Department of Family Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, 81 Irwon-ro, Gangnam-gu, Seoul, Korea 06351. Email:
Am J Manag Care. 2018 Nov 1;24(11):e338-e343.
A cancer pain clinic (CPC) service is a thorough, comprehensive consultation service for patients with uncontrolled cancer pain. The aim of this study was to determine the success of a new CPC service with enrollment via electronic health record-based automatic screening at 1 cancer center in Korea.
A case-control study and a satisfaction survey.
The intervention group (n = 158) was enrolled in the CPC service, whereas the control group (n = 158), which was matched using propensity scores, did not participate in the service. The pain scores of participants were compared using an independent t test. Thirty-nine patients and 20 physicians completed a self-administered survey on instructions for pain-relief medications, effective usage of long-acting and short-acting opioids, perceptions of or barriers to CPC services, knowledge of opioid use, and overall satisfaction.
Although the baseline pain score of the intervention group was significantly higher than that of the control group (P = .013), the difference in the decrease of pain between the groups was significant at days 1 (P = .001) and 2 (P = .039). Although the difference in pain scores disappeared on day 3, total pain score was significantly lower in the intervention group than in the control group (P = .012). When comparing pain relief events (<4 points on a 0-10 numeric rating scale that measured pain daily), the intervention group experienced more relief events than did controls (P = .017). Patients were satisfied with their physicians giving clear instructions and considering their opinions about pain-relief medications. The oncology residents expressed satisfaction with the management of patients with opioid-naïve or intractable pain.
The new CPC service seems to provide effective pain relief and users seem to be highly satisfied with it. These results support the importance of an integrated and specialized approach to cancer-related pain management.
癌症疼痛诊所(CPC)服务是为未得到有效控制的癌症疼痛患者提供的全面彻底的咨询服务。本研究旨在确定韩国一家癌症中心通过电子病历自动筛查纳入新的 CPC 服务的效果。
病例对照研究和满意度调查。
干预组(n=158)纳入 CPC 服务,而对照组(n=158)通过倾向评分匹配未参与该服务。采用独立 t 检验比较参与者的疼痛评分。39 名患者和 20 名医生完成了一份关于止痛药物使用说明、长效和短效阿片类药物有效使用、对 CPC 服务的看法或障碍、阿片类药物使用知识和总体满意度的自我管理调查问卷。
尽管干预组的基线疼痛评分显著高于对照组(P=0.013),但两组之间疼痛减轻的差异在第 1 天(P=0.001)和第 2 天(P=0.039)有统计学意义。尽管第 3 天疼痛评分差异消失,但干预组的总疼痛评分仍显著低于对照组(P=0.012)。当比较疼痛缓解事件(每日 0-10 数字评分量表上疼痛评分<4 分)时,干预组比对照组经历更多的缓解事件(P=0.017)。患者对医生给予明确的用药指导和考虑他们对止痛药物的意见表示满意。肿瘤学住院医师对管理阿片类药物初治或难治性疼痛患者表示满意。
新的 CPC 服务似乎能提供有效的疼痛缓解,且用户满意度较高。这些结果支持对癌症相关疼痛管理采取综合和专业化方法的重要性。