Derry Sheena, Wiffen Philip J, Kalso Eija A, Bell Rae F, Aldington Dominic, Phillips Tudor, Gaskell Helen, Moore R Andrew
Pain Research and Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences (Nuffield Division of Anaesthetics), University of Oxford, Pain Research Unit, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, Oxfordshire, UK, OX3 7LE.
Department of Anaesthesia, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Helsinki University and Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 May 12;5(5):CD008609. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008609.pub2.
Topical analgesic drugs are used for a variety of painful conditions. Some are acute, typically strains or sprains, tendinopathy, or muscle aches. Others are chronic, typically osteoarthritis of hand or knee, or neuropathic pain.
To provide an overview of the analgesic efficacy and associated adverse events of topical analgesics (primarily nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), salicylate rubefacients, capsaicin, and lidocaine) applied to intact skin for the treatment of acute and chronic pain in adults.
We identified systematic reviews in acute and chronic pain published to February 2017 in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (the Cochrane Library). The primary outcome was at least 50% pain relief (participant-reported) at an appropriate duration. We extracted the number needed to treat for one additional beneficial outcome (NNT) for efficacy outcomes for each topical analgesic or formulation, and the number needed to treat for one additional harmful outcome (NNH) for adverse events. We also extracted information on withdrawals due to lack of efficacy or adverse events, systemic and local adverse events, and serious adverse events. We required information from at least 200 participants, in at least two studies. We judged that there was potential for publication bias if the addition of four studies of typical size (400 participants) with zero effect increased NNT compared with placebo to 10 (minimal clinical utility). We extracted GRADE assessment in the original papers, and made our own GRADE assessment.
Thirteen Cochrane Reviews (206 studies with around 30,700 participants) assessed the efficacy and harms from a range of topical analgesics applied to intact skin in a number of acute and chronic painful conditions. Reviews were overseen by several Review Groups, and concentrated on evidence comparing topical analgesic with topical placebo; comparisons of topical and oral analgesics were rare.For at least 50% pain relief, we considered evidence was moderate or high quality for several therapies, based on the underlying quality of studies and susceptibility to publication bias.In acute musculoskeletal pain (strains and sprains) with assessment at about seven days, therapies were diclofenac Emulgel (78% Emulgel, 20% placebo; 2 studies, 314 participants, NNT 1.8 (95% confidence interval 1.5 to 2.1)), ketoprofen gel (72% ketoprofen, 33% placebo, 5 studies, 348 participants, NNT 2.5 (2.0 to 3.4)), piroxicam gel (70% piroxicam, 47% placebo, 3 studies, 522 participants, NNT 4.4 (3.2 to 6.9)), diclofenac Flector plaster (63% Flector, 41% placebo, 4 studies, 1030 participants, NNT 4.7 (3.7 to 6.5)), and diclofenac other plaster (88% diclofenac plaster, 57% placebo, 3 studies, 474 participants, NNT 3.2 (2.6 to 4.2)).In chronic musculoskeletal pain (mainly hand and knee osteoarthritis) therapies were topical diclofenac preparations for less than six weeks (43% diclofenac, 23% placebo, 5 studies, 732 participants, NNT 5.0 (3.7 to 7.4)), ketoprofen over 6 to 12 weeks (63% ketoprofen, 48% placebo, 4 studies, 2573 participants, NNT 6.9 (5.4 to 9.3)), and topical diclofenac preparations over 6 to 12 weeks (60% diclofenac, 50% placebo, 4 studies, 2343 participants, NNT 9.8 (7.1 to 16)). In postherpetic neuralgia, topical high-concentration capsaicin had moderate-quality evidence of limited efficacy (33% capsaicin, 24% placebo, 2 studies, 571 participants, NNT 11 (6.1 to 62)).We judged evidence of efficacy for other therapies as low or very low quality. Limited evidence of efficacy, potentially subject to publication bias, existed for topical preparations of ibuprofen gels and creams, unspecified diclofenac formulations and diclofenac gel other than Emulgel, indomethacin, and ketoprofen plaster in acute pain conditions, and for salicylate rubefacients for chronic pain conditions. Evidence for other interventions (other topical NSAIDs, topical salicylate in acute pain conditions, low concentration capsaicin, lidocaine, clonidine for neuropathic pain, and herbal remedies for any condition) was very low quality and typically limited to single studies or comparisons with sparse data.We assessed the evidence on withdrawals as moderate or very low quality, because of small numbers of events. In chronic pain conditions lack of efficacy withdrawals were lower with topical diclofenac (6%) than placebo (9%) (11 studies, 3455 participants, number needed to treat to prevent (NNTp) 26, moderate-quality evidence), and topical salicylate (2% vs 7% for placebo) (5 studies, 501 participants, NNTp 21, very low-quality evidence). Adverse event withdrawals were higher with topical capsaicin low-concentration (15%) than placebo (3%) (4 studies, 477 participants, NNH 8, very low-quality evidence), topical salicylate (5% vs 1% for placebo) (7 studies, 735 participants, NNH 26, very low-quality evidence), and topical diclofenac (5% vs 4% for placebo) (12 studies, 3552 participants, NNH 51, very low-quality evidence).In acute pain, systemic or local adverse event rates with topical NSAIDs (4.3%) were no greater than with topical placebo (4.6%) (42 studies, 6740 participants, high quality evidence). In chronic pain local adverse events with topical capsaicin low concentration (63%) were higher than topical placebo (5 studies, 557 participants, number needed to treat for harm (NNH) 2.6), high quality evidence. Moderate-quality evidence indicated more local adverse events than placebo in chronic pain conditions with topical diclofenac (NNH 16) and local pain with topical capsaicin high-concentration (NNH 16). There was moderate-quality evidence of no additional local adverse events with topical ketoprofen over topical placebo in chronic pain. Serious adverse events were rare (very low-quality evidence).GRADE assessments of moderate or low quality in some of the reviews were considered by us to be very low because of small numbers of participants and events.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is good evidence that some formulations of topical diclofenac and ketoprofen are useful in acute pain conditions such as sprains or strains, with low (good) NNT values. There is a strong message that the exact formulation used is critically important in acute conditions, and that might also apply to other pain conditions. In chronic musculoskeletal conditions with assessments over 6 to 12 weeks, topical diclofenac and ketoprofen had limited efficacy in hand and knee osteoarthritis, as did topical high-concentration capsaicin in postherpetic neuralgia. Though NNTs were higher, this still indicates that a small proportion of people had good pain relief.Use of GRADE in Cochrane Reviews with small numbers of participants and events requires attention.
局部镇痛药用于多种疼痛状况。有些是急性疼痛,通常为拉伤、扭伤、肌腱病或肌肉疼痛。其他则是慢性疼痛,通常是手部或膝部骨关节炎或神经性疼痛。
概述用于治疗成人急性和慢性疼痛的局部镇痛药(主要是非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)、水杨酸擦剂、辣椒素和利多卡因)在完整皮肤上的镇痛效果及相关不良事件。
我们在Cochrane系统评价数据库(Cochrane图书馆)中检索截至2017年2月发表的关于急性和慢性疼痛的系统评价。主要结局是在适当的时间段内至少50%的疼痛缓解(参与者报告)。我们提取了每种局部镇痛药或制剂的疗效结局的需治疗人数(NNT)以获得一个额外的有益结局,以及不良事件的需治疗人数(NNH)以获得一个额外的有害结局。我们还提取了因缺乏疗效或不良事件而退出的信息、全身和局部不良事件以及严重不良事件。我们要求至少两项研究中至少200名参与者的信息。如果增加四项典型规模(400名参与者)且效应为零的研究后,与安慰剂相比NNT增加到10(最小临床效用),我们判断存在发表偏倚的可能性。我们提取了原始论文中的GRADE评估,并进行了我们自己的GRADE评估。
十三项Cochrane系统评价(206项研究,约30700名参与者)评估了一系列用于完整皮肤的局部镇痛药在多种急性和慢性疼痛状况下的疗效和危害。这些评价由多个评价小组监督,并且集中在比较局部镇痛药与局部安慰剂的证据上;局部和口服镇痛药的比较很少。对于至少50%的疼痛缓解,基于研究的基础质量和发表偏倚的易感性,我们认为几种疗法的证据质量为中等或高质量。在急性肌肉骨骼疼痛(拉伤和扭伤)且约七天时进行评估,疗法有双氯芬酸乳胶剂(78%乳胶剂,20%安慰剂;2项研究,314名参与者,NNT 1.8(95%置信区间1.5至2.1))、酮洛芬凝胶(72%酮洛芬,33%安慰剂,5项研究,348名参与者,NNT 2.5(2.0至3.4))、吡罗昔康凝胶(70%吡罗昔康,47%安慰剂,3项研究,522名参与者,NNT 4.4(3(3.2至6.9))、双氯芬酸Flector贴剂(63%Flector,41%安慰剂,4项研究,1030名参与者,NNT 4.7(3.7至6.5))以及双氯芬酸其他贴剂(88%双氯芬酸贴剂,57%安慰剂,3项研究,474名参与者,NNT 3.2(2.6至4.2))。在慢性肌肉骨骼疼痛(主要是手部和膝部骨关节炎)中,疗法有使用时间少于六周的局部双氯芬酸制剂(43%双氯芬酸,23%安慰剂,5项研究,732名参与者,NNT 5.0(3.7至7.4))、使用6至12周的酮洛芬(63%酮洛芬,48%安慰剂,4项研究,2573名参与者,NNT 6.9(5.4至9.3))以及使用6至12周的局部双氯芬酸制剂(60%双氯芬酸,50%安慰剂,4项研究,2343名参与者,NNT 9.8(7.1至16))。在带状疱疹后神经痛中,局部高浓度辣椒素疗效有限的证据质量中等(33%辣椒素,24%安慰剂,2项研究,571名参与者,NNT 11(6.1至62))。我们判断其他疗法的疗效证据质量为低或极低。对于布洛芬凝胶和乳膏、未指明的双氯芬酸制剂以及除乳胶剂外的双氯芬酸凝胶、吲哚美辛和酮洛芬贴剂在急性疼痛状况下的疗效,存在有限的证据,可能受到发表偏倚的影响;对于水杨酸擦剂在慢性疼痛状况下的疗效也存在有限证据。其他干预措施(其他局部NSAIDs、急性疼痛状况下的局部水杨酸、低浓度辣椒素、利多卡因、用于神经性疼痛的可乐定以及任何状况下的草药疗法)的证据质量极低,通常限于单项研究或数据稀少的比较。由于事件数量较少,我们评估关于退出的证据质量为中等或极低。在慢性疼痛状况下,因缺乏疗效而退出的比例,局部双氯芬酸(6%)低于安慰剂(9%)(11项研究,3455名参与者,预防需治疗人数(NNTp)26,中等质量证据),局部水杨酸(2%对安慰剂的7%)(5项研究,501名参与者,NNTp 21,极低质量证据)。因不良事件而退出的比例,局部低浓度辣椒素(15%)高于安慰剂(3%)(4项研究,477名参与者,NNH 8,极低质量证据),局部水杨酸(5%对安慰剂的1%)(7项研究,735名参与者,NNH 26,极低质量证据),局部双氯芬酸(5%对安慰剂的4%)(12项研究,3552名参与者,NNH 51,极低质量证据)。在急性疼痛中,局部NSAIDs的全身或局部不良事件发生率(4.3%)不高于局部安慰剂(4.6%)(42项研究,6740名参与者,高质量证据)。在慢性疼痛中,局部低浓度辣椒素的局部不良事件发生率(63%)高于局部安慰剂(5项研究,557名参与者,危害需治疗人数(NNH)2.6),高质量证据。中等质量证据表明,在慢性疼痛状况下,局部双氯芬酸的局部不良事件多于安慰剂(NNH 16),局部高浓度辣椒素会引起局部疼痛(NNH 16)。有中等质量证据表明,在慢性疼痛中,局部酮洛芬与局部安慰剂相比不会增加局部不良事件。严重不良事件很少见(极低质量证据)。由于参与者和事件数量较少,我们认为一些评价中的GRADE评估为中等或低质量实际上是极低质量。
有充分证据表明,一些双氯芬酸和酮洛芬制剂在急性疼痛状况如扭伤或拉伤中有用,NNT值较低(良好)。有一个强烈的信息是,在急性状况下使用的确切制剂至关重要,这可能也适用于其他疼痛状况。在6至12周评估的慢性肌肉骨骼状况中,局部双氯芬酸和酮洛芬在手部和膝部骨关节炎中的疗效有限,局部高浓度辣椒素在带状疱疹后神经痛中的疗效也有限。尽管NNT较高,但这仍表明一小部分人疼痛缓解良好。在参与者和事件数量较少的Cochrane系统评价中使用GRADE需要注意。