A Pragmatic Utility Function to Describe the Risk-Benefit Composite of Opioid and Nonopioid Analgesic Medication

$ 20.50 · 4.5 (540) · In stock

It is not straightforward to simultaneously evaluate the beneficial and harmful effects of pain management, since different drugs may possess different analgesia and adverse effect profiles. Utility functions, derived from the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of individual outcome parameters, have been constructed to address this problem. Here, we construct “pragmatic” utility functions based on measurements of benefit and harm, but without making assumptions about the underlying pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Using data from two previous studies, utility functions were designed by estimating the probability of occurrence of benefit and harm and combining these into one function. Study 1 was a clinical trial on the effect of oral pregabalin on pain relief in chronic pancreatitis patients, with endpoint analgesia and dizziness monitored for 21 days. Study 2 was an experimental study on the effect of intravenous fentanyl on antinociception and respiratory depression in healthy volunteers. From study 1, the utility function was negative the first week of treatment, indicative of the greater probability of dizziness than analgesia, but positive thereafter. From study 2, the utility function showed a nadir 30 minutes after dosing, after which the probability function slowly increased toward zero. A pragmatic utility function based on the probability of two binary outcomes, analgesia and adverse effect, was successfully constructed using data from the two previous studies. The results yielded valuable insights into the utility of treatment and may be highly educative for physicians and potentially used in development of potent analgesics without serious side effects.

PDF) Neuropathic Pain: Challenges and Opportunities

A Pragmatic Utility Function to Describe the Risk-Benefit

Gastrointestinal pain Nature Reviews Disease Primers

The role for high volume local infiltration analgesia with liposomal bupivacaine in total hip arthroplasty: A scoping review

Acute Pain Management: Scientific Evidence

Albert DAHAN, Professor of Anesthesioligy, MD PhD

An experimental study comparing the respiratory effects of

Pharmacotherapy for pain: efficacy and safety issues examined by

PDF) Neuropathic Pain: Challenges and Opportunities

Oral and Parenteral Opioid Analgesics (Section 2) - The Essence of Analgesia and Analgesics

Comparing the clinical and cost-effectiveness of remote (telehealth and online) cognitive behavioral therapy-based treatments for high-impact chronic pain relative to usual care: study protocol for the RESOLVE multisite randomized control trial