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Treatment of Pain in Head-and-Neck Cancer Patients: is Methadone More Effective? (310111-4)

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC) logo

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Cancer of Head and Neck
Pain

Treatments

Drug: fentanyl
Drug: methadone

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01317589
METC 11-2-007

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background of the study:

Treatment of Pain in Head-and-Neck Cancer Patients:

is methadone more effective than fentanyl?

Pain is a prevalent symptom in patients with cancer. A neuropathic component is seen in one third of the patients. In patients with head-and-neck cancer neuropathic pain is far more prevalent than in a general cancer population: 46-64%. Treatment of neuropathic pain is complex and available treatment modalities achieve (partial) pain relief in only 40-60% of patients. The N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor (NMDAR) plays a central role in the mediation of neuropathic pain. NMDAR blockers could be a new approach to treat neuropathic pain in patients with cancer.

Methadone is a strong opioid but at the same time significant non-competitive NMDA-receptor antagonist qualities have been described. Many small studies and case-reports describe the successful rotation from different strong opioids to methadone. There are no studies that selected patients with (predominantly) neuropathic pain to be treated with methadone, whereas this group of patients is expected to profit from the NMDAR-antagonist properties of methadone.

Objective of the study:

This randomised controlled trial (RCT) aims to investigate whether addition of a NMDAR-antagonist to a strong opioid (methadone) is superior in the treatment of predominantly neuropathic pain over a strong opioid alone (fentanyl) in terms of pain relief and time to achieve significant pain relief.

Study design:

Open label randomised controlled trial

Study population:

opioid naïve patients with histological proven head-and-neck cancer and (partly) neuropathic pain with a NRS score of ≥ 4, age =/> 18 years

Intervention Treatment with methadone or fentanyl patch

Primary study parameters/outcome of the study:

Is methadone more effective than fentanyl in the treatment of pain in patients with head-and-neck cancer with respect to

  1. significant pain relief (reduction of Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) of 50%) and
  2. pain interference

Secondary study parameters/outcome of the study:

Is methadone superior to fentanyl in the treatment of pain in patients with head-and-neck cancer with respect to

  1. time to achieve significant pain relief
  2. side-effect profile?

Full description

Study design The duration of the study will be 9 weeks. Patients will visit the outpatient clinic 5 times. Patients of MAASTRO clinic will be seen directly before or after the radiation therapy. No extra visits will be necessary.

T= -1: - informed consent

  • sort of pain (DN4)
  • randomisation

T = 0 - questionnaire 1: demographic variables, disease specific variables, BPI, side effect questions, HADS, QoL

  • explain and provide the pain sheet
  • start methadone 2 x 2,5 mg or fentanyl patch 12 μg/uur
  • breakthrough medication: 50 µg fentanyl nose spray or fentanyl stick 400 µg till 6x/day

T=1 - questionnaire 2: BPI, side effect questions, global perceived effect

1 week - review pain sheet on pain and total rescue doses

  • if necessary increase dose strong opioid with 50%

T=2 - questionnaire 2: BPI, side effect questions, global perceived effect 3 weeks - review pain sheet on pain and total rescue doses

  • if necessary increase dose strong opioid with 50%
  • if necessary decrease dose strong opioid with 30%

T=3 - questionnaire 2: BPI, side effect questions, global perceived effect 5 weeks - review pain sheet on pain and total rescue doses

  • if necessary increase dose strong opioid with 50%
  • if necessary decrease dose strong opioid with 30%

T = 4 - questionnaire 3: BPI, side effect questions, global perceived effect, QoL

  • if necessary increase dose strong opioid with 50%
  • if necessary decrease dose strong opioid with 30%

Enrollment

134 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • opioid naive patients with histological proven head-and-neck cancer and (partly) neuropathic pain with a NRS score of =/> 4

Exclusion criteria

  • age under 18
  • not being able to read or fill in the questionnaires
  • recent operation (less than 7 days)
  • women of childbearing potential not using contraception

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

134 participants in 2 patient groups

fentanyl
Active Comparator group
Description:
active pain treatment with fentanyl patch
Treatment:
Drug: fentanyl
methadone
Experimental group
Description:
active pain treatment with methadone
Treatment:
Drug: methadone

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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