Medical Marijuana for Pain Management in Hospice Care as a Complementary Approach to Scheduled Opioids: A Single Arm Study.

Theodore Zanker, Joseph Sacco, James Prota, Michelle Palma, Kyoung A Viola Lee, Ruixiao Rachel Wang, Yixuan Liang, James Cunningham, Mona Mackary, Polina Ovchinnikova
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Abstract

Background: Opioid therapy is critical for pain relief for most hospice patients but may be limited by adverse side effects. Combining medical cannabis with opioids may help mitigate adverse effects while maintaining effective pain relief. Aim: This single-arm study investigated the impact of combined medical cannabis/opioid therapy on pain relief, opioid dose, appetite, respiratory function, well-being, nausea, and adverse events in hospice inpatients. Design: Adult hospice inpatients using scheduled oral, parenteral, or transdermal opioids for pain were administered standardized oral medical cannabis, 40 mg CBD/1.5 mg THC or 80 mg CBD/3 mg THC. Descriptive statistics detailed demographic and clinical baseline characteristics, the Mann-Whitney test compared outcomes, and the longitudinal mixed effects regression model analyzed longitudinal effects of combined therapy. Setting/Participants: Sixty-six inpatients at The Connecticut Hospital, Inc. were assessed over 996 treatment days; average age was 68.2 ± 12.9 years, 90.9% were white. Cancer was the most common diagnosis. Results: The medical cannabis/opioid combination showed a significant longitudinal reduction in pain intensity (P = .0029) and a non-significant trend toward lower opioid doses. Well-being, appetite, nausea, and respiratory function showed non-statistically significant changes. Three patients (4.5%) experienced minor, reversible adverse events potentially related to medical cannabis. No serious or life-threatening adverse events were seen. Conclusion: Combination medical cannabis/opioid therapy showed statistically significant pain relief and may have the potential for reducing opioid dose and mitigating opioid toxicity, offering a safe pain management alternative to opioids alone for patients in end-of-life care settings, and warrants further investigation in larger controlled trials.

在安宁疗护中使用医用大麻治疗疼痛,作为在册阿片类药物的补充方法:单臂研究。
背景:阿片类药物治疗对大多数临终关怀患者的疼痛缓解至关重要,但可能会受到不良副作用的限制。将医用大麻与阿片类药物结合使用可能有助于减轻不良反应,同时保持有效的镇痛效果。目的:这项单臂研究调查了医用大麻/阿片类药物联合疗法对临终关怀住院患者的疼痛缓解、阿片类药物剂量、食欲、呼吸功能、幸福感、恶心和不良反应的影响。设计:对按计划使用口服、肠外或透皮阿片类药物止痛的成人安宁疗护住院患者服用标准化口服医用大麻、40 毫克 CBD/1.5 毫克 THC 或 80 毫克 CBD/3 毫克 THC。描述性统计详细描述了人口统计学和临床基线特征,曼-惠特尼检验比较了结果,纵向混合效应回归模型分析了综合疗法的纵向效应。环境/参与者:康涅狄格医院的66名住院患者接受了996个治疗日的评估;平均年龄(68.2 ± 12.9)岁,90.9%为白人。癌症是最常见的诊断。结果:医用大麻/阿片类药物组合可显著降低疼痛强度(P = .0029),并有降低阿片类药物剂量的非显著趋势。福祉、食欲、恶心和呼吸功能的变化无统计学意义。三名患者(4.5%)出现了可能与医用大麻有关的轻微、可逆的不良反应。没有出现严重或危及生命的不良事件。结论医用大麻/阿片类药物联合疗法在统计学上显示出明显的镇痛效果,可能具有减少阿片类药物剂量和减轻阿片类药物毒性的潜力,为生命末期护理环境中的患者提供了一种替代单独使用阿片类药物的安全镇痛方法,值得在更大规模的对照试验中进一步研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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