Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Nov 2023
The need of a comprehensive approach in a condition of poorly opioid-responsive cancer pain.
Spinal analgesia is often claimed as an effective strategy for patients with a poor response to systemic opioids. Despite the optimistic data reported in literature with intrathecal drug delivery systems (IDDS) for cancer pain, a critical analysis showed modest benefit. Indeed, intrathecal therapy may be potent means to be used in a very selected population. However, ability to manage spinal therapy combined with the use of opioids and other drugs in the general perspective of a comprehensive palliative care treatment may allow to resolve refractory cancer pain in a patient with a clinical profile of poor pain prognosis, according to the Edmonton staging system. ⋯ No evidence-based treatment can be taken into consideration for such extreme conditions, where only experience and knowledge can guide to an effective course of treatment along a period of about six months. Timely therapeutic strategies are needed to be performed in each challenging clinical situation along the course of disease.