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用于成人慢性神经性疼痛的大麻类药物。

Cannabis-based medicines for chronic neuropathic pain in adults.

作者信息

Mücke Martin, Phillips Tudor, Radbruch Lukas, Petzke Frank, Häuser Winfried

机构信息

Department of Palliative Medicine, University Hospital of Bonn, Sigmund-Freud-Str. 25, Bonn, Germany, 53127.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Mar 7;3(3):CD012182. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012182.pub2.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

This review is one of a series on drugs used to treat chronic neuropathic pain. Estimates of the population prevalence of chronic pain with neuropathic components range between 6% and 10%. Current pharmacological treatment options for neuropathic pain afford substantial benefit for only a few people, often with adverse effects that outweigh the benefits. There is a need to explore other treatment options, with different mechanisms of action for treatment of conditions with chronic neuropathic pain. Cannabis has been used for millennia to reduce pain. Herbal cannabis is currently strongly promoted by some patients and their advocates to treat any type of chronic pain.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the efficacy, tolerability, and safety of cannabis-based medicines (herbal, plant-derived, synthetic) compared to placebo or conventional drugs for conditions with chronic neuropathic pain in adults.

SEARCH METHODS

In November 2017 we searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, and two trials registries for published and ongoing trials, and examined the reference lists of reviewed articles.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We selected randomised, double-blind controlled trials of medical cannabis, plant-derived and synthetic cannabis-based medicines against placebo or any other active treatment of conditions with chronic neuropathic pain in adults, with a treatment duration of at least two weeks and at least 10 participants per treatment arm.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Three review authors independently extracted data of study characteristics and outcomes of efficacy, tolerability and safety, examined issues of study quality, and assessed risk of bias. We resolved discrepancies by discussion. For efficacy, we calculated the number needed to treat for an additional beneficial outcome (NNTB) for pain relief of 30% and 50% or greater, patient's global impression to be much or very much improved, dropout rates due to lack of efficacy, and the standardised mean differences for pain intensity, sleep problems, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and psychological distress. For tolerability, we calculated number needed to treat for an additional harmful outcome (NNTH) for withdrawal due to adverse events and specific adverse events, nervous system disorders and psychiatric disorders. For safety, we calculated NNTH for serious adverse events. Meta-analysis was undertaken using a random-effects model. We assessed the quality of evidence using GRADE and created a 'Summary of findings' table.

MAIN RESULTS

We included 16 studies with 1750 participants. The studies were 2 to 26 weeks long and compared an oromucosal spray with a plant-derived combination of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) (10 studies), a synthetic cannabinoid mimicking THC (nabilone) (two studies), inhaled herbal cannabis (two studies) and plant-derived THC (dronabinol) (two studies) against placebo (15 studies) and an analgesic (dihydrocodeine) (one study). We used the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool to assess study quality. We defined studies with zero to two unclear or high risks of bias judgements to be high-quality studies, with three to five unclear or high risks of bias to be moderate-quality studies, and with six to eight unclear or high risks of bias to be low-quality studies. Study quality was low in two studies, moderate in 12 studies and high in two studies. Nine studies were at high risk of bias for study size. We rated the quality of the evidence according to GRADE as very low to moderate.Primary outcomesCannabis-based medicines may increase the number of people achieving 50% or greater pain relief compared with placebo (21% versus 17%; risk difference (RD) 0.05 (95% confidence interval (CI) 0.00 to 0.09); NNTB 20 (95% CI 11 to 100); 1001 participants, eight studies, low-quality evidence). We rated the evidence for improvement in Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) with cannabis to be of very low quality (26% versus 21%;RD 0.09 (95% CI 0.01 to 0.17); NNTB 11 (95% CI 6 to 100); 1092 participants, six studies). More participants withdrew from the studies due to adverse events with cannabis-based medicines (10% of participants) than with placebo (5% of participants) (RD 0.04 (95% CI 0.02 to 0.07); NNTH 25 (95% CI 16 to 50); 1848 participants, 13 studies, moderate-quality evidence). We did not have enough evidence to determine if cannabis-based medicines increase the frequency of serious adverse events compared with placebo (RD 0.01 (95% CI -0.01 to 0.03); 1876 participants, 13 studies, low-quality evidence).Secondary outcomesCannabis-based medicines probably increase the number of people achieving pain relief of 30% or greater compared with placebo (39% versus 33%; RD 0.09 (95% CI 0.03 to 0.15); NNTB 11 (95% CI 7 to 33); 1586 participants, 10 studies, moderate quality evidence). Cannabis-based medicines may increase nervous system adverse events compared with placebo (61% versus 29%; RD 0.38 (95% CI 0.18 to 0.58); NNTH 3 (95% CI 2 to 6); 1304 participants, nine studies, low-quality evidence). Psychiatric disorders occurred in 17% of participants using cannabis-based medicines and in 5% using placebo (RD 0.10 (95% CI 0.06 to 0.15); NNTH 10 (95% CI 7 to 16); 1314 participants, nine studies, low-quality evidence).We found no information about long-term risks in the studies analysed.Subgroup analysesWe are uncertain whether herbal cannabis reduces mean pain intensity (very low-quality evidence). Herbal cannabis and placebo did not differ in tolerability (very low-quality evidence).

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The potential benefits of cannabis-based medicine (herbal cannabis, plant-derived or synthetic THC, THC/CBD oromucosal spray) in chronic neuropathic pain might be outweighed by their potential harms. The quality of evidence for pain relief outcomes reflects the exclusion of participants with a history of substance abuse and other significant comorbidities from the studies, together with their small sample sizes.

摘要

背景

本综述是关于用于治疗慢性神经性疼痛药物系列综述之一。据估计,伴有神经病变成分的慢性疼痛在人群中的患病率在6%至10%之间。目前用于治疗神经性疼痛的药物治疗方案仅能使少数人获得显著益处,且其不良反应往往超过益处。有必要探索其他治疗方案,采用不同作用机制来治疗慢性神经性疼痛病症。大麻已被使用了数千年以减轻疼痛。目前,一些患者及其支持者大力推崇草药大麻来治疗任何类型的慢性疼痛。

目的

评估与安慰剂或传统药物相比,基于大麻的药物(草药、植物提取物、合成药物)治疗成人慢性神经性疼痛病症的疗效、耐受性和安全性。

检索方法

2017年11月,我们检索了Cochrane系统评价数据库、MEDLINE、Embase以及两个试验注册库,以查找已发表和正在进行的试验,并查阅了综述文章的参考文献列表。

选择标准

我们选择了针对安慰剂或其他任何积极治疗方法,对成人慢性神经性疼痛病症使用医用大麻、植物提取物和合成大麻素类药物的随机、双盲对照试验,治疗持续时间至少为两周,每个治疗组至少有10名参与者。

数据收集与分析

三位综述作者独立提取研究特征数据以及疗效、耐受性和安全性结果数据,检查研究质量问题,并评估偏倚风险。我们通过讨论解决分歧。对于疗效,我们计算了疼痛缓解30%及以上、50%及以上、患者整体印象显著或非常显著改善、因疗效不佳导致的脱落率以及疼痛强度、睡眠问题、健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)和心理困扰的标准化均数差所需治疗人数(NNTB)。对于耐受性,我们计算了因不良事件和特定不良事件、神经系统疾病和精神疾病导致停药的额外有害结果所需治疗人数(NNTH)。对于安全性,我们计算了严重不良事件的NNTH。采用随机效应模型进行Meta分析。我们使用GRADE评估证据质量并创建了“结果总结”表。

主要结果

我们纳入了16项研究,共1750名参与者。这些研究时长为2至26周,比较了口腔喷雾剂与植物提取物四氢大麻酚(THC)和大麻二酚(CBD)的组合(10项研究)、模拟THC的合成大麻素(纳布啡)(2项研究)、吸入式草药大麻(2项研究)和植物提取物THC(屈大麻酚)(2项研究)与安慰剂(15项研究)以及一种镇痛药(双氢可待因)(1项研究)的效果。我们使用Cochrane“偏倚风险”工具评估研究质量。我们将偏倚判断为零至两个不清楚或高风险的研究定义为高质量研究,三至五个不清楚或高风险的研究定义为中等质量研究,六至八个不清楚或高风险的研究定义为低质量研究。两项研究质量低,12项研究质量中等,两项研究质量高。九项研究在样本量方面存在高偏倚风险。根据GRADE,我们将证据质量评为极低至中等。

主要结局

与安慰剂相比,基于大麻的药物可能会使疼痛缓解50%及以上的人数增加(21%对17%;风险差(RD)0.05(95%置信区间(CI)0.00至0.09);NNTB 20(95%CI 11至100);1001名参与者,8项研究,低质量证据)。我们将大麻改善患者整体变化印象(PGIC)的证据质量评为极低(26%对21%;RD 0.09(95%CI 0.01至0.l7);NNTB 11(95%CI 6至100);1092名参与者,6项研究)。与安慰剂相比,更多使用基于大麻药物的参与者因不良事件退出研究(10%的参与者),而使用安慰剂退出的参与者为5%(RD 0.04(95%CI 0.02至0.07);NNTH 2(95%CI 16至50);1848名参与者,13项研究,中等质量证据)。我们没有足够的证据来确定与安慰剂相比,基于大麻的药物是否会增加严重不良事件的发生率(RD 0.01(95%CI -0.01至0.03);1876名参与者,13项研究,低质量证据)。

次要结局

与安慰剂相比,基于大麻的药物可能会使疼痛缓解30%及以上的人数增加(39%对33%;RD 0.09(95%CI 0.03至0.15);NNTB 11(95%CI 7至33);1586名参与者,10项研究,中等质量证据)。与安慰剂相比,基于大麻的药物可能会增加神经系统不良事件的发生(61%对29%;RD 0.38(95%CI 0.18至0.58);NNTH 3(95%CI 2至6);1304名参与者,9项研究,低质量证据)。使用基于大麻药物的参与者中17%发生精神疾病,使用安慰剂的参与者中5%发生精神疾病(RD 0.10(95%CI 0.06至0.15);NNTH 10(95%CI 7至16);1314名参与者,9项研究,低质量证据)。

我们在所分析的研究中未发现有关长期风险的信息。

亚组分析

我们不确定草药大麻是否能降低平均疼痛强度(极低质量证据)。草药大麻和安慰剂在耐受性方面无差异(极低质量证据)。

作者结论

基于大麻的药物(草药大麻、植物提取物或合成THC、THC/CBD口腔喷雾剂)在慢性神经性疼痛中的潜在益处可能被其潜在危害所抵消。疼痛缓解结果的证据质量反映出研究中排除了有药物滥用史和其他重大合并症的参与者,以及样本量较小的问题。

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