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Variability in conditioned pain modulation predicts response to NSAID treatment in patients with knee osteoarthritis. | LitMetric

Variability in conditioned pain modulation predicts response to NSAID treatment in patients with knee osteoarthritis.

BMC Musculoskelet Disord

Department of Anesthesiology, Harvard Medical School, Brigham & Women's Hospital, 850 Boylston St, Suite 302, Chestnut Hill, MA, 02467, USA.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) showed increased pain sensitivity and reduced ability to inhibit pain compared to a pain-free control group.
  • After a month of treatment with diclofenac, OA patients experienced about a 30% reduction in pain, irrespective of any neuropathic symptoms.
  • The study found that those with better baseline pain-inhibition measures (measured through conditioned pain modulation) had greater reductions in pain after treatment, indicating the potential usefulness of quantitative sensory testing (QST) in predicting responses to pain management.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with painful knee osteoarthritis (OA) demonstrate hyperalgesia and altered pain-modulatory responses. While some prior work has demonstrated cross-sectional associations between laboratory and clinical pain measures, it is unknown whether individual variability in quantitative sensory testing (QST) responses at baseline can prospectively predict analgesic treatment responses.

Method: Patients with knee OA (n = 35) were compared on QST responses to a demographically-matched pain-free control group (n = 39), after which patients completed a month-long treatment study of diclofenac sodium topical gel (1 %), applied up to 4 times daily.

Results: OA patients demonstrated reduced pain thresholds at multiple anatomic sites, as well as reduced conditioned pain modulation (CPM) and enhanced temporal summation of pain. The most pain-sensitive patients tended to report the most intense and neuropathic OA pain. Following diclofenac treatment, the knee OA cohort showed a roughly 30 % improvement in pain, regardless of the presence or absence of neuropathic symptoms. Baseline CPM scores, an index of endogenous pain-inhibitory capacity, were prospectively associated with treatment-related changes in clinical pain. Specifically, participants with higher CPM at baseline (i.e., better functioning endogenous pain-inhibitory systems) showed more reduction in pain at the end of treatment (p < .05).

Conclusions: These results support prior findings of amplified pain sensitivity and reduced pain-inhibition in OA patients. Moreover, the moderate to strong associations between laboratory-based measures of pain sensitivity and indices of clinical pain highlight the clinical relevance of QST in this sample. Finally, the prospective association between CPM and diclofenac response suggests that QST-based phenotyping may have utility in explaining inter-patient variability in long-term analgesic treatment outcomes.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.Gov Identifier: NCT01383954 . Registered June 22, 2011.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4944243PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12891-016-1124-6DOI Listing

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