Pharmacovigilance in hospice/palliative care: net effect of amitriptyline or nortriptyline on neuropathic pain : UTS/IMPACCT rapid programme international consecutive cohort

Article indépendant

HUSSEIN, Akram | DIGGES, Madeline | CHANG, Sungwon | HUNT, Jane | DOOGUE, Matt | ROWETT, Debra | AGAR, Meera | SINNARAJAH, Aynharan | KAIN, Danielle | ALLAN, Simon | BOLAND, Jason W. | CURROW, David

Background: Real-world effectiveness of interventions in palliative care need to be systematically quantified to inform patient/clinical decisions. Neuropathic pain is prevalent and difficult to palliate. Tricyclic antidepressants have an established role for some neuropathic pain aetiologies, but this is less clear in palliative care. Aim: To describe the real-world use and outcomes from amitriptyline or nortriptyline for neuropathic pain in palliative care. Design: An international, prospective, consecutive cohort post-marketing/phase IV/pharmacovigilance/quality improvement study of palliative care patients with neuropathic pain where the treating clinician had already made the decision to use a tricyclic antidepressant. Data were entered at set times: baseline, and days 7 and 14. Likert scales graded benefits and harms. Setting/participants: Twenty-one sites (inpatient, outpatient, community) participated in six countries between June 2016 and March 2019. Patients had clinician-diagnosed neuropathic pain. Results: One hundred and fifty patients were prescribed amitriptyline (110) or nortriptyline (40) of whom: 85% had cancer; mean age 73.2 years (SD 12.3); mean 0–4 scores for neuropathic pain at baseline were 1.8 (SD 1.0). By day 14, doses of amitriptyline were 57 mg (SD 21) and nortriptyline (48 mg (SD 21). Fifty-two (34.7%) patients had pain improvement by day 14 (amitriptyline (45/110 (43.3%); nortriptyline (7/40 (18.9%)). Thirty-nine (27.7%) had new harms; (amitriptyline 29/104 (27.9%); nortriptyline 10/37 (27.0%); dizziness (n = 23), dry mouth (n = 20), constipation (n = 14), urinary retention (n = 10)). Benefits without harms occurred (amitriptyline (26/104 (25.0%); nortriptyline (4/37 (10.8%)). Conclusions: Benefits favoured amitriptyline while harms were similar for both medications.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02692163221085855

Voir la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 36»

Autres numéros de la revue «PALLIATIVE MEDICINE»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Paracentesis for cancer-related ascites in pa...

Article | SEAH, Davinia SE | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°9 | vol.36

Background: Paracentesis is commonly undertaken in patients with cancer-related ascites. Aim: To systematically investigate the symptomatic benefits and harms experienced by patients with cancer undergoing paracentesis using real-...

Paracentesis for cancer-related ascites in pa...

Article indépendant | SEAH, Davinia SE | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°9 | vol.36

Background: Paracentesis is commonly undertaken in patients with cancer-related ascites. Aim: To systematically investigate the symptomatic benefits and harms experienced by patients with cancer undergoing paracentesis using real-...

Paracentesis for cancer-related ascites in pa...

Article indépendant | SEAH, Davinia SE | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°9 | vol.36

Background: Paracentesis is commonly undertaken in patients with cancer-related ascites. Aim: To systematically investigate the symptomatic benefits and harms experienced by patients with cancer undergoing paracentesis using real-...

De la même série

Posttraumatic growth in palliative care setti...

Article indépendant | AUSTIN, Philip D. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Posttraumatic growth refers to positive psychological change following trauma. However, there is a need to better understand the experience of posttraumatic growth in the palliative care setting as well as the availabi...

Long-term bereavement outcomes in family memb...

Article indépendant | LAPENSKIE, Julie | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.38

Background: Severe grief is highly distressing and prevalent up to 1 year post-death among people bereaved during the first wave of COVID-19, but no study has assessed changes in grief severity beyond this timeframe. Aim: Understa...

Understanding the extent to which PROMs and P...

Article indépendant | HOWARD, Faith D. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Older people with severe frailty are nearing the end of life but their needs are often unknown and unmet. Systematic ways to capture and measure the needs of this group are required. Patient reported Outcome Measures (...

The perspectives of people with dementia and ...

Article indépendant | MONNET, Fanny | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: Advance care planning has been defined in an international consensus paper, supported by the European Association for Palliative Care. There are concerns that this definition may not apply to dementia. Moreover, it is ...

Revised European Association for Palliative C...

Article indépendant | SURGES, Séverine M. | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.38

BACKGROUND: The European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) acknowledges palliative sedation as an important, broadly accepted intervention for patients with life-limiting disease experiencing refractory symptoms. The EAPC the...

Chargement des enrichissements...