• J Natl Med Assoc · Jul 2004

    Case Reports

    Outpatient management of sickle cell pain with chronic opioid pharmacotherapy.

    • Lauren Shaiova and David Wallenstein.
    • Department of Pain Medicine and Palliative Care, Beth Israel Medical Center, First Avenue at 16th Street, New York, NY 10003, USA. lshaiova@bethisraelny.org
    • J Natl Med Assoc. 2004 Jul 1; 96 (7): 984-6.

    AbstractWe report our experience of providing chronic opioid pharmacotherapy on an outpatient basis to selected patients with frequent episodes of moderate-to-severe pain from sickle cell disease (SCD). Three cases illustrate our clinical experience in approximately 40 patients with sickle cell pain. Patients were seen at our sickle cell pain clinic at Beth Israel Hospital once each month for a three-hour visit. Visits included group music therapy and individual medical care, including comprehensive blood work and scheduling of medical tests when appropriate. Between visits, the pain and palliative care physicians followed patients on an as-needed basis. The SCD pain opioid pharmacotherapy protocol was modeled on a regimen used to treat malignant pain-typically a long-acting opioid in combination with a short-acting opioid, such as oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate (OTFC; Actiq) for breakthrough pain (BTP). Emergency department (ED) visits and hospital admissions were dramatically reduced in the three patients whose pain was managed by adapting the cancer pain model. During the year before their first visit to our pain clinic, the patients each had between six and 18 ED visits, which resulted in six- to 13 hospital admissions amounting to 32-182 inpatient days per patient. Each of the patients was prescribed a long-acting opioid (methadone, control-release oxycodone, or transdermal fentanyl) with a short-acting opioid for BTP from crises (oral transmucosal fentanyl citrate for two patients; short-acting oxycodone for one patient). Pain was well controlled. For each patient, hospital admissions were reduced to < or = 1 visit per year. These reduced levels of ED visits and hospital admissions have remained constant for more than three years.

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