UK medical cannabis registry: A clinical outcome analysis of medical cannabis therapy in chronic pain patients with and without co-morbid sleep impairment.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q2 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Pain Practice Pub Date : 2024-11-15 DOI:10.1111/papr.13438
Ishita Datta, Simon Erridge, Carl Holvey, Ross Coomber, Rahul Guru, Wendy Holden, Alia Darweish Medniuk, Mohammed Sajad, Robert Searle, Azfer Usmani, Sanjay Varma, James J Rucker, Michael Platt, Mikael H Sodergren
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Chronic pain (CP) affects 35.0%-51.3% of the UK population, with 67%-88% reporting sleep disturbances. Cannabis-based medicinal products (CBMPs) have shown therapeutic potential in managing CP. Evidence suggests poor sleep worsens pain perception; therefore, this study aimed to assess patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) following CBMP treatment in CP patients with and without co-morbid sleep impairment.

Methods: A prospective cohort study of CP patients from the UK Medical Cannabis Registry was conducted. Participants were separated by baseline single-item sleep quality scale (SQS) score into sleep impaired (SQS ≤3) and unimpaired (SQS ≥4) cohorts. The primary outcome assessed changes in PROMs from baseline to 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-months. Participants completed the following: SQS, General Anxiety Disorder-7, EQ-5D-5L, Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), and Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2. Significance was defined as p < 0.050.

Results: 1139 participants met the inclusion criteria (sleep impaired: n = 517, 45.4%; sleep unimpaired: n = 622, 54.61%). The sleep impaired cohort showed improvements in all PROMs at each follow-up (p < 0.010). The sleep unimpaired cohort showed similar results (p < 0.050), except in SQS and ED-5Q-5L: self-care and anxiety/depression scores (p > 0.050). However, the sleep impaired cohort observed greater improvements in BPI pain severity (p < 0.050) and SQS (p < 0.001) than the sleep unimpaired cohort at all follow-ups. 2817 adverse events were self-reported between both cohorts (p = 0.197).

Discussion: These findings align with literature that shows associated improvements in pain outcomes following CBMP administration. Sleep impaired individuals were more likely to experience greater pain severity improvements. However, this was not confirmed on multivariate logistic regression analysis and instead may be confounded by baseline pain severity.

Conclusion: Whilst these results show promise for the effects of CBMPs on CP, they must be examined within the limitations of the study design. These findings provide further evidence to support the design of subsequent randomized controlled trials to verify causality between CBMPs and pain outcomes.

英国医用大麻登记处:对伴有或不伴有睡眠障碍的慢性疼痛患者进行医用大麻治疗的临床结果分析。
简介英国有 35.0%-51.3% 的人受到慢性疼痛(CP)的影响,其中 67%-88% 的人有睡眠障碍。以大麻为基础的药用产品(CBMPs)已显示出治疗慢性疼痛的潜力。有证据表明,睡眠不佳会加重痛觉;因此,本研究旨在评估伴有或不伴有睡眠障碍的 CP 患者接受 CBMP 治疗后的患者报告结果指标(PROMs):方法:对英国医用大麻登记处的 CP 患者进行了一项前瞻性队列研究。参与者按基线单项睡眠质量量表(SQS)得分分为睡眠受损(SQS ≤3)和未受损(SQS ≥4)两组。主要结果是评估 PROMs 从基线到 1 个月、3 个月、6 个月和 12 个月的变化。参与者完成了以下项目:SQS、一般焦虑症-7、EQ-5D-5L、简明疼痛量表 (BPI) 和短式麦吉尔疼痛问卷-2。显著性定义为 p 结果:1139 名参与者符合纳入标准(睡眠受损者:517 人,占 45.4%;睡眠未受损者:622 人,占 54.61%)。在每次随访中,睡眠受损者队列的所有 PROM 均有所改善(p 0.050)。然而,睡眠受损组在 BPI 疼痛严重程度方面的改善更大(P 讨论):这些研究结果与文献一致,文献显示服用 CBMP 后疼痛结果得到了相关改善。睡眠受损者的疼痛严重程度更有可能得到改善。然而,多变量逻辑回归分析并未证实这一点,反而可能受到基线疼痛严重程度的影响:虽然这些结果表明了 CBMPs 对 CP 的影响,但必须在研究设计的限制条件下对其进行审查。这些发现为后续随机对照试验的设计提供了进一步的证据,以验证 CBMPs 与疼痛结果之间的因果关系。
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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来源期刊
Pain Practice
Pain Practice ANESTHESIOLOGY-CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
3.80%
发文量
92
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pain Practice, the official journal of the World Institute of Pain, publishes international multidisciplinary articles on pain and analgesia that provide its readership with up-to-date research, evaluation methods, and techniques for pain management. Special sections including the Consultant’s Corner, Images in Pain Practice, Case Studies from Mayo, Tutorials, and the Evidence-Based Medicine combine to give pain researchers, pain clinicians and pain fellows in training a systematic approach to continuing education in pain medicine. Prior to publication, all articles and reviews undergo peer review by at least two experts in the field.
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