Opioids in cancer-related pain: current situation and outlook

Affiliation auteursAffiliation ok
TitreOpioids in cancer-related pain: current situation and outlook
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2019
AuteursGeorge B, Minello C, Allano G, Maindet C, Burnod A, Lemaire A
JournalSUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume27
Pagination3105-3118
Date PublishedAUG
Type of ArticleReview
ISSN0941-4355
Mots-clésCancer pain, Multimorphic pain, Opioids, Pain management, Personalised medicine, pharmacokinetics
Résumé

PurposeDespite progress in treatments, cancer pain remains underestimated, poorly assessed and under-treated. Prescribing strong opioids, because of their specificities, requires precision in management considering their pharmacology but also a clear understanding of recommendations. Some clinicians highlight the risk of addiction, excessive sedation and respiratory depression and their need for information. Our objective in this review is to suggest some clinical guidance for the positioning and daily use of opioids within cancer pain management.MethodsCritical reflection based on literature analysis and clinical practice.ResultsStrong opioids may be initiated as soon as pain diagnosis is defined. Factors to consider are pain aetiology, opioid pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, genetic polymorphism, physiology (age, gender, weight and pregnancy), comorbidities (especially renal, hepatic, cardiovascular diseases), chronobiology, environmental factors, medication interference and treatment adherence. Achieving the best-balanced opioid treatment for background pain is complex, mainly due to the variable benefit/risk ratio between individuals and the experience of breakthrough cancer pain. Opioid initiation alongside a dynamic reassessment of pain should be fully integrated into the patient's management to optimise analgesia. The efficacy and safety of a strong opioid treatment need to be re-evaluated and adapted to individuals constantly as it varies over time.ConclusionsCancer pain is multimorphic and permanently changing due to disease evolution, curative treatments and disruptive events (concomitant treatments, pain from associated disease, comorbidities and complications, modifications of the environment). Well-managed opioids are the cornerstone of a complex environment requiring multidisciplinary dynamic assessments integrated into the patient's care pathway.

DOI10.1007/s00520-019-04828-8