H. Central
neuronal mechanisms in cancer-induced bone pain. - Curr Opin Support Palliat Care 16-10 2007
12ANALGESIC PRESCRIPTION AT THE END OF LIFE
IN CHILDREN WITH CANCER, 1996
- Conventional analgesic doses and routes is
achievable for the majority of children with
cancer - Approx. 6 of these patients required massive
doses of an opioid infusion - Half required extraordinary analgesic
measures, such as sedation or subarachnoid
infusions - Regional anaesthetic techniques are infrequent
in treating pain at end-of-life for children with
cancer - Collins JJ, Grier HE, Kinney HC, Berde CB.
Control of severe pain in terminal pediatric
malignancy. Journal of Pediatrics 1995
126(4)653-657 - Collins JJ, Grier HE, Sethna NF, Berde CB.
Regional anesthesia for pain associated with
terminal malignancy. Pain 1996 6563-69
13CHANGING MANAGEMENT OF INTRACTABLE PAIN IN
CHILDREN WITH CANCER
- Practice has become more sophisticated, greater
understanding of - 1. Management of the paediatric pain crisis
- 2. Calculation of opioid rescue dosing and
dose escalation - 3. Opioid switching
- 4. Management of opioid side-effects
- 5. NMDA antagonists as new therapeutic options
- 6. Combination analgesic chemotherapy
- 6. Invasive approaches to pain management in
children - Fewer children may need to be sedated to reduce
conscious awareness of intractable symptoms
14THE PAEDIATRIC PAIN CRISIS
- Emergency
- Make a diagnosis
- Titrate incremental intravenous opioid doses
every 10-15 minutes until analgesia effective - Analgesic effect of opioids increase in a
log-linear function, with incremental opioid
dosing required until either analgesia is
achieved or somnolence occurs - Total amount of opioid administered is the
opioid loading dose - A continuous infusion of opioid may need to be
commenced to maintain this level of analgesia - Cherny NI, Foley KM. Nonopioid and opioid
analgesic pharmacotherapy of cancer pain. In
Cherny NI, Foley KM, editors. Hematol Oncol Clin
North Amer. 1996 79-102
15BREAKTHROUGH CANCER PAIN IN CHILDREN
- Breakthough cancer pain in children is
- - severe
- - sudden in onset
- - short-lived
- Unclear what is the best breakthrough dose.
This is probably better determined by the nature
of the pain being treated. - Role of oral opioids??
- Friedrichsdorf, S, Collins JJ. Breakthrough pain
in children with cancer. 200734(2)209-216.Journa
l of Pain and Symptom Management
16OPIOID SWITCHING
- Indication is dose-limiting opioid side-effects
preventing opioid dose escalation - Changing opioids is often accompanied by change
in ratio between analgesia and side-effects, - Following a prolonged period of regular dosing
with one opioid, equivalent analgesia may be
attained with a dose of a second opioid that is
smaller than that calculated from an
equianalgesic table - Galer BS, Coyle N, Pasternak GW, et al.
Individual variability in the response to
different opioids report of five cases. Pain
1992 4987-91 - Portenoy RK. Opioid tolerance and
responsiveness research findings and clinical
observations. In Gebhart GF, Hammond DI, Jensen
TS, editors. Progress in Pain Research and
Management. Seattle IASP Press, 1994 615-619
17OPIOID SWITCHING PAEDIATRIC DATA
- Review of opioid prescriptions in the Oncology
Unit, Childrens Hospital at Westmead - 14 children (n11) had 30 opioid rotations
- Indications
- - opioid side-effects with adequate analgesia
- opioid side-effects with inadequate analgesia
- Outcome Opioid side-effects resolved in 90
cases -
- Drake R, Longworth J, Collins JJ. Opioid
rotation in children with cancer. Journal of
Palliative Medicine 2004 7(3)419-42
18NMDA RECEPTOR ANTAGONISTS
- NMDA- receptor antagonists depress central
sensitisation - Dextromethorphan, dextrorphan, ketamine,
memantine and amantadine have been shown to have
NMDA-receptor antagonist activities - Clinical usefulness is compromised by an adverse
effect to side effect ratio - No data of their utility in paediatrics, other
than procedural pain management - Clinical usage is increasing, particularly in the
setting of severe neuropathic pain and rapid
opioid dose escalation and perceived tolerance - Eide PK, Jorum E, Stubhaug A, et a. Relief of
post-herpetic neuralgia with the
N-methyl-D-aspartic acid receptor antagonist
ketamine a double-blind cross-over comparison
with morphine and placebo. Pain 1994 58347-354 - Persson J, Axelsson G, Hallin RG, et a.
Beneficial effects of ketamine in a chronic pain
state with allodynia. Pain 1995 60217-222 - Nelson KA, Park KM, Robinovitz E, et al. High
dose dextromethorphan versus placebo in painful
diabetic neuropathy and postherpetic neuralgia.
Neurology 1997 481212-1218 - Eisenberg E, Pud D. Can patients with chronic
neuropathic pain be cured by acute administration
of the NMDA-receptor antagonist amantadine? Pain
1994 7437-39
19INVASIVE APPROACHES TO INTRACTABLE PAEDIATRIC
CANCER PAIN
- Anaesthetic approaches
- Experience of regional anaesthesia for children
with intractable pain is limited - Regional anaesthesia may be appropriate in a
highly select subset of children - The indications for regional anaesthesia related
to either dose-limiting side-effects of opioids
or opioid unresponsiveness in patients where pain
was confined to one region of the body - Rapid intravenous opioid dose reduction was
required in some cases - Collins JJ, Grier HE, Sethna NF, Berde CB.
Regional anesthesia for pain associated with
terminal malignancy. Pain 1996 6563-69
20SEDATION AS A THERAPEUTIC MODALITY FOR
REFRACTORY PAIN
- Sedation assumes therapies beyond the
conventional have been utilised and there is no
acceptable means of providing analgesia without
compromising consciousness - Trade-off between sedation and inadequate pain
relief requires the consideration of the wishes
of the child and his or her family - Ethical issues include the principle of double
effect - Continuation of high-dose opioid infusions in
these circumstances is recommended - A variety of drugs have been used in this
setting, including barbiturates, benzodiazepines,
and phenothiazines