Chronic Non-cancer Pain Management in a Tertiary Pain Clinic Network: a Retrospective Study

This study aimed to provide preliminary information regarding the treatments of CP in PMCs in Italy, and to identify the reasons for accessing the Italian network (hub versus spoke pain clinics) to manage CP. This study sheds light on CP management after the Italian Law 38/2010 was enacted and the Regional Network for the management of CP was established. Pain management aims to improve the psycho–physical, emotional, and social dimensions of health and functioning in CP patients using a holistic approach by an interdisciplinary team [29, 30]. We found that integrated treatment approaches were used in pain clinics, mainly pharmacological and invasive therapies, since pain clinics can offer advanced treatments, which primary care cannot fully provide for very complex patients owing to the complex nature of pain [18] or for patients with refractory pain. A multimodal analgesic approach includes NSAIDs, opioids, and adjuvants [14, 15]. Over half of the studied patients use opioid therapy, and their choice shows a statistically significant association with the intensity and nature of the CP. Although National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommend not starting with opioids to manage primary chronic pain in people aged 16 years and over [16], in our case, the results of multivariate logistic regressions suggest that the nature seems to influence the use of opioids and the use of complementary treatments, as well as invasive treatments for pain management. The results of multivariate logistic regressions suggest that severe/moderate pain was significantly associated with the benefit of invasive therapies. Given the high use of these treatments, it is plausible that many of these patients have been suffering from pain for a long time (more than 24 months) [28].

Moreover, opioid use has benefits as well as potentially serious risks. However, many Americans have been impacted by the severe harm associated with their use [31], but this is not the case in Italy or Europe as a whole, where the prevalence of opioid dependence among adults is low and varies considerably between countries [32]. In Italy, the use of pain medication has progressively increased over the years, with an average annual variation of 1.7%, rising from 6.9 defined daily dose (DDD)/1000 inhabitants. In particular, the use of effective opioids for pain therapy has progressively increased over time (from 2014 to 2020), with an annual average variation of 5.5% [33].

In our results, the multivariate analysis describes how the use of invasive treatments relates to the nature and intensity of the pain. A recent review shows that invasive treatments as adjuvants to conventional medical treatment can be effectively used for managing patients with refractory pain [20]. Despite the publications on these therapies, considerable controversy surrounds the efficacy of most invasive treatments. The primary purpose of most invasive treatments continues to be pain severity or the reduction of opioid use. For example, most experts would not consider a two-point decrease in pain score a successful outcome if the study participant doubled their opioid dosage and stopped working due to increasing functional impairment [34].

Moreover, the quality of the outcomes depends on research. In scenarios where blinding of the participant is not possible or feasible, blinding of the outcome assessor can still function to reduce bias. Surprisingly, most invasive pain therapy trials have not been double-blinded [35].

Our results showed that the use of complementary therapies is minimal. This is in contrast with many other studies [17]. Among complementary treatments, acupuncture is the most prevalent. Its use is related to increased pain intensity; it is used in therapy with intensive pharmacological treatments in cases of severe pain. Studies also focus on the treatment of musculoskeletal and mixed chronic pain. Acupuncture reduced pain and improved quality of life in the short term (up to 3 months) compared with sham acupuncture or usual care [16]. There was not enough evidence to determine longer-term benefits [16]. A previous survey shows a partial use of complementary therapies to treat chronic pain and reduced use caused by economic and cultural barriers [34]. However, there is a lack of good-quality studies focusing on non-pharmacological approaches to treating CP [20].

Finally, the authors want to point out that this research did not demonstrate the effectiveness of the treatment strategies but only described treatment prescribed in outpatient records. First, every pain therapy center uses approaches that do not always clearly consider the guidelines (GL) available. This could reflect the heterogeneity of the treatments provided by the individual pain center in the same network. Although there are guidelines in some countries [14,15,16, 21], in Italy, no guidelines have been published on chronic non-cancer pain management. The Italian National Institute of Health is working hard to adapt international guidelines, using the International Guideline Evaluation Screening Tool (IGEST) [36] and the GRADE-ADOLOPMENT approach [37, 38]. This last approach combines the advantages of adolopment/adoption and the development of the new guidelines, which guarantees a high methodological rigor so that the recommendations are applicable in a health system context different from the ones produced.

The results of our univariate and multivariate logistic regression (Table 4) regarding the choice of type of pain clinic (spoke versus hub) demonstrate that some clinical characteristics (nature/quality of pain, multi-diagnosis in chronic pain, and > 1 sites of pain), pharmacological and complementary therapies, and free choice of pain clinic, were significantly associated with the intention of spoke pain clinics for pain management. Based on the advice of specialists, patients with severe/moderate pain and those needing invasive treatments were directed to the hub clinic for pain management. The complexity of their case did not appear to affect whether patients were referred to the spoke or the hub. They are characterized by different levels of care intensity and are distributed throughout the region and the country, according to a structured network. The pain therapy hub hospital centers represent regional reference structures with high care complexity and guarantee pain management through an interdisciplinary approach for complex pathologies, using dedicated multidisciplinary teams. Spokes, on the other hand, are outpatient pain therapy centers, which aim to carry out various integrated diagnostic, pharmacological, instrumental and/or surgical treatments aimed at reducing pain and disabilities associated with people assisted on an outpatient basis, independent of the etiology/pathogenesis of the painful condition. A recent study in the same network showed a lack of a multi-professional or interdisciplinary approaches to chronic pain management [23]. The main problem is that many patients wait a long time before consulting with a specialist in pain clinics. The activation of the treatment path starts from an initial evaluation of the patient by the GP, who can request specialist consultations to manage the patient’s chronic pain. At least in Italy, pain therapy consultations do not have clear priority criteria for rapid access to tertiary pain clinics. A proposed model uses priority criteria for admission to consultation with a pain specialist [39]. The tool allows a fast and straightforward numerical validated instrument, to correctly manage the priority assignation of patients affected by chronic pain. This model avoids either improper admission to the emergency room if not indicated, or consulting a specialist too early for patients who could still be managed appropriately by their GP.

This survey has some limitations. Firstly, the research was restricted to only one Italian region (Latium), and it is a retrospective study, despite collecting a numerically and statistically significant sample. Secondly, this study is not able to evaluate the efficacy and the appropriateness of the application of therapeutic regimes. Lastly, we have not been able to assess the effectiveness and efficiency of the pain therapy network because, to date, a series of indicators capable of measuring the pain therapy network has not been determined, as already in use in the palliative care setting [40].

A strength of this study is that this is one of the very few studies on tertiary pain clinics in Italy, and all clinical information was provided by the medical records filled in by the medical and nursing staff working in the tertiary pain clinics, thus limiting or avoiding errors and recall bias.

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