Department of Health Law, Policy, and Management, Boston University School of Public Health, 715 Albany Street, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.
AIDS Behav. 2023 Oct;27(10):3239-3247. doi: 10.1007/s10461-023-04044-w. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
Chronic pain is common in people living with HIV (PLWH), causes substantial disability and is associated with limitations in daily activities. Opioids are commonly prescribed for pain treatment among PLWH, but evidence of sustained efficacy is mixed. There is little information available on how PLWH who have chronic pain use multimodal strategies in pain management. The current cross-sectional study examined background characteristics, self-reported pain, and the use of other pain treatments among 187 PLWH with chronic pain and depressive symptoms who were and were not prescribed opioids. Approximately 20.9% of participants reported using prescription opioids at the time of the study interview. These individuals were significantly more likely to report having engaged in physical therapy or stretching, strengthening or aerobic exercises in the previous 3 months, recent benzodiazepine use, and receiving disability payments. There were no significant differences in pain characteristics (pain-related interference, average pain severity, and worst pain severity) between the two groups. Those not prescribed opioids were more likely to report better concurrent physical functioning and general health, and fewer physical role limitations, but higher depression symptom severity. Our findings suggest that many PLWH with chronic pain and depressive symptoms express high levels of pain with deficits in physical function or quality of life despite their use of opioids. The high rate of co-use of opioids and benzodiazepines (30.8%) is a concern because it may increase risk of overdose. An integrated care approach that includes a variety of effective non-pharmacologic treatment strategies such as physical therapy may be beneficial in reducing the reliance on opioids for pain management.
慢性疼痛在艾滋病毒感染者(PLWH)中很常见,会导致严重残疾,并与日常活动受限有关。阿片类药物常用于治疗 PLWH 的疼痛,但持续疗效的证据不一。关于慢性疼痛的 PLWH 如何在疼痛管理中使用多模式策略,可用的信息很少。目前这项横断面研究调查了背景特征、自我报告的疼痛以及在 187 名患有慢性疼痛和抑郁症状且未开阿片类药物和开阿片类药物的 PLWH 中使用其他疼痛治疗方法的情况。大约 20.9%的参与者报告在研究访谈时正在使用处方阿片类药物。这些人更有可能报告在过去 3 个月中进行过物理治疗或伸展、强化或有氧运动,最近使用过苯二氮䓬类药物,并领取残疾津贴。两组患者的疼痛特征(疼痛相关干扰、平均疼痛严重程度和最严重疼痛严重程度)没有显著差异。未开阿片类药物的患者更有可能报告同时具有更好的身体功能和总体健康状况,以及较少的身体角色限制,但抑郁症状严重程度更高。我们的研究结果表明,许多患有慢性疼痛和抑郁症状的 PLWH 尽管使用阿片类药物,但仍表达出高水平的疼痛,存在身体功能或生活质量缺陷。阿片类药物和苯二氮䓬类药物(30.8%)的高共同使用率令人担忧,因为这可能会增加过量用药的风险。一种包括各种有效非药物治疗策略的综合护理方法,例如物理治疗,可能有助于减少对阿片类药物的依赖,以进行疼痛管理。