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Treatment for Neuropathic Pain in Patients with Cancer: Comparative Analysis of Recommendations in National Clinical Practice Guidelines from European Countries
Abstract
Introduction
Neuropathic
pain is a common symptom, present in 39% of the patients with cancer
pain. Treating this type of pain is challenging, as this patient group
is often frail and has comorbidities which increase the risk of side
events and hence influences their quality of life. Clinical practice
guidelines (CPGs) can be helpful for clinicians, especially when
scientific evidence is uncertain or weak. In this study, we focused on
the quality of the review of the literature used in treatment
recommendations in the selected European CPGs.
Methods
In
a previous study, 9 CPGs from European countries that contained at
least one paragraph on treatment for neuropathic pain in cancer were
included. Recommendations with their grade (according SIGN 55
classification) and supporting literature (first author, patients'
population, year and type of publication) were compared between CPGs.
Results
In
all CPGs, amitriptylin was mentioned as the drug of first choice. Six
guidelines proposed also gabapentinoids. Only 30 of the 163 citations
(18%) were based on studies in patients with cancer. Seven CPGs did not
argue the indirect evidence due to extrapolation of study results from
non-cancer to patients with cancer.
Conclusion
The
majority of guideline development groups extrapolated their results
from non-cancer publications to formulate recommendations. Consequently,
these guidelines fail to address important issues such as altered
kinetics and side effect profiles in these patients. We recommend
creating specific recommendations by an international expert group for
the treatment for neuropathic pain in patients with cancer supported by
targeted research in patients with cancer.
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