• Pain physician · Jul 2009

    Clinical Trial

    Intrathecal ziconotide and opioid combination therapy for noncancer pain: an observational study.

    • Timothy R Deer, Christopher Kim, Richard Bowman, Diana Tolentino, C Stewart, and Wilfrido Tolentino.
    • The Center for Pain Relief, Inc., Charleston, WV 25301, USA. Doctdeer@aol.com
    • Pain Physician. 2009 Jul 1;12(4):E291-6.

    BackgroundIntrathecal ziconotide is used to manage severe chronic pain. Although ziconotide is approved by the US Food and Drug Administration for monotherapy, it is sometimes used in combination with other intrathecal drugs for the management of intractable pain conditions in clinical practice.ObjectivesEvaluate the safety and tolerability of ziconotide combination therapy.Study DesignA retrospective, observational study.SettingA single center.MethodsPatients with severe chronic pain of noncancer origin who were receiving inadequate analgesia with intrathecal opioid therapy (with or without intrathecal adjuvants) and who had ziconotide added to their intrathecal regimens were included. Patient characteristics, intrathecal ziconotide doses, concomitant intrathecal and systemic drug use, visual analog scale pain scores, Oswestry Disability Index scores, mini-mental status examination scores, neurological examination results, clinical observations (including adverse event reports), and equipment complications were reviewed for 12 weeks after ziconotide initiation.ResultsSixteen patients were identified. Ziconotide was initiated at a dose of 0.5 mcg/d and titrated to a mean dose of 2.64 mcg/d at week 12. Intrathecal opioids were hydromorphone (n=7), morphine (n=5), fentanyl (n=3), and sufentanil (n=1). Adverse events were noted in one patient, who reported increased depression and pain during combination therapy; ziconotide treatment was discontinued, and all adverse events resolved over a 4-week period. Substantial pain relief (> or =4-point decrease in visual analog scale score) was reported in 3 of 15 patients (20.0%) and increased functional capacity was evident in 3 of 15 patients (20.0%).LimitationsA retrospective study with a limited number of patients from a single center.ConclusionResults from this observational study suggest that combination intrathecal ziconotide and opioid therapy may be a safe and potentially effective treatment option for patients with refractory chronic pain. Controlled, prospective clinical trials to evaluate ziconotide combination therapy are needed.

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