Els Charl, Jackson Tanya D, Hagtvedt Reidar, Kunyk Diane, Sonnenberg Barend, Lappi Vernon G, Straube Sebastian
Department of Psychiatry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Oct 30;10(10):CD012299. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012299.pub2.
Chronic pain is typically described as pain on most days for at least three months. Chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) is any chronic pain that is not due to a malignancy. Chronic non-cancer pain in adults is a common and complex clinical issue where opioids are routinely used for pain management. There are concerns that the use of high doses of opioids for chronic non-cancer pain lacks evidence of effectiveness and may increase the risk of adverse events.
To describe the evidence from Cochrane Reviews and Overviews regarding the efficacy and safety of high-dose opioids (here defined as 200 mg morphine equivalent or more per day) for chronic non-cancer pain.
We identified Cochrane Reviews and Overviews through a search of the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (The Cochrane Library). The date of the last search was 18 April 2017. Two review authors independently assessed the search results. We planned to analyse data on any opioid agent used at high dose for two weeks or more for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain in adults.
We did not identify any reviews or overviews meeting the inclusion criteria. The excluded reviews largely reflected low doses or titrated doses where all doses were analysed as a single group; no data for high dose only could be extracted.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is a critical lack of high-quality evidence regarding how well high-dose opioids work for the management of chronic non-cancer pain in adults, and regarding the presence and severity of adverse events. No evidence-based argument can be made on the use of high-dose opioids, i.e. 200 mg morphine equivalent or more daily, in clinical practice. Trials typically used doses below our cut-off; we need to know the efficacy and harm of higher doses, which are often used in clinical practice.
慢性疼痛通常被描述为多数日子里持续至少三个月的疼痛。慢性非癌性疼痛(CNCP)是指并非由恶性肿瘤引起的任何慢性疼痛。成人慢性非癌性疼痛是一个常见且复杂的临床问题,阿片类药物常被用于疼痛管理。人们担心,使用高剂量阿片类药物治疗慢性非癌性疼痛缺乏有效性证据,且可能增加不良事件风险。
描述Cochrane系统评价和概述中关于高剂量阿片类药物(此处定义为每天200毫克吗啡当量及以上)治疗慢性非癌性疼痛的疗效和安全性的证据。
通过检索Cochrane系统评价数据库(Cochrane图书馆)来识别Cochrane系统评价和概述。最后一次检索日期为2017年4月18日。两名综述作者独立评估检索结果。我们计划分析高剂量使用两周或更长时间的任何阿片类药物治疗成人慢性非癌性疼痛的数据。
我们未识别出任何符合纳入标准的综述或概述。被排除的综述大多反映的是低剂量或滴定剂量,所有剂量作为一个单一组进行分析;无法提取仅关于高剂量的数据。
关于高剂量阿片类药物治疗成人慢性非癌性疼痛的效果如何,以及不良事件的存在和严重程度,严重缺乏高质量证据。在临床实践中,无法基于证据对使用高剂量阿片类药物(即每天200毫克吗啡当量及以上)做出论证。试验通常使用低于我们设定界限的剂量;我们需要了解临床实践中常用的更高剂量的疗效和危害。