大麻素在慢性非癌性疼痛中的作用:系统综述和荟萃分析。

IF 1.9 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS Clinical Medicine Insights. Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Disorders Pub Date : 2020-02-19 eCollection Date: 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1177/1179544120906461
Herman Johal, Tahira Devji, Yaping Chang, Jonathan Simone, Christopher Vannabouathong, Mohit Bhandari
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引用次数: 66

摘要

背景:对于慢性、非癌性疼痛患者,传统的止痛药物包括阿片类药物,它已显示出益处,但与成瘾和不良反应的风险增加有关。医用大麻已成为管理这些患者的一种替代治疗方法,近年来,随机临床试验的数量有所增加;因此,有必要对证据进行系统审查。目的:分析医用大麻素治疗慢性非癌相关性疼痛的利与弊的相关证据。设计:采用荟萃分析的系统评价。数据来源:Medline, Embase, CINAHL, SCOPUS, Google Scholar和Cochrane数据库。入选标准:大麻素治疗慢性非癌症相关疼痛的英语随机临床试验。数据提取和综合:使用Cochrane偏倚风险工具评估研究质量。所有阶段均由6名评审员组成的团队独立进行。通过荟萃分析收集不同治疗持续时间(2周、2个月、6个月)的数据,并根据给药途径(烟熏、口黏膜、口服)、病情和大麻素类型进行分层。主要结局和测量:患者报告的疼痛和不良事件(ae)。结果:纳入36项试验(4006名受试者),研究了吸烟大麻(4项试验)、口腔黏膜大麻喷雾剂(14项试验)和口服大麻素(18项试验)。与安慰剂相比,大麻素显著减轻疼痛,治疗时间为2至8周时效果最显著(0-10疼痛视觉模拟量表加权平均差为-0.68,95%可信区间[CI], -0.96至-0.40,i2 = 8%, P P[相互作用]>)。3个疗程均为0.05);与安慰剂相比,大麻素在2周内对多发性硬化症引起的疼痛的减轻幅度较小,相对于其他神经性疼痛(P[相互作用]= 0.05),相对于风湿性关节炎引起的疼痛,差异不显著;纳比龙在治疗2周以上的时间内,与安慰剂相比,与其他类型的大麻素相比,纳比龙更能减轻疼痛,但差异不显著(P[相互作用]> 0.05)。严重不良事件很少见,大麻素组(2176人中有74人,3.4%)和安慰剂组(1640人中有53人,3.2%)相似。与安慰剂相比,大麻素增加了非严重不良反应的风险。结论:有中度证据支持大麻素治疗慢性非癌性疼痛2周。在后来的时间点观察到类似的结果,但对效果的置信度很低。几乎没有证据表明大麻素会增加经历严重不良反应的风险,尽管在使用后的短期内非严重不良反应可能很常见。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Cannabinoids in Chronic Non-Cancer Pain: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Background: For patients with chronic, non-cancer pain, traditional pain-relieving medications include opioids, which have shown benefits but are associated with increased risks of addiction and adverse effects. Medical cannabis has emerged as a treatment alternative for managing these patients and there has been a rise in the number of randomized clinical trials in recent years; therefore, a systematic review of the evidence was warranted.

Objective: To analyze the evidence surrounding the benefits and harms of medical cannabinoids in the treatment of chronic, non-cancer-related pain.

Design: Systematic review with meta-analysis.

Data sources: Medline, Embase, CINAHL, SCOPUS, Google Scholar, and Cochrane Databases.

Eligibility criteria: English language randomized clinical trials of cannabinoids for the treatment of chronic, non-cancer-related pain.

Data extraction and synthesis: Study quality was assessed using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. All stages were conducted independently by a team of 6 reviewers. Data were pooled through meta-analysis with different durations of treatment (2 weeks, 2 months, 6 months) and stratified by route of administration (smoked, oromucosal, oral), conditions, and type of cannabinoids.

Main outcomes and measures: Patient-reported pain and adverse events (AEs).

Results: Thirty-six trials (4006 participants) were included, examining smoked cannabis (4 trials), oromucosal cannabis sprays (14 trials), and oral cannabinoids (18 trials). Compared with placebo, cannabinoids showed a significant reduction in pain which was greatest with treatment duration of 2 to 8 weeks (weighted mean difference on a 0-10 pain visual analogue scale -0.68, 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.96 to -0.40, I 2 = 8%, P < .00001; n = 16 trials). When stratified by route of administration, pain condition, and type of cannabinoids, oral cannabinoids had a larger reduction in pain compared with placebo relative to oromucosal and smoked formulations but the difference was not significant (P[interaction] > .05 in all the 3 durations of treatment); cannabinoids had a smaller reduction in pain due to multiple sclerosis compared with placebo relative to other neuropathic pain (P[interaction] = .05) within 2 weeks and the difference was not significant relative to pain due to rheumatic arthritis; nabilone had a greater reduction in pain compared with placebo relative to other types of cannabinoids longer than 2 weeks of treatment but the difference was not significant (P[interaction] > .05). Serious AEs were rare, and similar across the cannabinoid (74 out of 2176, 3.4%) and placebo groups (53 out of 1640, 3.2%). There was an increased risk of non-serious AEs with cannabinoids compared with placebo.

Conclusions: There was moderate evidence to support cannabinoids in treating chronic, non-cancer pain at 2 weeks. Similar results were observed at later time points, but the confidence in effect is low. There is little evidence that cannabinoids increase the risk of experiencing serious AEs, although non-serious AEs may be common in the short-term period following use.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
8 weeks
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