Williamson Owen D, Schroer Melissa, Ruff Dustin D, Ahl Jonna, Margherita Anthony, Sagman Doron, Wohlreich Madelaine M
JPOCSC Pain Management Clinic, Fraser Health Authority, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada; Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Mercy Health, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Clin Ther. 2014 Apr 1;36(4):544-51. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2014.02.009. Epub 2014 Mar 17.
Knowing when to change pain-medication strategy is not well researched and remains a gap in treating chronic pain.
Our aim was to determine how long to treat osteoarthritis (OA) knee pain and chronic low back pain (CLBP) with duloxetine before considering a change in medication strategy.
We employed a post hoc analysis of changes in pain-severity data from placebo-controlled studies of duloxetine treatment in nondepressed patients with OA knee pain and CLBP. The studies were selected for inclusion in the analyses based on similarity of study design. Pain severity was recorded daily in patient diaries using an ordinal 11-point numerical rating scale (0 = no pain to 10 = most severe pain). The weekly means of the daily 24-hour average pain severity ratings from these diaries were pooled within disease states. Moderate response was defined as at least a 30% reduction from baseline in pain severity, and minimal improvement was defined as <10% reduction from baseline. The probability of achieving at least moderate pain reduction during 3 months treatment with duloxetine was estimated by Kaplan-Meier methods in patients with no or minimal improvement after 2, 4, and 6 weeks of treatment, as well as in all patients who had not yet achieved a moderate response (<30% reduction in pain severity).
There were 239 OA patients and 541 CLBP patients who were randomly assigned to treatment with duloxetine 60/120 mg/d. OA and CLBP patients with minimal improvement at 2 weeks of treatment had <40% probability of achieving a moderate response, and at 4 weeks of treatment their chances were reduced to <30% in OA patients and <25% in CLBP patients. In patients showing <30% improvement at week 2 of treatment, OA patients had a 62% probability of achieving a moderate response, and CLBP patients had a 52% probability for a moderate response, and at 4 weeks of treatment, their chances were reduced to <50% in OA patients and <40% in CLBP patients.
Patients taking duloxetine for OA or CLBP who have <10% reduction in pain after 4 weeks of treatment have limited possibility for eventually achieving even moderate pain reduction by the end of 12 weeks. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00433290, NCT00408421, NCT00424593, NCT00408876, NCT00767806.
何时改变疼痛治疗策略尚未得到充分研究,仍是慢性疼痛治疗中的一个空白。
我们的目的是确定在考虑改变药物治疗策略之前,用度洛西汀治疗骨关节炎(OA)膝关节疼痛和慢性下腰痛(CLBP)需要多长时间。
我们对度洛西汀治疗非抑郁性OA膝关节疼痛和CLBP患者的安慰剂对照研究中的疼痛严重程度数据变化进行了事后分析。根据研究设计的相似性选择研究纳入分析。使用11点有序数字评定量表(0 = 无疼痛至10 = 最严重疼痛)在患者日记中每日记录疼痛严重程度。这些日记中每日24小时平均疼痛严重程度评分的每周平均值在疾病状态内进行汇总。中度反应定义为疼痛严重程度较基线至少降低30%,最小改善定义为较基线降低<10%。在治疗2、4和6周后无改善或改善最小的患者以及所有尚未达到中度反应(疼痛严重程度降低<30%)的患者中,采用Kaplan-Meier方法估计在度洛西汀治疗3个月期间实现至少中度疼痛减轻的概率。
有239例OA患者和541例CLBP患者被随机分配接受度洛西汀60/120 mg/d治疗。治疗2周时改善最小的OA和CLBP患者实现中度反应的概率<40%,治疗4周时,OA患者的机会降至<30%,CLBP患者降至<25%。在治疗第2周时改善<30%的患者中,OA患者实现中度反应的概率为62%,CLBP患者为52%,治疗4周时,OA患者的机会降至<50%,CLBP患者降至<40%。
服用度洛西汀治疗OA或CLBP的患者在治疗4周后疼痛减轻<10%,最终在12周结束时实现即使是中度疼痛减轻的可能性有限。ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT00433290、NCT00408421、NCT00424593、NCT00408876、NCT00767806。