Department of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University, School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
J Pain. 2018 Jan;19(1):46-56. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.08.010. Epub 2017 Sep 21.
Chronic opioid therapy is a common treatment regimen for patients with sickle cell disease (SCD), a chronically painful recessive hemoglobinopathy. The collective risk profile of chronic opioid therapy necessitates an understanding of which pain-related factors, such as affect and pain catastrophizing, are associated with the ebbs and flows of opioid use in daily life, a topic that has received very little attention among patients with any type of chronically painful condition, including SCD. We therefore investigated the variability of day-to-day patterns of short- and long-acting opioid use and their associations with pain and pain-related cognitive and affective processes in daily life among patients with SCD using a nightly electronic diary (N = 45). Opioid use was self-reported and converted into oral morphine equivalents for analysis, which was conducted with mixed effects modeling. Results indicated that greater pain and pain catastrophizing were associated with greater use of short-acting opioids, and negative affect was associated with greater use of long-acting opioids. Additionally, the association of pain and short-acting opioid use was moderated by pain catastrophizing, showing that opioid use was elevated when patients catastrophized about their pain, even if they reported low levels of pain. These findings suggest that monitoring pain-related cognitive and affective variables may be a useful approach to understanding risk for problematic opioid use in patients with daily pain.
The present study shows that pain and pain-related cognitive and affective variables are associated with daily variation in prescription opioid use in SCD. The findings may have broad implications for tracking and defining risk for prescription opioid misuse in patients with daily pain.
慢性阿片类药物治疗是治疗镰状细胞病(SCD)患者的常见治疗方案,SCD 是一种慢性疼痛的隐性血红蛋白病。慢性阿片类药物治疗的集体风险概况需要了解哪些与疼痛相关的因素,如情感和疼痛灾难化,与日常生活中阿片类药物使用的起伏有关,而这个话题在任何类型的慢性疼痛患者中,包括 SCD 患者中,都很少受到关注。因此,我们使用夜间电子日记(N=45)调查了 SCD 患者日常生活中短时间和长效阿片类药物使用的日常变化模式及其与疼痛和与疼痛相关的认知和情感过程的可变性。阿片类药物的使用是自我报告的,并转换为口服吗啡当量进行分析,分析采用混合效应模型进行。结果表明,疼痛和疼痛灾难化程度越大,使用短效阿片类药物的可能性就越大,而负性情绪与长效阿片类药物的使用量增加有关。此外,疼痛和短效阿片类药物使用的相关性受疼痛灾难化的调节,表明即使患者报告疼痛水平较低,但如果对疼痛产生灾难化的想法,阿片类药物的使用就会增加。这些发现表明,监测与疼痛相关的认知和情感变量可能是了解日常疼痛患者阿片类药物使用问题风险的有用方法。
本研究表明,疼痛和与疼痛相关的认知和情感变量与 SCD 中处方阿片类药物的日常使用变化有关。这些发现可能对跟踪和定义日常疼痛患者处方阿片类药物滥用风险具有广泛的意义。