• Pain Med · May 2011

    Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study

    The association between hydroxyurea treatment and pain intensity, analgesic use, and utilization in ambulatory sickle cell anemia patients.

    • Wally R Smith, Samir K Ballas, William F McCarthy, Robert L Bauserman, Paul S Swerdlow, Martin H Steinberg, Myron A Waclawiw, and Investigators of the Multicenter Study of Hydroxyurea in Sickle Cell Anemia.
    • Division of Quality Health Care, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia 23060, USA. wrsmith@vcu.edu
    • Pain Med. 2011 May 1; 12 (5): 697705697-705.

    BackgroundWe compared daily pain, home analgesic use, and utilization among ambulatory adults in the randomized multicenter study of hydroxyurea in sickle cell anemia (MSH). We related the fetal hemoglobin (HbF) hydroxyurea response to these response variables.MethodsPatients rated their sickle cell pain intensity (0-9), use of analgesics, and visits for pain daily. Diaries were collected biweekly, and intensity was collapsed into single interval ratings. The interval proportions of days of analgesic use and medical visits for pain were also calculated. Group comparisons were made by intention to treat as well as by HbF change levels from baseline to 2 years of treatment (placebo and low, medium, high, or very high response).ResultsA total of 134 (44.8%) enrollees completed 2 years of follow-up. Pain intensity correlated with analgesic use (r = 0.83, P > 0.0001) and utilization (r = 0.50, P < 0.0001). Pain intensity was lower for patients on hydroxyurea (2.51 ± 0.062 vs 2.82 ± 0.063 placebo, F(1270) = 11.65, P = 0.0007). The difference, though small, appeared early and was sustained. Analgesic use and utilization were also slightly lower (analgesic use: F (1270) = 11.97, P = 0.0006; utilization: F(1270) = 32.0, P < 0.0001). Each was statistically significantly lower among hydroxyurea patients with higher HbF treatment responses to hydroxyurea.ConclusionsHydroxyurea usage led to a small, statistically significant reduction in daily pain, analgesic use, and utilization in adults in MSH, corroborating previously shown larger reductions in crises and mortality. The degree of daily symptomatic reduction was related to the size of the HbF treatment response, further confirming HbF response as a useful laboratory correlate.Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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