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Prospective Study About Clinical and Pharmacogenetic Safety of Opioid Use for Chronic Pain

I

IRCCS Policlinico S. Matteo

Status and phase

Suspended
Phase 4

Conditions

Chronic Pain

Treatments

Drug: Morphine
Drug: Oxycodone
Drug: Buprenorphine
Drug: Fentanyl

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00916890
PT-SM-1-Op-Cancer

Details and patient eligibility

About

Aim of this project is to customize the choice of the strong opioid in the treatment of cancer chronic pain through the identification of patient clinical history and pain characteristics, moreover in the analysis the investigators will also correlate the clinical efficacy and safety of opioid treatment with pharmacokinetic and pharmacogenetic patterns in order to identify variables able to predict the efficacy of the treatment or the patient susceptibility towards a specific treatment.

Furthermore with this study the investigators want to identify the pharmacogenomic characterization responsible for pharmacokinetic variability in the conversion between morphine and other opioids, in order to validate the currently available conversion tables from a pharmacokinetic viewpoint, estimating the influence of the most common genetic polymorphisms, and if this characterization could be useful and cost-effective. This study will also focus on the specific clinical-pharmacological response in the elderly and between male and female and on the interactions between opioids and those anticonvulsant and antidepressant drugs routinely used in the pain therapy (study of pharmacovigilance).

Full description

Pain continues to be a major problem in patients with cancer, affecting 25% to 30% of patients with recently diagnosed cancers. The incidence of pain in advanced stages of cancer approaches 70% to 80%. There are a number of reasons that patients with cancer experience chronic pain either related to the disease itself or to its treatment.

Cancer can spread by metastasis or direct invasion, and 90% of patients with metastasis to osseous structures report pain. Patients with cancer can have neuropathic pain due to direct compression of nerves or plexus or spinal cord involvement.

Inadequate treatment and undertreatment are associated with increased pain scores, decreased functional ability, and increased depression and anxiety.

Opioid administration though proven to be effective still meets with resistance from both healthcare operators, who are seldom willing to prescribe these drugs, and patients, who tend to not take them because of many false beliefs still related to opioids.

It is well demonstrated by the literature that opioids are effective in controlling both acute and chronic pain of nociceptive and/or neuropathic origin. Switching type of opioid and/or administration routes (e.g., from oral to neuraxial) is also known to be an important factor in long-term treatment: appropriate conversion tables elucidating drug equipotence and different potency in base of administration route for the different opioids currently available have therefore been devised and validated in the clinical setting.

There have been several attempts to define guidelines for treatment protocols and even recent meta-analyses indicate that morphine should remain the gold standard. However, a general consensus is still lacking, as opioid management depends not only on the type and cause of pain, but also on the patient's history, the pain characteristics and genetic patterns. Which, if any, is the best opioid, in relation with previous characters, to start systemic treatment remains therefore debated. The different effects that different opioids have on spinal cord sensitization as a result of continuous peripheral nociceptive stimulus in long term administration have also been partially investigated.

Current pharmacogenetic publications analyze the pharmacokinetic behavior of opioids in short-term administration, but studies are still lacking on how the pharmacokinetics and analgesic effect vary after repeated administrations of opioids, especially through direct comparison with clinical response. Genetic studies showed differences in the results of opioid treatment related to the variability of the genes that have a role in the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetics of opioids. Regardless these studies, the literature has not yet investigated how quantitative and qualitative variability of gene products can influence the efficacy or the toxicity of a specific opioid treatment.

Enrollment

320 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult oncologic patients (>= 18 years old)
  • Chronic peripheral neuropathic and/or nociceptive pain
  • Written informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Pediatric patients
  • Mental impaired patients
  • Substance abuse disorder
  • Opioid allergy
  • History of opioids use or addiction
  • Severe immunodeficiency, severe renal impairment, severe liver disease
  • Cachectic state
  • HIV positive patients

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

320 participants in 4 patient groups

Oral extended-release morphine
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: Morphine
Oral extended-release oxycodone
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: Oxycodone
Transdermal fentanyl
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: Fentanyl
Transdermal buprenorphine
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Drug: Buprenorphine

Trial contacts and locations

6

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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