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This randomized controlled study compares tapering of long-term opioid therapy in a population with chronic non-cancer pain with control group constituted of waiting list. Half of participants receives intervention at baseline and the other half are controls but receives intervention after 4 months. Ethical approval to follow up excluded participants denying tapering at baseline.
Full description
Chronic non-cancer pain is a major problem in society and a common cause to seek health care. The suffering is complex as it, besides pain, often includes psychological symptoms and may decrease the ability to participate in work life. Pharmacological treatments have limited possibilities to ease suffering. Opioids used in this population have evidence to ease pain and to some extent increase physical ability when used in limited treatment periods and in selected patients. Medium to long-term opioid therapy, extended beyond three months, lack evidence of easing pain or increase physical ability.
The current study is conducted on three specialized pain care units (Skane University Hospital; Lund, Sahlgrenska University Hospital Gothenburg and University Hospital, Linkoeping) and aims at taper long-term opioid therapy with support from physician and nurse and study the effects of tapering.
Method: Randomized controlled study, without concealment. Waiting-list constitutes the control-group. Intervention means tapering with a motivated patient. Follow up at four and twelve months.
Primary end-point: collected opioid prescriptions registered in The National Board of Health and Welfare registry expressed in milligram of morphine equivalent.
Secondary end-point: Data will be retrieved from the Swedish Quality Registry for Pain Rehabilitation. The database contains participants' self-report of variables measuring the impact of rehabilitation on depressive symptoms, anxiety, rating of pain and acceptance to pain. Assessments are made prior to, at the end of and one year after discharge of the rehabilitation program.
As denying tapering or participation is shown to be as common as decision to taper drugs at baseline an extended ethical approval was acquired also retrospective. This approval covers obtaining collected prescribed medication and prescribed opioid replacement therapy (Buprenorphine or Methadone) after one year. The study may describe the excluded population better this way.
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Inclusion criteria
A long-term opioid therapy with daily intake due to chronic pain condition, by prescription. Willing to enter an intervention aiming at taper opioid therapy.
Exclusion criteria
No daily intake of opioids. Shorter duration of opioid therapy than 3 months. Repeated intake of non-prescribed opioids or other illegal drugs. Refusal to perform drug-screening Perceived medical risks of waiting with tapering of opioids (e.g: raising opioid doses after acute pancreatitis caused by excessive alcohol intake or kidney disease stage 4-5 in combination with excessive alcohol intake and high doses of opioids).
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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140 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Åsa Ringqvist, MD, PhD; Henrik Grelz, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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