Title: Pharmaceutical Care of people with Chronic Pain
1Pharmaceutical Care of people with Chronic Pain
- Deborah Paton
- Lead Pharmacist Pain Management NHS Fife
- NHS Fife
2Objectives
- To provide an overview of the aetiology and
therapeutic management of chronic pain - Identify the key pharmaceutical care issues of
people with chronic pain - Explore ways of positively impacting on the care
of this patient group
3What causes pain?
- Trauma/ injury initiates immediate nerve impulses
to brain - Injury to cells result in chemical release
- H
- K
- Substance P
- Bradykinin
- 5HT
- Phospholipids ?Prostaglandins
- Blood vessels leak resulting in inflammation
- Stimulate C-fibres (slow response)
4Pain Pathway
5Nerve Fibres
- ?? ( A delta)
- Myelinated
- Fast conductors
- Gentle pressure and pain
- ?? (A beta)
- Thinner but still myelinated
- Fast conductors
- Heavy pressure temp
- C - very thin
- Slow conductors
- PAIN, Pressure, temp chemicals
6Categorisation of pain
7Different types of pain
Nociceptive descriptors Neuropathic descriptors
Cramping, tender Shooting
Gnawing, heavy Hot-burning
Aching Sharp
Splitting Stabbing
8Acute Pain
- Essential biological response to injury
- Last a short time lt1month
- Associated with anxiety and hyperactivity of
sympathetic nervous system
9Chronic Pain
- Pain persisting/recurring for gt3months after
acute injury - Associated with changes in structure and
operation of central - nervous system
- Cognitive control-behavioural models important
- Pain assessment is essential component of
management
10Chronic Pain in Scotland (2004 Foster Project)
- Prevalence of 18 of the population
- How many patients do you see as a pharmacist with
chronic pain? - What medications have been tried out with these
patients - Few Primary Care Organisation (PCOs) provide
guidance for medication management of
non-malignant chronic pain. - Only 33 PCOs operate a formal/structured service
for chronic pain management in primary care
11Pain Assessment
- Severity
- Location
- Duration
- Intensity
- Periods of remission and degree of fluctuation
- Exacerbating relieving factors
- Response to treatment
- Psychological factors
- Sociological factors
12Pain Assessment
- gt Individualised- what does it mean to the
patient? - gt Subjective
- gt Quality of Life- pain diaries
- gt Identify neuropathic elements
- gt Identify safety issues
13Pain Management-Principles of Treatment
- - By the Mouth
- - By the Clock
- - By the Ladder
- - Individualised treatment
- - Patient involvement goal setting gt they
manage pain not the reverse
14WHO 3 step ladder
15Analgesic medication key points
- Paracetamol round the clock explore and
dispel fears of safety or ineffectiveness - Codeine-15 unable to metabolise - add in doses
of - 30 mg codeine or 30mg dihydrocodeine if
necessary using lower doses not supported by
evidence. - Note need for laxative at therapeutic doses of
opioids - Separate agents are recommended gt allows
flexibility and self management
16NSAIDs
- NSAIDs always consider is there an active
indication e.g. is inflammation present in OA? - Full inflammatory effect can take 2-4 weeks 60
will benefit from first choice-has there been an
appropriate trial? - Lowest effective dose in pulse or prn basis where
possible - Is there a risk of GI bleed? If yes review
continued need and consider gastroprotectant
17NSAIDs Risks
- Over 20 of drug related hospital admissions are
due to NSAIDs - Absolute risk over 65 years, previous GI bleed,
previous peptic ulcer-aide memoir - Risk with increasing dose, type and duration of
therapy, age, concurrent medication and
co-morbidities - - 50-60 of people who will have GI bleed are
asymptomatic before presentation
18NSAIDs vs COX IIs
- gt NSAIDs Cox IIs equally effective
- gt Cox-II better tolerated but not safer (CV risk)
- gt NSAID plus gastro-protectant equally effective
at reducing ulcers/bleeds - gt Similar non GI risks risk of PPI increase in
infection rate? - gt NSAID plus aspirin-if pain control required
consider non-NSAID, in presence of inflammation
or if required for long term use add PPI- - gt Avoid Cox-IIs plus aspirin negation of GI
benefit - this is under review.
19Neuropathic painAdjuvant Analgesics
Antidepressants
- Tricyclic antidepressants
- Amitriptyline/ Nortriptyline/ Clomipramine
- Unlicensed use
- Beneficial in neuropathic burning pain
- SNRI
- Duloxetine/ Venlafaxine
- Unlicensed use
- Improves mood and increases Serotonin
Noradrenaline at synapses - SSRI- no real evidence
- Fluoxetine/ paroxetine
- Unlicensed use
- Improves mood and increases Serotonin at synapses
20Adjuvant Analgesics Anticonvulsants
- Carbamazepine Valproate useful in shooting
pain indications - (e.g. trigeminal neuralgia)
- Gabapentin / Pregabalin
- - Acts centrally, GABA analogue
- - Slow titration, particularly in elderly
21Adjuvant Analgesics Corticosteroids
- Prednisolone dexamethasone
- Used to control inflammation where NSAIDs
insufficient e.g. Rheumatoid conditions - Intra-articular route may give relief for a few
months
22Topical products
- -Topical NSAIDs v Rubefacients was previously
contentious - - Some evidence to suggest Topical NSAIDs useful
in small joint inflammation - - Stimulate A? fibres increasing inhibitory
response? - - Counter irritant
- - Capsaicin, derived from chilli peppers useful
in diabetic neuropathy and OA
23Osteoarthritis
- Active disease (inflammation), not just wear
tear - Degenerative disorder of cartilage and bone
- Age, obesity genetics related
- Affects 50 of population gt60yrs
- - Diagnosed through x-ray or arthroscopy
24Osteoarthritis
- - Aim of treatment is pain relief mobilisation
- - Regular simple analgesics particularly
paracetamol - - NSAIDs-caution in long-term use
- - Intra-articular steroids
- - Weight reduction
- - Joint replacement
25Rheumatoid Arthritis
- - Chronic disabling systemic disease
- - Often affects symmetrical peripheral joints
- - Can affect all ages
- - Auto-immune disease
- - Diagnosed through symptoms, blood tests
(ESR,RF,CRP) and X-rays - - Flares relapses
26Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Treatment aims
- Pain inflammation relief
- Preserve joint damage
- Preserve / improve joint function
- Treatment
- DMARDs
- NSAIDs
- Simple analgesics
- Systemic steroids
27Pharmaceutical care issues Understanding and
compliance are they taking it if not why not?
- Fear of hidden long term risk
- Fear of becoming immune to effects over time
- Fear of addiction
- Previous experience of ADR or sub-optimal therapy
- Patient beliefs
- Misunderstanding of benefits or how medication
works
28Effectiveness and safety
- - Use of Pain diaries and pain scores
- - Optimising timing frequency and dose
- - Identifying undiagnosed neuropathic element
- - Activities and time when pain is worse
- - History of ulcer or gastric bleed
- - Reviewing continued need for NSAID
- - Co-morbidity-CVD, hypertension
- - Confirm co-prescribing or buying of medications
that may increase risk - - Enquire if they are experiencing side-effects
29Self-help
- Encourage exercise e.g. Walking and tai chi
- Self-help e.g. Pain Association
- Acupuncture, acupressure are helpful-TENS
machines
30Pharmaceutical Care Model Schemes Chronic Pain
Project n41-medication
- NSAID 26 (63)
- Cox 11 3 (7)
- Paracetamol 7 (17) !!!!
- Co-codamol 18 (44)
- Co-dydramol 5 (12)
- Strong opioid 14 (34)
- Neuropathic 9 (22)
31Continued prescribed
- 73 had pain for more than 5 years
- 7(17) used neuropathic pain descriptors but
were not prescribed medication to manage this - 16 (44) described their pain as severe and often
or continuous - 14 (34) were purchasing OTC painkillers
32Continued
- 9 (22) prescribed NSAID reported having an ulcer
or gastric symptoms, only 5 out of the 9 were
co-prescribed a gastro-protectant - 25 (61) reported side-effects,mainly
constipation and GI - 11 referrals were made and 7 referrals were taken
forward-unclear if people at GI risk or
experiencing neuropathic pain were referred.
33Continued-Care issues
- 10 (24) understanding of medication-fear of
adverse effects or taking combining pain killers - 15 (37) optimising dose, frequency or timing of
analgesia-before activity etc - 2 (5) reducing risk advising not to take OTC
purchases or person taking excessive amounts - 8 (20) advised use of pain diary and follow up
34Why get involved?
- Out of the six PCMS Chronic condition projects
this group - were most supportive of the pharmacists current
role and - wanted more help-they highlighted
- Friendly and give good advice- side effects
- Provide good information and explain dosage
- Better than some GPs
- Would like more monitoring and follow up along
with GPs-as they see pharmacist more often
35Continued Professional DevelopmentgtImplementing
the Pharmaceutical Care Needs Assessment Chronic
Pain
- Who will you target?
- - Compound analgesics
- - People unsatisfied with their pain control
- - People over 65 on NSAIDs, with or without
gastro-protection - - Cardiovascular patient on COX-II/NSAID
- - Anyone that comes in during a quiet moment
- - 19 patients involved in focus groups completed
the PCNA on their own within 10 minutes-this can
be done while they are waiting for prescriptions
36Continued Professional Development
- - Plan and record
- - What did you learn tonight-what are the gaps?
- - How will you meet the gaps?
- - What is happening locally in relation to
effective pain management? - - How and when will you find out?
- - Ideal therapeutic area for pharmacist
prescribing
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