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Managing chronic pain in older adults: 6 steps to overcoming medication barriers

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Recommendations. In addition to assessing the intensity of the pain using a pain assessment tool, it is important to determine certain characteristics of the pain. What is the location and quality of the pain? Ask patients how the pain limits them. What prior treatments have been tried and failed? What has worked the best? What treatment/coping strategies are they using now? Have they had any intolerable adverse effects from specific treatments? Reliable predictors of treatment response require further definition,17 but a successful trial of a given analgesic in the past is often a good indicator of what might work again.

Step 2. Review the patient’s problem list

Use of multiple medications. Polypharmacy—with 5 or more being a typical threshold criterion—is common in people ages 65 and older and frequently complicates the pharmacologic management of chronic pain.16,18 Complications most often occur as a result of drug-drug interactions.

Multiple coexisting chronic conditions. Multimorbidity is common in older adults with chronic pain. Consider co-occurring diabetes, hypertension, and osteoporosis when initiating any trial of a pain medication. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) can be effective in treating pain syndromes, but their use can be hazardous in older individuals, particularly those with coexisting hypertension, cardiovascular disease, history of peptic ulcer disease or gastropathy, or impaired renal function. NSAID use has been implicated as a cause of approximately one-quarter of all hospitalizations related to drug adverse effects among adults over age 65.1

Key Point

NSAIDs can be effective in treating pain syndromes, but their use can be hazardous in older patients with hypertension, peptic ulcer disease, or impaired renal function.

The geriatric syndrome of frailty is defined by deficits in physiologic reserve and decreased resistance to multiple stressors.19 Risk of fracture is a particular concern of clinicians, older patients, and their caregivers. Opioids are the analgesic medications most often associated with increased fracture risk. In a recent analysis of Medicare claims data, opioid users were found to have a significantly increased fracture risk compared with users of nonselective NSAIDs.20 Mechanisms underlying this association include opioid-associated cognitive dysfunction and worsening gait/balance function.

Recommendations. Obtain a full list of the patient’s medications, including all OTC and complementary preparations. Also consider chronic kidney problems, liver disease, movement disorders, and neurologic problems when selecting a pharmacologic agent. Consider what chronic conditions might be made worse by an analgesic trial or would operate as a contraindication to starting a specific pain medication. Establish which medications or comorbidities might modify your treatment choices.

Step 3. Establish the patient’s treatment goals

We recommend shared decision-making when planning treatment and monitoring outcomes for older adults with chronic pain. Use your patient’s reports of the experience of pain— including pain intensity and how pain affects daily functioning1 —and identify his or her treatment goals, which might differ from yours. You may be aiming for the best pain relief possible, but your patient might be focused on practical issues such as increased mobility or ability to socialize. By talking openly, you can reach consensus and agree upon realistic treatment goals.

This approach can improve patients’ outcomes and satisfaction with treatment; it also has been shown to improve physician satisfaction when treating patients with chronic pain.21 In a recent qualitative study, older individuals varied in how much they wanted to participate in making decisions and being a “source of control” in their pain treatment. 22 Some patients—particularly those ages 80 and older—prefer to have their physicians make treatment decisions for them, whereas others embrace active participation. Regardless of how much older individuals wish to share in treatment decisions, they all value being listened to and understood by their physicians.21

Recommendations. The patient’s goals and expectations for treatment may or may not be the same as yours. Before starting a medication trial, address potential unrealistic expectations such as complete relief of pain or a belief that treatment is not likely to help. Come to a mutual decision as to what constitutes the most important outcomes, and you will then be able to monitor and assess treatment success.

Step 4. Identify barriers to initiating and adhering to therapy

Cognitive impairment is a strong risk factor for undertreatment of pain. It can lead to underreporting of pain by patients or difficulty for clinicians in assessing treatment response from those who are unable to communicate pain effectively. A study of nursing home residents found that only 56% of those with cognitive impairment received pain medications, compared with 80% of those with intact cognition.23 Older patients with cognitive deficits and memory loss also may take analgesic medications inappropriately or forget when/if they took them, increasing the risk of undertreatment or overdosing.

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