Abstract

Pharmacological treatment is not very effective for neuropathic pain (NP). A progressive decrease in the estimated effect of NP drugs has been reported, giving rise to an increase in the use of the multimodal analgesic approach. We performed a new independent review to assess whether more and better-quality evidence has become available since the last systematic review. We evaluated the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of double-blinded randomized controlled trials involving only adult participants and comparing combination therapy (CT: ≥2 drugs) with a placebo and/or at least one other comparator with an NP indication. The primary outcome assessed was the proportion of participants reporting ≥50% pain reductions from baseline. The secondary outcome assessed was the proportion of drop-outs due to treatment-emergent adverse events. After removing duplicates, 2323 citations were screened, with 164 articles assessed for eligibility, from which 16 were included for qualitative analysis. From the latter, only five lasted for at least 12 weeks and only six complied with the required data for complete analysis. CT has been adopted for years without robust evidence. Efforts have been made to achieve better-quality evidence, but the quality has not improved over the years. In this regard, guidelines for NP should attempt to make recommendations about CT research, prioritizing which combinations to analyze.

Highlights

  • Neuropathic pain (NP) occurs as a direct consequence of an injury or disease that affects the somatosensory system [1]

  • Clinical guidelines recommend starting treatment with monotherapy and placing combination treatment (CT) in a second tier for patients who do not respond to monotherapy or switching [7,8]

  • We can assume that adding THC/CBD to a pre-existing treatment for NP has no effect and that no difference between a PGB–DXT combination exists against either drug on high-dose monotherapy

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Neuropathic pain (NP) occurs as a direct consequence of an injury or disease that affects the somatosensory system [1]. The prevalence of NP in the population varies from 6.9% to 10%, depending on the tool used for its diagnosis [2], and it negatively affects quality of life, impacting daily activities, such as sleeping and walking, and family and social interactions. A considerable number of patients do not achieve a satisfactory pain relief or improvements in their quality of life with currently available drugs [4]. Clinical guidelines recommend starting treatment with monotherapy and placing combination treatment (CT) in a second tier for patients who do not respond to monotherapy or switching [7,8]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call