Case Study in Neuropathic Pain
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Transcript Case Study in Neuropathic Pain
June 3, 2009
Palliative Care Team
Drs. St. Godard, Loiselle, Hohl and Pilkey
Objectives
By the end of the hour the learner will be able to:
Define neuropathic pain
List at least 2 types of Pain receptors
List at least 4 different types of adjuvant pain
medications
List the mechanisms of action, benefits, and side-effects
of these 4 medications
List 2 new/different adjuvant pain medications
Talk Outline
Case Study – Dr. Ted St. Godard & Dr. Joel Loiselle
Pathophysiology of Neuropathic Pain – Dr. Jana Pilkey
Adjuvant Medications – Dr. Chris Hohl
What’s new/different in Neuropathic Pain – Dr. Jana Pilkey
History
Ms. G. D.
55 y.o with breast cancer
Mets to bone
Pain to left arm
History
2 week hx of worsening pain
Mid back – dull ache, Pressure
Burning to L hand and arm
Since 1997
brachial plexus neuropathy
“Pins and needles”
“Like dipped in acid”
Morphine for 4 weeks not helping
Cancer History
Breast cancer dx 1997
Lumpectomy, tamoxifen x 2 yrs
Mastectomy 1999 and LN dissection
Oophorectomy 1999
Multiple courses of chemo
2008- mets to c-spine, ribs, sternum.
Sept 2008 – Rx to spine
Phx: PUD
Physical Exam & Investigations
Temp 37.2
Hr 100
Rr 18
Sao2 – 90% on RA
BP 150/88
Lab work normal throughout
Course in Hospital
Admission orders:
Methadone 5mg bid
Dex 10mg bid
Pariet 20mg po od
Dilaudid 8 mg subcut q4h and q1prn
Fentanyl 50 per IPP
Course in Hospital
Dec 30
Myoclonus noticed – hydrated
Rotated to fentanyl patch
Methadone increased
Jan 14
CT head – mets to R cerebellum and R frontal lobe
Pain better- on methadone 40 bid, dex 8 bid
Starts 12 rdtx to whole brain
Course in Hospital
Jan 27 Pain Crisis
Severe excruciating burning pain
From neck to top of R shoulder
Crying, screaming
BT HM ineffective
Slept with 5mg versed
Methadone increased
Ketamine added 2.5 mg subcut tid
Pregabalin added 50mg bid
Lidocaine 2% gel to shoulder qid prn
Potentially useful Peripheral
Nerve Block in this Case
Interscalene block
-Performed at root level
-“Single shot” -only lasts 12 h.
-Catheter techniques difficult to
maintain (displacement).
-Disease extent limits anesthetic flow.
-Risk of bleeding /epidural hematoma
is prohibitive in this case.
Neuraxial (Intraspinal) blocks
Epidural:
comparable to bilateral
peripheral nerve block
catheter outside dura
would be placed at C7/T1
Intrathecal = Spinal
catheter enters CSF in
lumbar cistern
can be guided to high
thoracic level as required
for upper limb pain
Contraindications to Neuraxial
Analgesia in this Case
- Extent of Disease involving C-spine:
- Risk of epidural hematoma if needle at C7-T1.
- Poor CSF flow impedes spread of analgesics
- Brain Metastasis:
- Posterior Fossa- increased risk of “coning”
- Relative contraindication
Remember coagulopathy (Plt <100; INR >1.3) and need
for ongoing anticoagulation are contraindications.
Course in Hospital
Consult to Dr J. Loiselle
Nerve-block or epidural too risky given fragility of spine
and cerebellar mets
Jan 28
Pain continues
On Methadone 60mg bid
Starts fentanyl 50mcg/hr IV
HM stopped – twitching
Ketamine 5 mg subcut tid
Course in Hospital
Jan 28
Family concerned about sedation on fentanyl
Jan 29
RR 7 - fentanyl stopped, Pain again severe
Fentanyl IV not restarted at family request
Ativan started
Jan 30 – Mini Case conference
Ketamine IV @ 2.5mg/hr
Gabapentin being lowered
Course in Hospital
Jan 31-Feb 5 – good pain control
Feb 6 – weepy and tired, pain with movement
Feb 9 – increase in ketamine IV 3.52mg/hr
Feb 13 – increase in ketamine IV 6mg/hr
Feb 17 – decrease po intake – deteriorating – ketamine
7.5mg/hr
Course in Hospital
Feb 19 – pt wishes she could sleep until death
– tired of trying to “hold the pain in”
Feb 23 – unresponsive
Feb 26 – prognosis hrs to days/ discussed sedation
Feb 28 – difficulty maintaining sedation
Mar 4 – died sedated and comfortable
What is Neuropathic Pain?
Pain initiated or caused by a primary lesion or
dysfunction in the nervous system
Characterized by :
Burning, Tingling, Electric ,Shooting Pain
Pain Receptors
A delta
Mechanical sensation eg. Cut, prick
C fibres
Diffuse, respond to many stimuli
Burning sensation
Sleeping receptors
Active in injured tissue only
Acquire mechanical sensitivity
(Almeida 2004)
Nociceptors
Damaged tissue releases:
Serotonin, Substance P,
Bradykinin, Prostaglandin
Involved in acute & chronic pain
Influenced by endorphins
Sensitization
Can be a tissue level (primary) or
At CNS level (secondary)
Results in:
threshold of activation after injury
intensity of a response to a noxious stimulus
emergence of spontaneous activity
(Aguggia 2003)
Sensitization
Primary sensitization
Sympathetic activity and Inflammatory Mediators
(Chong 2003)
Secondary sensitization
CNS changes in spinal cord and brain
NMDA receptors activated
“Wind-up” = increased amplitude and frequency summation
in neurons after prolonged stimulation
(Chong 2003)
Blocked by NMDA antagonists, anti-inflammatories
(McHugh 2000)
The Dorsal Root Ganglion
Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs)
40-60% efficacy for partial relief (NNT~2.5-3)
Start 10-25 mg/d and 10-25mg each week
Best effects: 50-150 mg/day
Mechanism:
NE & 5HT reuptake blockade
+/- NMDA antagonism,
+/- Na channel blockade
Anticholinergic effects
Secondary amine better tolerated
Selective Serotonin-Norepinephrine
Reuptake Inhibitors (SNRIs)
Duloxetine
Venlafaxine
NNT ~4-5 (~7 for SSRI)
Start 37.5 mg/day
Start & efficacious @ 60mg/day Increase by 37.5 mg weekly
Effective @ 150-225 mg/d
Antidepressant & anxiolytic
Favorable side effect profile
Limited long term data
Lower doses – results
inconsistent
Short vs XR preps
ά2-δ Ligands (Gabapentinoids)
Bind to ά2-δ subunit of voltage gated Ca channels
glutamate, NE, substance P release
NNT ~3.5-4.5
Gabapentin
Pregabalin
No drug interactions
Similar side effects to gaba
Start 50-150mg divided Q8-12H
Few drug interactions
Dizziness & sleepiness
Exacerbate cognitive impairment
Start 100-300mg TID
Titrate to 1800-3600 mg/d
Peak effect in >2 weeks
Titrate 50-150mg/day weekly
Goal 300-600 mg/d in 1-2 weeks
Peak effect in 2 weeks
Opioids
20-30% pain reduction, NNT ~2.5
Provides rapid relief
Rapid titration
No ceiling effect
Multiple forms & delivery methods
More side effects than 1st line
treatments
Risk of misuse and abuse (5%)
Methadone
μ-receptor agonist + NMDA antagonist
Very long half-life, variable in individuals
Slow titration:
start 2.5mg TID
Increase 50-100% every 48-72 hours
~5:1 to ~30:1 morphine equivalency (depending on dose)
Little literature support, ++ practical support
NMDA Antagonists
Ketamine
Start 2.5-5mg PO TID
Titrate by 50-100% dose to 1-2 mg/kg/day
Start IV infusion @ 0.05-0.1mg/kg/hr
IV bolus @ 0.1-0.2 mg/kg/dose over 20 minutes
No NNT data
Poor performance in studies, good efficacy in practice
Topical or gargle preparations possible
*opioid sparing effects
Other/New Things to Try
IV Lidocaine And po Mexilitine
Cochrane Review 2005
Good quality evidence in neuropathic pain
Both decrease VAS by 11 on 1-100 scale
47% of people in trials had a 30% decrease in pain
(22% in placebo)
35% had Side –effects
Numbness, dizziness, fatigue, metallic taste
Authors conclude similar efficacy to other adjuvants and
good safety profile
Other/New Things to Try
Capsaicin – High dose patch in PHN (640mcg/cm2)
1 – 60 min application
Lasts up to 12 weeks
Mean decrease in pain score of 29.6%
Side-effects – Pain and erythema at site
(Backonja – Lancet Neurology, 2008)
Cannabis – Sativex - Neuropathic pain with Allodynia
Improvements of 1.43 on 10 point VAS
Good safety profile – SE include GI upset & drowsiness
(Nurmikko – Pain 2007)
Other/New Things to Try
Intrathecal Ziconotide
N-type Ca Channel blocker (NCCB)
Median dose 6.48mcg/day
Improved VASPI scores in 53.1%
Decreased opioid usage in 9%
Very expensive
Side Effects:
Memory loss, dizziness, nystagmus, somnolence, gait, CK rise
(Pommer - J Pain Symptom – 2009)
A Comparison of Adjuvants
Drug
NNT Titration
Notes
Side Effects
TCA
2.5-3
2-15 wks
Antidepressant, cheap
Anticholinergic
Duloxetine
4-5
none
Anxiolytic, antidepressant
few
Venlafaxine
4-5
3-5 wks
Antidepressant
few
Gabapentin
3.5-4.5
1.5-6 mo
Min drug interactions
Dizzy/sleepy
Pregabalin
3.5-4.5
1-2 wks
Min drug interactions
Dizzy/sleepy
Methadone
?
variable
Opioid, cheap
Opioid, drug interactions
Ketamine
?
1-4 wks
Opioid sparing
Hallucinations
Tramadol
3.8
4-8 wks
For Diabetes, PHN
Anticholinergic
Carbamezapine
1.7
1-4 wks
For Trigeminal neuralgia
Drug interactions
Lidocaine/Mexilitine
4
none
IV trial then po
Cardiac, neurologic
Capsaicin
?
none/days
Topical
Burning, redness
Cannabinoids
?
none/days
For MS, allodynia
GI, drowsiness
Clonidine
?
none/days
Effective IT, topical
Hypotension
Summary/Objectives
By the end of the hour the learner will be able to:
Define neuropathic pain
List at least 2 types of Pain receptors
List at least 4 different types of adjuvant pain
medications
List the mechanisms of action, benefits, and side-effects
of these 4 medications
List 2 new/different adjuvant pain medications
Recommended References
1.
2.
3.
Cruccum, G. Treatment of painful neuropathy. Current Opions
in Neurology. 2007; 20; 531-535.
Dworkin, R. et al. Pharmacologic management of neuropathic
pain: evidence-based recommendations. Pain. 2007; 132; 237-251.
Gilron, I. et al. Neuropathic pain: a practical guide for the
clinician. CMAJ. 2006; 175(3); 265-275.