Pain Management Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Pain Pract. 2013 Mar;13(3):173-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1533-2500.2012.00575.x. Epub 2012 Jun 11.
Patients with chronic noncancer pain frequently report symptoms of depression and anxiety (negative affect), which are associated with higher ratings of pain intensity and a greater likelihood of being prescribed chronic opioid therapy. The purpose of this secondary analysis was to test the hypothesis that initial levels of negative affect can predict treatment-related outcomes in a double-blind, placebo-controlled study of extended-release (ER) hydromorphone among opioid-tolerant patients with chronic low back pain.
Four hundred fifty-nine (N = 459) patients participated in the titration/conversion phase of a multicenter study, of which 268 were randomized to receive once-daily hydromorphone or placebo. All patients completed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) at baseline and were divided evenly into Low (N = 157), Moderate (N = 155), and High (N = 147) negative affect groups based on their scores. Group differences in numerical pain intensity measures at home and in the clinic, Roland-Morris Disability ratings, and measures of symptoms from the Subjective Opiate Withdrawal Scale (SOWS) throughout the trial were analyzed.
Two hundred sixty-eight of the initial 459 subjects who entered the 2 to 4-week titration/conversion phase (pretreatment) were successfully randomized to either placebo or ER hydromorphone; a total of 110 patients then completed this double-blind phase of the study. Those in the Moderate and High negative affect groups tended to drop out more often during the titration/conversion phase because of the adverse effects or lack of efficacy of their prescribed opioid than those in the Low negative mood group (P < 0.05). Overall, those patients in the Moderate and High groups reported significantly higher pain intensity scores in at-home and in-clinic pain intensity ratings (P < 0.05), greater disability on the Roland-Morris Scale (P < 0.01), and more withdrawal symptoms on the SOWS (P < 0.05) than those in the Low group. Higher negative affect scores also predicted less favorable ratings of the study drug during the titration phase (P < 0.05). Interestingly, the High negative affect group showed the most improvement in pain in the placebo condition (P < 0.05).
Negative affect is associated with diminished benefit during a trial of opioid therapy and is predictive of dropout in a controlled clinical trial.
慢性非癌痛患者常报告抑郁和焦虑(负性情绪)症状,这些症状与更高的疼痛强度评分和更有可能接受慢性阿片类药物治疗相关。本二次分析的目的是检验以下假设,即在一项多中心研究中,对于接受阿片类药物耐受的慢性腰痛患者,使用缓释氢吗啡酮进行双盲、安慰剂对照治疗时,初始负性情绪水平可以预测治疗相关结局。
459 名(N=459)患者参与了一项多中心研究的滴定/转换阶段,其中 268 名患者随机接受每日一次氢吗啡酮或安慰剂治疗。所有患者在基线时均完成医院焦虑和抑郁量表(HADS),并根据其得分均分为低(N=157)、中(N=155)和高(N=147)负性情绪组。分析试验过程中在家中和诊所的数字疼痛强度测量值、Roland-Morris 残疾评分以及主观阿片戒断量表(SOWS)症状测量值的组间差异。
459 名进入 2 至 4 周滴定/转换阶段(治疗前)的初始患者中有 268 名成功随机分为安慰剂或 ER 氢吗啡酮组;共有 110 名患者随后完成了这项双盲研究阶段。与低负性情绪组相比,中、高负性情绪组患者在滴定/转换阶段因不良反应或阿片类药物疗效不佳而更常退出(P<0.05)。总体而言,中、高组患者在家中和诊所疼痛强度评分中报告的疼痛强度评分显著更高(P<0.05),Roland-Morris 量表评分更高(P<0.01),SOWS 上的戒断症状更多(P<0.05)。较高的负性情绪评分也预示着在滴定阶段对研究药物的评价较差(P<0.05)。有趣的是,高负性情绪组在安慰剂条件下疼痛改善最明显(P<0.05)。
负性情绪与阿片类药物治疗试验中的获益减少有关,并可预测对照临床试验中的脱落。