Cancer Pain and Co-Analgesics
WHO Analgesic Ladder (Step 1 non-opioid → Step 2 → Step 3 strong opioid) & its by-mouth/by-the-clock/by-the-individual principles · Co-analgesics (adjuvant analgesics) — antidepressants (amitriptyline, duloxetine), anticonvulsants (gabapentin, pregabalin, carbamazepine), corticosteroids, bisphosphonates/denosumab & radiopharmaceuticals, NMDA antagonist ketamine, topical agents · Breakthrough-pain dosing · Opioid rotation & equianalgesia · Managing opioid adverse effects · Palliative-care principles & the Indian NDPS/END opioid-access framework
Past DNB · 1
DNBDec '16
Introduction — cancer pain & the co-analgesic rationale
- Cancer pain is multi-mechanistic — clinical cancer-pain syndromes typically combine nociceptive/inflammatory and neuropathic mechanisms rather than a single pain type; pain is treated as the "fifth vital sign" and adequate assessment/relief is a standard-of-care and legal obligation in many jurisdictions.
- Two dimensions of pain — the sensory-discriminative (intensity) and affective-motivational (suffering) dimensions are pharmacologically distinct — opioids act on both, and even sub-analgesic morphine can blunt the affective response before perceived intensity.
- Mechanism dictates drug choice — continuous dull inflammatory pain is relieved well by opioids; neuropathic pain responds less well to opioids (needs higher doses) and not at all to NSAIDs — the pharmacological rationale for recruiting co-analgesics.
- Co-analgesic (adjuvant analgesic) — definition — a drug whose primary indication is not pain but which "enhances analgesic efficacy, treats concurrent symptoms that exacerbate pain, or provides independent analgesic activity for specific types of pain" — usable at every step of the ladder (examples: antidepressants, anticonvulsants, corticosteroids, bisphosphonates, ketamine, topical agents).
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Cancer Pain And Co Analgesics
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