Critical Care Plus: Poor Prescription Adherence Leads to Poor Pain Care
Critical Care Plus: Poor Prescription Adherence Leads to Poor Pain Care
Addiction fears not the problem
Lack of adherence to pain medication regimens and inadequate analgesic prescriptions are the main reasons cancer patients do not achieve adequate pain relief, according to researchers at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF).
In one of the first studies to observe cancer patients in their homes, researchers at the schools of nursing, medicine, and pharmacy at the UCSF studied whether cancer patients were adhering to the around-the-clock and as-needed pain management regimens prescribed by their doctors. The results of the study were published in the Dec. 1 issue of the Journal of Clinical Oncology.1
"The old message was that people weren’t taking their pain medication because of fear of addiction," said Christine Miaskowski, RN, PhD, professor and chairwoman of the Department of Physiological Nursing at UCSF. "Our study debunks that explanation and found that the side effects caused by most opioid analgesics were a key reason why cancer patients did not adhere to their pain medication regimen."
Side effects, such as constipation and sedation, deterred patients from taking their pain medication. Patients in the study told researchers that they would rather experience pain than deal with the side effects of the analgesic medications. This finding is unfortunate, because side effects like these can be proactively treated.
According to an accompanying editorial in the Journal of Clinical Oncology by Jamie von Roenn, MD, professor of medicine at Northwestern University, "Lack of adequate knowledge or assessment of pain management by physicians is suggested by the pattern of analgesic prescriptions. Effective pain management requires repeated assessment and adjustments in dosage."
The randomized 5-week study included 65 adult oncology patients with baseline pain and evidence of bone metastases. On a daily basis, patients rated their level of pain intensity and recorded their pain medication intake. Adherence rates for opioid analgesics prescribed on an around-the-clock and an as-needed basis were calculated weekly.
Overall adherence rates ranged from 84.5% to 90.8% for around-the-clock opioid analgesics and 22.2 % to 26.6% for as-needed analgesics. There were no significant changes in adherence rates, pain intensity, or duration of pain during the course of the study.
Federal guidelines recommend that all cancer patients with chronic cancer pain be prescribed an around-the-clock analgesic regimen, as well as a short-acting supplement for breakthrough pain. However, not all patients received both types of medication. In the study, 13.9% of patients were prescribed opioid analgesics on an around-the-clock basis, 56.9% were prescribed opioid analgesics on an as-needed basis, and 29.2% were prescribed both around-the-clock and as-needed analgesics.
"Poor adherence, may, therefore, in part reflect the lack of relief from inadequate analgesic prescriptions," said von Roenn.
Reference
1. Miaskowski C, et al. Lack of adherence with the alalgesic regimen: A significant barrier to effective cancer pain management. J Clin Oncol. 2001;23:4275-4279.
Subscribe Now for Access
You have reached your article limit for the month. We hope you found our articles both enjoyable and insightful. For information on new subscriptions, product trials, alternative billing arrangements or group and site discounts please call 800-688-2421. We look forward to having you as a long-term member of the Relias Media community.