CHICAGO — An updated guideline addressing persistent pain in older people takes a tough stance on the use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
The American Geriatrics Society (AGS) guideline recommends that acetaminophen be considered for initial and ongoing treatment of persistent pain, particularly musculoskeletal pain. But in a significant departure from its 2002 guideline, the AGS recommends that nonselective NSAIDs and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) selective inhibitors “be considered rarely, and with extreme caution, in highly selected individuals.”
The AGS had recommended that seniors use over-the-counter or prescription NSAIDs, such as aspirin or ibuprofen, or COX-2 inhibitors before being prescribed an opioid. The current recommendation reflects recent good evidence that this is a risky strategy in older people, panel member Dr. James Katz said at the society's annual meeting, where the guidelines (“Pharmacological Management of Persistent Pain in Older Persons”) were released.
Traditional NSAIDs are associated with adverse gastrointestinal events in 20% of patients, with 107,000 hospitalizations and 16,500 deaths yearly attributed to NSAID-related GI complications.
COX-2 inhibitors seem to produce fewer upper GI events than do other NSAIDs, but “all nonsteroidals, whether they are [COX-2 inhibitors] or not, have a significant portfolio of adverse effects that is noteworthy for the elderly population,” said Dr. Katz, director of rheumatology at George Washington University in Washington. “They can aggravate hypertension, they can cause renal impairment by a variety of mechanisms, [they can cause] edema [and] gastrointestinal problems, and now we know cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease can be attributed to nonsteroidal interaction.”
Last year's study of 336,906 community-dwelling Medicaid beneficiaries by the Veterans Affairs Tennessee Valley Healthcare System extended concerns about COX-2 selective inhibitors to cerebrovascular disease, said Dr. Katz. The study suggested an increased risk of stroke with rofecoxib (Vioxx) and valdecoxib (Bextra), compared with the effects of nonselective agents (Stroke 2008;39:2037–45). The finding was not statistically significant, he noted, but both drugs have been withdrawn from the market.
Recent evidence also showed that combining a traditional NSAID with low-dose aspirin therapy increases the risk of GI bleeding beyond that of the traditional NSAID alone (Curr. Opin. Rheumatol. 2008;20:239–45). In 2006, the Food and Drug Administration warned against taking aspirin and ibuprofen together because ibuprofen interferes with aspirin's acetylation effect.
More research is needed to determine whether other NSAIDs interfere with the cardioprotective benefits of low-dose aspirin, said Dr. Katz, who was part of a panel unveiling the guidelines at the meeting. Panel members also said that more data are needed on the safety of topical preparations of NSAIDs.
The revised guideline recommends the eradication of Helicobacter pylori prior to initiating NSAIDs for pain, and the use of a proton pump inhibitor or misoprostol for gastrointestinal protection in older persons taking nonselective NSAIDs or in patients taking a COX-2 selective inhibitor with aspirin.
The guideline recommends that physicians consider opioid therapy for patients with moderate to severe pain, pain-related functional impairment, or diminished quality of life because of pain. People with continual or frequent daily pain may be treated with around-the-clock, time-contingent dosing aimed at achieving steady-state opioid therapy, said Dr. Perry Fine of the pain management center at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City.
The recommendations are based on a systematic review of 2,400 abstracts and 240 data-based, full-text articles. The update is to be published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.
Dr. Katz has served as a consultant for the American Academy of CME Inc. and for UCB Pharma Inc. Dr. Fine is as a consultant or speaker for numerous pharmaceutical companies and has interests in Johnson & Johnson and Cephalon Inc.