Siebenhuener Klarissa, Eschmann Emmanuel, Kienast Alexander, Schneider Dominik, Minder Christoph E, Saller Reinhard, Zimmerli Lukas, Blaser Jürg, Battegay Edouard, Holzer Barbara M
Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Center of Competence Multimorbidity, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 3;12(1):e0168987. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0168987. eCollection 2017.
Chronic pain is common in multimorbid patients. However, little is known about the implications of chronic pain and analgesic treatment on multimorbid patients. This study aimed to assess chronic pain therapy with regard to the interaction potential in a sample of inpatients with multiple chronic conditions.
We conducted a retrospective study with all multimorbid inpatients aged ≥18 years admitted to the Department of Internal Medicine of University Hospital Zurich in 2011 (n = 1,039 patients). Data were extracted from the electronic health records and reviewed. We identified 433 hospitalizations of patients with chronic pain and analyzed their combinations of chronic conditions (multimorbidity). We then classified all analgesic prescriptions according to the World Health Organization (WHO) analgesic ladder. Furthermore, we used a Swiss drug-drug interactions knowledge base to identify potential interactions between opioids and other drug classes, in particular coanalgesics and other concomitant drugs. Chronic pain was present in 38% of patients with multimorbidity. On average, patients with chronic pain were aged 65.7 years and had a mean number of 6.6 diagnoses. Hypertension was the most common chronic condition. Chronic back pain was the most common painful condition. Almost 90% of patients were exposed to polypharmacotherapy. Of the chronic pain patients, 71.1% received opioids for moderate to severe pain, 43.4% received coanalgesics. We identified 3,186 potential drug-drug interactions, with 17% classified between analgesics (without coanalgesics).
Analgesic drugs-related DDIs, in particular opioids, in multimorbid patients are often complex and difficult to assess by using DDI knowledge bases alone. Drug-multimorbidity interactions are not sufficiently investigated and understood. Today, the scientific literature is scarce for chronic pain in combination with multiple coexisting medical conditions and medication regimens. Our work may provide useful information to enable further investigations in multimorbidity research within the scope of potential interactions and chronic pain.
慢性疼痛在患有多种疾病的患者中很常见。然而,关于慢性疼痛和镇痛治疗对患有多种疾病的患者的影响,我们知之甚少。本研究旨在评估针对患有多种慢性疾病的住院患者样本中的相互作用潜力的慢性疼痛治疗。
我们对2011年苏黎世大学医院内科收治的所有年龄≥18岁的患有多种疾病的住院患者进行了一项回顾性研究(n = 1039例患者)。数据从电子健康记录中提取并进行审查。我们确定了433例患有慢性疼痛的患者的住院情况,并分析了他们的慢性疾病组合(多种疾病并存)。然后,我们根据世界卫生组织(WHO)镇痛阶梯对所有镇痛处方进行分类。此外,我们使用瑞士药物 - 药物相互作用知识库来识别阿片类药物与其他药物类别之间的潜在相互作用,特别是辅助镇痛药和其他伴随用药。38%的患有多种疾病的患者存在慢性疼痛。慢性疼痛患者的平均年龄为65.7岁,平均诊断数为6.6个。高血压是最常见的慢性疾病。慢性背痛是最常见的疼痛状况。几乎90%的患者接受了多种药物治疗。在慢性疼痛患者中,71.1%因中度至重度疼痛接受了阿片类药物治疗,43.4%接受了辅助镇痛药治疗。我们确定了3186种潜在的药物 - 药物相互作用,其中17%归类于镇痛药之间(不包括辅助镇痛药)。
在患有多种疾病的患者中,与镇痛药相关的药物 - 药物相互作用,特别是阿片类药物,通常很复杂,仅使用药物 - 药物相互作用知识库很难评估。药物与多种疾病并存之间的相互作用尚未得到充分研究和理解。目前,关于慢性疼痛与多种并存医疗状况和药物治疗方案相结合方面的科学文献很少。我们的工作可能会提供有用的信息,以便在潜在相互作用和慢性疼痛范围内对多种疾病并存的研究进行进一步调查。