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Pain Management Research Institute

Study Shows Pregabalin Effective in Difficult-to-Treat Nerve Pain

Sydney, Australia, November 28 (ots/PRNewswire)

- Results Offer Hope to Patients With Excruciating Chronic Pain
Findings from a new study published today in the journal Neurology
demonstrate that the oral medication pregabalin is significantly
effective in relieving central neuropathic (nerve) pain and improves
pain-related sleep disturbance and anxiety in patients with spinal
cord injury. Conducted by researchers at the Pain Management Research
Institute in Sydney, the study is the largest controlled clinical
trial ever of patients with spinal cord injury who suffer from
central neuropathic pain, a particularly persistent and severe pain
condition.
Results from the study showed that patients using pregabalin
(150-600 mg/day) experienced significant improvements in symptoms as
early as the first week of treatment and those improvements were
sustained throughout the study. Patients taking pregabalin
experienced a significant reduction in the average intensity of their
pain and significant improvements in pain-related sleep interference
as well as a reduction in anxiety compared to those taking placebo.
"Historically it has been extremely difficult to manage patients
with central neuropathic pain due to a lack of effective treatments
and many people with spinal cord injury have excruciating pain," said
Prof. Philip Siddall, lead investigator of the study and Clinical
Associate Professor at the Pain Management Research Institute in
Sydney. "The study demonstrates that pregabalin is an effective and
well-tolerated therapy for treating a range of symptoms that can
negatively impact overall quality of life. This study is an important
step forward for clinicians trying to improve the lives of patients
suffering from difficult-to-treat nerve pains."
Approximately two-thirds of patients with spinal cord injury often
suffer from severe central neuropathic pain,[1],[2] which is caused
by a lesion or dysfunction in the central nervous system.[3] Patients
often describe the symptoms of their pain as burning, tingling,
stabbing, shooting, pricking, scalding and freezing.[4],[5],[6]
Chronic pain following spinal cord injury may limit a patient's
ability to perform daily activities.[7] Consequently, quality of life
may be impaired.[8] Central neuropathic pain can occur in patients
with spinal cord injury, stroke, multiple sclerosis and neoplasia.
Pregabalin is believed to work by calming hyper-excited neurons or
nerve cells which may be an underlying cause for various types of
nerve pain.
Based on the results of this study, pregabalin recently became the
only therapy to receive European regulatory approval in central
neuropathic pain.
About the Study
The study, sponsored by pregabalin (Lyrica(R)) developer Pfizer
Inc, was  a multicentre, parallel-group, double-blind, randomised
clinical trial comparing pregabalin with placebo over a 12-week
treatment period in patients with spinal cord injury who had central
neuropathic pain as defined by the International Association for the
Study of Pain classification. The 12-week treatment period was
preceded by a 1-week baseline period during which baseline data were
collected. Patients were randomised to receive either flexible dose
pregabalin (150-600 mg/day) (n=70) or placebo (n=67) taken twice
daily. The primary endpoint of the study was mean pain score as
measured by patient pain diary assessments which were completed
daily. Patients also rated the extent to which pain interfered with
sleep in a daily diary. Changes in anxiety were evaluated using the
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS).
Results from the study showed that:
  • Patients receiving pregabalin experienced significant improvements in symptoms as early as the first week of treatment and those improvements were sustained throughout the study
  • Patients receiving pregabalin experienced a significant reduction in the average intensity of their pain and significant improvements in pain-related sleep interference (p<0.001) as well as a reduction in anxiety (p<0.05) compared to those taking placebo (p<0.001)
  • More than 40 percent of patients had greater than a 30 percent reduction in pain as compared to 16 percent of patients on placebo (p=0.001)
  • At the end of the study, three times less patients had severe pain in the pregabalin group compared with the placebo group
  • Pregabalin was associated with a rapid and significant reduction in pain-related sleep interference (p<0.001) as well as a reduction in anxiety (p<0.05) compared to those patients taking placebo
  • The most common adverse events were somnolence and dizziness, which were typically mild to moderate and transient.
About the Pain Management Research Institute
The Pain Management Research Institute (PMRI) is headed by
Professor Michael Cousins and brings together around 40 researchers
and 40 clinical staff who are involved in pain research and
management  (http://www.pmri.med.usyd.edu.au/). The Institute also
has a strong focus on education and has a number of staff involved in
the delivery of a postgraduate degree program in Pain Management
through the University of Sydney. This course is delivered on-line
and accessible to students internationally. In 2004 the PMRI
Educational Program received an international award as an "Exemplary
Educational Program". Since 2005, the education program has been
available to European and North American students through
collaborations with the University of Edinburgh and the University of
California, San Francisco.
The pain research program of the PMRI has a broad scope and has a
number of teams investigating various aspects of pain epidemiology,
neurobiology, psychology and treatment and has gained international
recognition for its work in several areas including pain following
spinal cord injury. In 1998, the Centre gained one of only eight
National Health & Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia
awards as a "Centre of Clinical Excellence in Hospital Based
Research". In 2005, the PMRI, in collaboration with the University of
Queensland (Australia), University College London (UK) and Nagasaki
University (Japan) was a recipient of an NHMRC Program Grant
(2005-2009). Also in 2005 PMRI was the top level funded institution
for a Program Grant from the NSW Health to investigate "Mechanisms
and Treatment of Pain Associated with Spinal Cord Injury" (2005 -
2008)
The Pain Management & Research Centre (PMRC) is the clinical arm
of the PMRI and conducts clinical treatment programs in acute pain,
cancer pain and chronic non cancer pain. PMRC comprises a group of
approx 40 multidisciplinary health care practitioners who evaluate
all aspects of each patient's pain and recommend treatment options
based upon a multidisciplinary approach. PMRC currently provides
approx 40,000 episodes of patient care per annum. Each year at least
four internationally funded Fellows spend a year of training with
PMRC. To date Fellows have been drawn from more than 20 countries.
[1] Bonica JJ. Introduction: Semantic, epidemiologic and
educational issues. In: Casey KL, ed. Pain and Central Nervous System
Disease. New York: Raven Press, 1991:13-30.
[2] Siddall PJ, Taylor DA, McClelland JM, Rutkowski SB, Cousins
MJ. Pain report and the relationship of pain to physician factors in
the first 6 months following spinal cord injury. Pain
1999;81(1-2):187-197.
[3] Merskey H, Bogduk N, eds. Classification of chronic pain.
Descriptions of chronic pain syndromes and definitions of pain terms.
Seattle: IASP Press, 1994:209-212.
[4] Cruz-Almeida Y, Martinez-Arizala A, Widerstrom-Noga EG.
Chronicity of pain associated with spinal cord injury: a longitudinal
analysis. J Rehabil  Res Develop. 2005; 42(5):585-594.
[5] Finnerup N, Johannesen I, Fuglsang-Frederiksen A, Bach FW,
Jensen T. Sensory function in spinal cord injury patients with and
without pain. Brain.  2003; 126:57-70.
[6] Siddall P, McClelland JM, Rutkowski S, Cousins M. A
longitudinal study of the prevalence and characteristics of pain in
the first 5 years  following spinal cord injury. Pain. 2003;
103:249-257.
[7] Ravensscroft A, Ahmed YS, Burnside IG. Chronic pain after SCI:
a patient survey. Spinal Cord. 2000; 38:611-614.
[8] Stensman R. Adjustment to traumatic spinal cord injury: a
longitudinal study of self-reported quality of life. Paraplegia.
1994; 32:416-422.

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