• Cochrane Db Syst Rev · Jan 2005

    Review Meta Analysis

    Comparative efficacy of epidural, subarachnoid, and intracerebroventricular opioids in patients with pain due to cancer.

    • J C Ballantyne and C M Carwood.
    • Dept of Anesthesia, Clinics 3, Massachusetts General Hospital, Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114, USA. ballantyne@etherdome.mgh.harvard.edu
    • Cochrane Db Syst Rev. 2005 Jan 1(1):CD005178.

    BackgroundSince the 1970s, when endogenous opioids and opioid receptors were first isolated in the central nervous system, attempts have been made to optimize opioid therapy by delivering the medication centrally rather than systemically. Although the vast majority of cancer patients obtain satisfactory pain relief from individualized systemic treatment, there remain the few whose pain is refractory to systemic treatments. These patients may obtain relief from neuraxial opioid therapy: intracerebroventricular, epidural or subarachnoid.ObjectivesTo compare intracerebroventricular therapy with other neuraxial treatments and to determine whether intracerebroventricular (ICV) has anything to offer over epidural (EPI) and subarachnoid (SA) catheters in terms of efficacy, adverse effects, and complications.Search StrategyA number of electronic databases were searched to retrieve information for inclusion in this review. Non-English language reports are awaiting assessment. Unpublished data were not sought.Selection CriteriaRandomised studies of intracerebroventricular therapy for patients with intractable cancer pain were sought. However, this level of evidence was not available so data from uncontrolled trials, retrospective case series and uncontrolled prospective cohort studies were assessed.Data Collection And AnalysisOur search did not retrieve any controlled trials. We therefore used data from uncontrolled studies to compare incidences of analgesic efficacy, adverse effects, and complications. We found 72 uncontrolled trials assessing ICV (13 trials, 337 patients), EPI (31 trials, 1343 patients), and SA (28 trials, 722 patients) in cancer patients. From these we extracted data on analgesic efficacy, common pharmacologic adverse effects, and complications.Main ResultsData from uncontrolled studies reported excellent pain relief among 73% of ICV patients compared with 72% EPI and 62% SA. Unsatisfactory pain relief was low in all treatment groups. Persistent nausea, persistent and transient urinary retention, transient pruritus, and constipation occurred more frequently with EPI and SA. Respiratory depression, sedation and confusion were most common with ICV. The incidence of major infection when pumps were used with EPI and SA was zero. There was a lower incidence of other complications with ICV therapy than with EPI or SA.Authors' ConclusionsNeuraxial opioid therapy is often effective for treating cancer pain that has not been adequately controlled by systemic treatment. However, long-term use of neuraxial therapy can be complicated by problems associated with the catheters. The data from uncontrolled studies suggests that ICV is at least as effective against pain as other neuraxial treatments and may be a successful treatment for patients whose cancer pain is resistant to other treatments.

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