Pharmacodynamic effects following co-administration of cannabinoids and opioids: a scoping review of human experimental studies.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain Medicine Pub Date : 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1093/pm/pnae024
David Guy, Jared C Wootten, Michael Wong, Daniel Turski, Mark Lukewich, Abdulrahman Alboog, Abirami R Kandasamy, Jonathan Gregory, Raju Poolacherla
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Cannabinoids are increasingly used in the management of chronic pain. Although analgesic potential has been demonstrated, cannabinoids interact with a range of bodily functions that are also influenced by chronic pain medications, including opioids.

Objective: We performed a scoping review of literature on the pharmacodynamic effects following the co-administration of cannabinoids and opioids.

Methods: We systematically searched EMBASE, PubMed, and PsycINFO for studies that experimentally investigated the co-effects of cannabinoids and opioids in human subjects. Available evidence was summarized by clinical population and organ system. A risk of bias assessment was performed.

Results: A total of 16 studies met the inclusion criteria. Study populations included patients with chronic non-cancer and cancer pain on long-term opioid regimens and healthy young adults without prior exposure to opioids who were subject to experimental nociceptive stimuli. Commonly administered cannabinoid agents included Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol and/or cannabidiol. Co-administration of cannabinoids and opioids did not consistently improve pain outcomes; however, sleep and mood benefits were observed in chronic pain patients. Increased somnolence, memory and attention impairment, dizziness, gait disturbance, and nauseousness and vomiting were noted with co-administration of cannabinoids and opioids. Cardiorespiratory effects following co-administration appeared to vary according to duration of exposure, population type, and prior exposure to cannabinoids and opioids.

Conclusions: The available evidence directly investigating the pharmacodynamic effects following co-administration of cannabinoids and opioids for non-analgesic outcomes is scarce and suffers from a lack of methodological reporting. As such, further research in this area with comprehensive methodologic reporting is warranted.

大麻素和阿片类药物联合用药后的药效学效应:人体实验研究范围综述。
背景:大麻素越来越多地被用于治疗慢性疼痛。虽然镇痛潜力已得到证实,但大麻素会与一系列身体机能相互作用,而这些机能也会受到包括阿片类药物在内的慢性疼痛药物的影响:我们对有关大麻素和阿片类药物联合用药后药效学效应的文献进行了一次范围性综述:我们系统地检索了 EMBASE、PubMed 和 PsycINFO 中对大麻素和阿片类药物在人类受试者中的协同作用进行实验研究的文献。按照临床人群和器官系统总结了现有证据。对偏倚风险进行了评估:共有 16 项研究符合纳入标准。研究人群包括长期接受阿片类药物治疗的慢性非癌症和癌症疼痛患者,以及之前未接触过阿片类药物但受到实验性痛觉刺激的健康年轻人。常用的大麻素药物包括Δ9-四氢大麻酚和/或大麻二酚。同时服用大麻素和阿片类药物并不能持续改善疼痛结果;但在慢性疼痛患者中观察到了睡眠和情绪方面的益处。同时服用大麻素和阿片类药物会增加嗜睡、记忆力和注意力障碍、头晕、步态障碍以及恶心和呕吐。联合用药后对心肺功能的影响似乎因接触时间长短、人群类型以及之前是否接触过大麻素和阿片类药物而异:直接研究大麻素和阿片类药物联合用药后对非镇痛结果的药效学影响的现有证据很少,而且缺乏方法学报告。因此,有必要在这一领域开展进一步研究,并提供全面的方法学报告。
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来源期刊
Pain Medicine
Pain Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
3.20%
发文量
187
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Pain Medicine is a multi-disciplinary journal dedicated to pain clinicians, educators and researchers with an interest in pain from various medical specialties such as pain medicine, anaesthesiology, family practice, internal medicine, neurology, neurological surgery, orthopaedic spine surgery, psychiatry, and rehabilitation medicine as well as related health disciplines such as psychology, neuroscience, nursing, nurse practitioner, physical therapy, and integrative health.
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