University of Wisconsin, Madison, School of Nursing, Madison, WI, United States.
Emeritus, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Department of Educational Psychology, (Serlin), School of Nursing (Ward), Madison, WI, United States.
Pain. 2021 Jun 1;162(6):1840-1847. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002173.
Patient fear of addiction is a well-documented barrier to the use of analgesic medications for cancer pain control. Over the past 2 decades in the United States, an "opioid crisis" has arisen, accompanied by risk messages delivered through news outlets, public health education, and patient-provider communication. The purpose of this study was to determine if patient-related barriers to cancer pain management-specifically, fears of addiction-and related pain outcomes (pain severity, pain interference with daily life, and adequacy of pain management) have worsened over the last 20 years. A sample of 157 outpatients with active recurrent or active metastatic cancer completed the Barriers Questionnaire-II (BQ-II) and measures of pain and analgesic use. We identified 7 comparison studies published between 2002 and 2020 that reported patient-related barriers using the BQ-II. Significant linear relationships were found between later year of publication and greater fear of addiction (harmful effect subscale score, B = 0.0350, R2 = 0.0347, F1,637 = 23.19, P < 0.0001) and between year of publication and more pain management barriers overall (total BQ-II score, B = 0.039, R2 = 0.065, F1,923 = 73.79, P < 0.0001). Relationships between BQ-II scores (harmful effect and total) and pain outcomes did not change over time. Despite worsening in patient-related barriers, the proportion of patients with adequate vs inadequate analgesic use did not differ over time. Notably, 40% of participants reported inadequate analgesic use, a statistic that has not improved in 20 years. Additional research is necessary to clarify factors contributing to changing beliefs. Findings indicate a continuing need for clinical and possibly system/policy-level interventions to support adequate cancer pain management.
患者对成瘾的恐惧是阻碍使用镇痛药控制癌症疼痛的一个众所周知的障碍。在过去的 20 年中,美国出现了一场“阿片类药物危机”,伴随着通过新闻媒体、公共卫生教育和医患沟通传递的风险信息。本研究旨在确定癌症疼痛管理方面的患者相关障碍(具体而言,即对成瘾的恐惧)及其相关疼痛结局(疼痛严重程度、疼痛对日常生活的干扰和疼痛管理的充分性)是否在过去 20 年中恶化。157 名患有活动性复发性或活动性转移性癌症的门诊患者完成了障碍问卷 II(BQ-II)和疼痛及镇痛药使用的测量。我们确定了 7 项发表于 2002 年至 2020 年期间的比较研究,这些研究使用 BQ-II 报告了与患者相关的障碍。研究发现,发表年份与更高的成瘾恐惧之间存在显著的线性关系(有害影响子量表得分,B=0.0350,R2=0.0347,F1,637=23.19,P<0.0001),以及发表年份与整体疼痛管理障碍之间存在显著的线性关系(BQ-II 总分,B=0.039,R2=0.065,F1,923=73.79,P<0.0001)。BQ-II 得分(有害影响和总分)与疼痛结局之间的关系并未随时间而改变。尽管患者相关障碍有所恶化,但在适当与不适当镇痛药物使用方面,患者比例并未随时间而改变。值得注意的是,40%的参与者报告使用了不充分的镇痛药物,这一统计数据在 20 年内并未得到改善。需要进一步的研究来阐明导致信念变化的因素。研究结果表明,需要持续进行临床干预,可能还需要进行系统/政策层面的干预,以支持充分的癌症疼痛管理。