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Chemotherapy induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) or nerve pain, is a painful and debilitating complication which can chronically affect up to 70% of patients who receive chemotherapy. It causes "glove-and-stocking" distribution of nerve-pain, weakness, and other debilitating symptoms. This can affect patient's quality of life, function, ability to tolerate chemotherapy, and return to work.
Duloxetine is the only recommended medication to reduce the painful symptoms and consequences of CIPN by national and international groups such as the American Society of Clinical Oncology. However, studies indicate it only has modest effect; for example, the largest study shows it only reduces pain by 0.73/10 points compared to placebo.
Another promising medication in theory and practice is methadone. It is a commonly used and well-studied opioid with unique attributes which allows it to treat non-cancer and cancer associated nerve-pain with better efficacy when compared to other opioids. Furthermore, patients appear to develop less tolerance to methadone over time when compared to other opioids; this is helpful as many develop long-term CIPN and may greatly benefit from long-term pain medication. Therefore, if a patient requires chronic opioids to reduce the painful symptoms of CIPN, one that develops less tolerance is invaluable. Despite the promising role for methadone to treat CIPN, it has not been studied to treat this condition. Therefore, methadone may never be considered by prescribers to reduce the painful symptoms of CIPN.
This study is a randomized controlled trial to assess the efficacy of methadone compared to duloxetine to treat painful CIPN. Participants will be randomized to receive either methadone or duloxetine regularly for 5 weeks. Methadone and duloxetine will be placed in indistinguishable capsules, so the participant and assessor are not aware of their treatment. They will be followed virtually or in-person weekly for 5 weeks where they will answer brief questionnaires detailing the effect of their treatment on their pain and their dose will increase weekly as tolerated until their pain is controlled or its the end of the study. This study would be critical in assessing the efficacy of a very promising medication to reduce the painful symptoms of CIPN: a debilitating disorder with otherwise few treatment options.
Full description
Rationale: Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a debilitating consequence of chemotherapy that causes chronic neuropathic pain in up to 70% of cancer patients. Duloxetine is the only pharmacotherapy recommended by international guidelines, and its effects are modest. Methadone is increasingly used to treat refractory neuropathic pain in cancer patients and has not been studied in CIPN.
Question: Is methadone more effective than duloxetine for the treatment of CIPN? Participants: Adult cancer patients with life expectancy greater than 12 weeks who have greater than grade 1 CIPN based on National Cancer Institute Common Toxicity Criteria for Adverse Events version 5.0 grading scale lasting ≥3 months beyond chemotherapy completion.
Intervention: This trial will follow a double-blind double-dummy randomized controlled trial design where participants will be randomized to either treatment arm (methadone) or control arm (duloxetine). They will be followed weekly over a 5-week period and undergo dose titration.
Outcomes: The primary outcome will be efficacy of methadone compared to duloxetine to reduce the average pain intensity between the baseline and end of study for patients with painful CIPN. Secondary outcomes include i) Determine the effect of methadone compared to duloxetine to improve functional interference using the Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form; ii) Determine the effect of methadone compared to duloxetine to improve the quality-of-life interference of CIPN using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group - Neurotoxicity 4 Item version. Exploratory outcomes include i) Determine the difference between the proportion of participants treated with methadone compared to duloxetine that have a 30% and a 50% reduction in average pain intensity; ii) Assess the efficacy of methadone compared to duloxetine to improve the patients' global impression of change (PGIC) using the PGIC questionnaire; iii) Assess the incidence of adverse events with methadone compared to duloxetine using the National Cancer Institute Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events version 5.0, and iv) assess dose tolerance of longer-term methadone use via the Opioid-Escalation Index.
Anticipated Impact: This study will determine if methadone is a viable treatment for CIPN: a very common, distressing, and debilitating condition that otherwise has limited treatment options.
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Note: Any use of prior co-analgesics will be continued (and must have been stable for more than 2 weeks), but the use of new co-analgesics or titration of current co-analgesics will not be permitted during the trial.
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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