Chapter 69 Approach to the Management of Cancer Pain Flashcards
KEY POINTS 1. Successful treatment of cancer pain is possible most of the time. 2. The cancer pain syndrome should be determined: nociceptive, neuropathic, or mixed. 3. Cancer pain should be assessed and managed within the dimensions of suffering that a patient and his or her family experience: physical, psychological, social, and spiritual. 4. Daily evaluation includes an assessment of the location, type, temporal profile, and severity of each significant pain. 5. The World Health Organiza
Effective pain management must begin with
comprehensive pain assessment.
the gold standard for assessing pain is
the patient’s self-report. Patients with chronic cancer pain may fail to display any signs of adrenergic stimulation such as tachycardia and hypertension even though the patient reports severe pain
Cancer pain can be classified as
nociceptive, neuropathic, or a combination of the two.
Nociceptive pain
results when pain-sensing neuronal
pathways are stimulated and function normally. Specialized receptors at the distal end of neuronal axons, termed
nociceptors, detect noxious mechanical, chemical, and thermal stimuli and generate neuronal electrical activity. These signals are transmitted normally along neuronal
pathways to the brain.
Nociceptive pain
can originate from somatic or visceral
sources, or both.
Somatic pain
originates from skin, muscle, bone, and fascia. It is mediated by the somatic nervous
system. As innervation is highly specific, localization of the pain is precise. Somatic pain is often described as sharp, aching, or throbbing.
Visceral pain
originates from internal
structures. It is mediated by the autonomic nervous system. As there is a lack of specificity of innervation, and considerable neuronal crossover, visceral pain is typically
difficult for the patient to localize or describe, and may encompass an area that is much larger than might be expected
for a single organ. Visceral pain is often characterized as crampy.
Neuropathic pain
defined as a primary lesion or dysfunction of the pain-sensing nervous system. The
lesion can be either peripheral in the somatic or visceral
nervous system, or central. The nerves themselves may be
subject to damage from compression, infiltration, ischemia, metabolic injury, or transection. The myelin sheath that insulates one nerve from another may also be damaged.
neuropathic pain may also be caused by
dysfunction of the nervous system, as in central facilitation or “wind-up” where an event that is normally not painful, such as the pressure from a bed sheet or clothing
on the chest of patient with recurrent breast cancer, causes
pain.
Neuropathic pain is often described as
burning, shooting, stabbing, or electric-like, and may be associated with numbness, tingling, and/or sensory deficits.
The temporal profile of a pain will provide further clues to
its etiology
The patient should be asked about the duration of the pain. When did it first start? How long has it
been present? Did it come on slowly, or suddenly? One can ask what the baseline or background pain is like. Does it vary over time, such as worse at night? Is the patient ever pain-free? Are there times when the pain gets much worse? What factors exacerbate or relieve the pain, such as
by activity, touch, clothing, cold/heat, procedures, and so on.
Back pain
that occurs only with weight bearing could indicate
a spinal bony metastasis.
Cancer pain is also frequently associated with
intermittent
paroxysms of pain that occur with activity (e.g., movement,
chewing, swallowing, breathing, defecating, urinating,
dressing, touch, etc.) or during a procedure.
Sequential measurement of severity using a validated severity
assessment scale will provide
an indication of the changing intensity of the pain experienced by a given patient over
time. It will also guide analgesic management. A numerical analog scale is the simplest.
numerical analog scale
The patient is
asked to indicate the severity of the pain on a 11-point scale where 0 represents “no pain” and 10 represents the
“worst possible pain.”
use to identify the relevant pathophysiology leading to a pain
state.
Together with a careful physical examination and select laboratory and imaging studies,
The concept of “total pain” emphasizes that multiple nonphysical factors can also contribute to pain, that is,
psychological factors (e.g., anxiety, depression), social factors (e.g., familial estrangement), and spiritual or existential factors (e.g., loss of meaning in life, fear of death).
use to identify the relevant pathophysiology leading to a pain
state.
Together with a careful physical examination and select laboratory and imaging studies,
World Health Organization (WHO) ladder: Step One
Acetaminophen and the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) including acetylsalicylic acid
(ASA) are the mainstay of step one of the WHO analgesic ladder for the management of mild pain
World Health Organization (WHO) ladder:Step Two
Several opioid analgesics are conventionally
available in combination with acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or ASA and are commonly used to manage moderate pain. tramadol (that has
a unique combination of weak opioid activity with other analgesic properties), meperidine, and codeine (methylmorphine, which has one-tenth the potency of morphine),
the opioids in this class are close in potency to morphine (mg for mg
The concept of “total pain” emphasizes that multiple nonphysical factors can also contribute to pain, that is,
psychological factors (e.g., anxiety, depression), social factors (e.g., familial estrangement), and spiritual or existential factors (e.g., loss of meaning in life, fear of death).
World Health Organization (WHO) three-step ladder for cancer pain
management
If the pain is mild (1/10 to 3/10), an analgesic can be chosen
from step one. If it is moderate (4/10 to 6/10), one can start with an analgesic from step two. If it is severe (7/10 to 10/10), one can start with an opioid from step three. At any step, adjuvant analgesics can be added to optimize pain
control.
World Health Organization (WHO) three-step ladder: Step One
Acetaminophen and the nonsteroidal antiinflammatory
drugs (NSAIDs) including acetylsalicylic acid
(ASA) are the mainstay of step one of the WHO analgesic ladder for the management of mild pain
World Health Organization (WHO) three-step ladder:Step Two
Several opioid analgesics are conventionally
available in combination with acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or ASA and are commonly used to manage moderate pain. tramadol (that has
a unique combination of weak opioid activity with other analgesic properties), meperidine, and codeine (methylmorphine, which has one-tenth the potency of morphine),
the opioids in this class are close in potency to morphine (mg for mg