Tapentadol Treatment Results in Long-term Pain Relief in Patients with Chronic Low Back Pain and Associates with Reduced Segmental Sensitization
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Introduction: Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is one of the most common chronic pain conditions in pain practice.
Objectives: In the current study, we describe phenotypes of patients with CLBP based on the status of their endogenous pain modulatory system.
Methods: Conditioned pain modulation (a measure of central pain inhibition), temporal summation (TS, a measure of pain facilitation), and offset analgesia (a measure of temporal filtering of nociception) were evaluated in 53 patients with CLBP at painful and nonpainful sites. Next, in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, 40 patients with defective conditioned pain modulation responses received treatment with tapentadol prolonged-release or placebo for 3 months.
Results: The majority of patients (87%) demonstrated loss of central pain inhibition combined with segmentally increased TS and reduced offset analgesia at the lower back region. During treatment, tapentadol reduced pain intensity more than placebo (tapentadol -19.5 ± 2.1 mm versus placebo -7.1 ± 1.8 mm, = 0.025). Furthermore, tapentadol significantly decreased pain facilitation by reduction of TS responses at the lower back (tapentadol -0.94 ± 1.9 versus placebo 0.01 ± 1.5, = 0.020), which correlated with pain reduction ( < 0.001).
Conclusion: Patients with CLBP demonstrated different phenotypes of endogenous pain modulation. In patients with reduced conditioned pain modulation, tapentadol produced long-term pain relief that coincided with reduction of signs of pain facilitation. These data indicate that the endogenous pain system may be used as a biomarker in the pharmacological treatment of CLBP, enabling an individualized, mechanism-based treatment approach.
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