Title: Educational interventions for cancer pain
1Educational interventions for cancer pain
- Mike Bennett
- St Gemmas Professor of Palliative Medicine
- University of Leeds, UK
2How good is cancer pain management?
3WHO ladder for cancer pain
4Effectiveness of the ladder as a wholeEarly
evidence
- Many observational studies 1985-90
- Reported proportion of patients that achieved
adequate control - 3220 patients studied
- 2361 (73) achieved control
- One study documented pain scores
- 1229 patients mean reduction in pain intensity
gt65 - Ventafridda et al 1987
- Around 25 of patients do not get adequate pain
control
5Prevalence
- Systematic reviews
- 48 of patients with early stage cancer
- 59 undergoing cancer treatment
- 64-75 with advanced disease
- Hearn and Higginson 2003
- Van den Beuken-van Everdingen et al 2007
- Surveys (n5000)
- 72 of European community patients
- 77 in UK
- Breivik et al 2009
6Severity
- Secondary care settings (n349)
- Using 0-10 rating scale (0no pain, 10worst)
- Average pain mean 3.7
- Worst pain mean 4.8
- Two thirds of patients rate greater than 5/10
- Klepstad et al 2002, Yates et al 2002
- Community settings (n617 in UK)
- Average pain 6.4
- 90 rated greater than 5/10
- 25 not receiving any analgesia
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8VOICES data 2011
9Prescribing data
- Pain Management Index
- indicates appropriateness of analgesic
prescription in relation to level of pain - negative score suggests under treatment
- Review of 26 studies
- Prevalence of negative PMI in 8 - 82 populations
studied - weighted mean 43
- nearly 1 in 2 patients were undertreated
- Deandrea et al Ann Onc 2008
10Will a better opioid or more knowledge of
genetics solve the problem alone?
11What are the problems?
12Barriers to good cancer pain control
13Key barriers
- Patients and carers
- reluctant to complain about symptoms
- fear pain and dont know how to get help
- lack knowledge about strong opioid analgesia
- fear adverse effects leading to poor adherence.
- Healthcare professionals
- fail to assess pain adequately
- reluctant to prescribe and monitor effective
analgesia - provide insufficient education to promote
self-management - Healthcare systems
- fail to recognise patients with cancer pain
- communicate data on pain ineffectively
- prevent patients receiving timely analgesia
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19Educational interventions
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21Improving knowledge
- Classroom approaches for professionals
- significant benefits on knowledge
- ..but moderately strong evidence that there is no
impact on patient outcomes - No clear changes in professional behaviours
22Patient satisfaction
- Associated with these behaviours
- Physician stating importance of pain control
- Receiving instructions to manage pain at home
- Managing side effects
- Allaying fears about addiction
- Dawson R, Spross JA, Jablonski ES, Hoyer DR,
Sellers DE, Solomon MZ. Probing the paradox of
patients' satisfaction with inadequate pain
management. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2002
Mar23(3)211-20 - Reid CM, Gooberman-Hill R, Hanks GW. Opioid
analgesics for cancer pain symptom control for
the living or comfort for the dying? A
qualitative study to investigate the factors
influencing the decision to accept morphine for
pain caused by cancer. Ann Oncol 200819(1)44-8.
23Assessment
- Pain outcomes significantly improved with
- Pain assessment presented to clinicians who use
it in consultations - (assessment alone doesnt help)
- Trowbridge R, Dugan W, Jay SJ, Littrell D,
Casebeer LL, Edgerton S, Anderson J, O'Toole JB.
Determining the effectiveness of a
clinical-practice intervention in improving the
control of pain in outpatients with cancer. Acad
Med 199772(9)798-800. - Â
- Velikova G, Booth L, Smith AB, Brown PM, Lynch P,
Brown JM, Selby PJ. Measuring quality of life in
routine oncology practice improves communication
and patient well-being a randomized controlled
trial. J Clin Oncol. 2004 Feb 1522(4)714-24.
24Management
- Pain outcomes significantly improved with
- use of specific prescribing guidelines by
clinicians - Du Pen SL, Du Pen AR, Polissar N, Hansberry J,
Kraybill BM, Stillman M, Panke J, Everly R,
Syrjala K. Implementing guidelines for cancer
pain management results of a randomized
controlled clinical trial. J Clin Oncol
199917(1)361-70. - Â
- Cleeland CS, Portenoy RK, Rue M, Mendoza TR,
Weller E, Payne R, Kirshner J, Atkins JN, Johnson
PA, Marcus A. Does an oral analgesic protocol
improve pain control for patients with cancer? An
intergroup study coordinated by the Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group. Ann Oncol.
200516(6)972-80.
25Patient barriers to good pain control
- Poor knowledge and attitudes associated with
- Reluctance to start opioids
- Poor medication adherence
- Higher pain intensity
- Gunnarsdottir S, Donovan HS, Serlin RC, Voge C,
Ward S. Patient-related barriers to pain
management the Barriers Questionnaire II
(BQ-II). Pain 2002 99(3)385-96. - Â
- Valeberg BT, Miaskowski C, Hanestad BR, Bjordal
K, Paul S, Rustøen T. Demographic, clinical, and
pain characteristics are associated with average
pain severity groups in a sample of oncology
outpatients. J Pain 20089(10)873-82.
26Educational interventions
27Interventions
- Explained causes of pain and promoted self
management - Addressed common fears about opioids
- Usually face-to-face coaching session combined
with written information
28Pain intensity
Average pain intensity
-1.1 -1.80, -0.41
Maximum pain intensity
-0.78 -1.21, -0.35
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30Mechanisms of action
- Medication adherence
- No benefits, but poorly measured
- Interference from pain on daily activity
- Good evidence of no benefit
- Others
- ? reduced anxiety
- ? Improved coping / self efficacy
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32(DVD video links)
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34Outcomes at 4 weeks
- PPQ subscale (knowledge and attitudes)
- Median improvement 34 (p 0.04)
- belief in addiction to medicine (37 improvement,
p0.008) - belief that pain will get better (30
improvement, p0.008) - Brief Pain Inventory (pain intensity)
- Median improvement 9.6 (p0.02)
- Acceptability
- DVD acceptable and patients very satisfied with
content - But.uncontrolled, observational study
35- Any type of chronic pain
- 4 studies identified
- 400 patients randomised, 335 with follow up data
- Arthritis, knee pain, pain clinic, cancer pain
36Type of interventions
- focus on pain assessment
- provision of information and advice on dosage
- sometimes by telecare
- and managing adverse effects of medication
37Pain intensity at 3 month follow up
Average pain intensity
-0.49 -0.79, -0.20
38Mechanisms of action
- Adverse events
- Data from 2 studies suggest gt 50 reduction
overall - ? better medicines management
- Satisfaction
- Significant improvement with intervention
- Reduced consultations with GPs
- ? self efficacy, improved coping
39Implications for practice
- Screening for misunderstandings about pain and
opioids - address these aspects with advice and information
- role for pharmacists and specialist nurses?
- Effects of education on cancer pain similar to
- adding paracetamol to opioids
- pain reduced by 0.4 to 0.6 points on BPI
- adding gabapentin to opioids
- Pain reduced by 0.8 points on BPI
- Stockler et al 2004
- Caraceni et al 2004
40What are the most important components?
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44Kroenke paper
45Intervention
- Care management
- Telephone calls from nurse (linked with
physician) to - Assess symptom response and medication adherence
- Provide specific education
- Adjust treatment according to protocol
- Baseline, follow-up calls at 1, 4, and 12 weeks
- Additional calls triggered by automated
monitoring
46Intervention
- Automated monitoring
- Interactive voice recording / web based surveys
- Twice weekly in first 3 weeks weekly, monthly
- Medication management
- Protocol provided to clinicians (single clinician
per patient)
47Results
48Average effects versus number of responders
49Summary
50- For your next patient with cancer pain
- Pay them attention
- State importance of pain management
- Assess their pain systematically and use this in
your management plan - Check and address fears about cancer pain and
barriers to taking opioids - Use specific prescribing guidelines
- Educate patients on how to take their drugs
- especially older people
- try to involve a pharmacist in this process
- Review and monitor their pain control
51Thank youm.i.bennett_at_leeds.ac.uk