Reducing referrals to the chronic pain clinic
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Transcript Reducing referrals to the chronic pain clinic
REDUCING REFERRALS TO
THE CHRONIC PAIN CLINIC
Dr Damien Smith FRCA, FFPMRCA
Consultant Anaesthesia & Pain Management
Hillingdon NHS Trust
RECENT NATIONAL PAPERS &
REPORTS
Report by Chief Medical Officer 2009
Nice guidelines for management of lower back
pain
Review of chronic pain services (Wales)
HEALTH SECRETARY AND CMO
CMO REPORT 2009
PAIN : BREAKING THROUGH THE BARRIER
United Kingdom : Pain in numbers
7.8 million people live with chronic pain
NHS spent £584 million on 67 million
prescriptions for analgesia
1 million women suffer with chronic pelvic pain
1.6 million adults suffer with chronic LBP
49% adults with CP experience depression
25% of sufferers lose their jobs
500 pain specialists in the UK
Roughly 1 specialist per 250,000 people
(1 specialist per 32,000 sufferers????)
CMO REPORT
When pain becomes chronic, normal damping
mechanisms stop working
Biological, psychological and social factors
combine to exacerbate symptoms
Modern pain management should address all
these elements with an “Integrated Approach”
Treatments involve activity, rehab, drug therapy,
psychological therapy, TENS, acupuncture and
interventions
Key is to ensure all aspects are INTEGRATED
and joined up rather than instigated in isolation
IDEAL MODEL
CMO REPORT : IDEAL MODEL?
Level 1 Specialiast Care
Complex Pain Relief
Procedures
Level 2
Community Care
Pain management programmes
Level 3
Primary Care
Out patient physio,
Treatment guidelines
Education programmes
WAYS TO REDUCE REFERRALS
More level 3 services in the community?
Educational programme for GP’s
Prescribing guidelines
Pharmacy teaching of community pharmacists
WAYS TO REDUCE REFERRALS
More level 2 care
Community screening teams
Interdisciplinary CBT based programmes
Patient support groups
Physio
? TENS clinics
? Acupuncture clinics
? Consultant sessions in the community
NICE GUIDELINES MAY 2009
Early Management of Persistant Lower Back
Pain
Patients must have back pain for LESS than a
YEAR
Does NOT cover SUSPECTED :
Malignancy
Infection
Fracture
Radiculopathy
Inflammatory disorder
NICE GUIDELINES
Care should be patient centred
Give patients advice and information to promote
self management
Exercise
Manipulation
Acupuncture
Psychology
EXERCISE PROGRAMMES
EXERCISE PROGRAMMES
8 sessions over 12 weeks
Groups of 10
Aerobic activity
Muscle Strengthening
Posture Control
Stretching
MANUAL THERAPY
MANUAL THERAPY
SPINAL MANIPULATION!!
MANUAL THERAPY
Spinal manipulation
Spinal mobilisation
Massage
MAY be performed by osteopaths and
chiropractors
9 sessions over 12 weeks
ACUPUNCTURE
ACUPUNCTURE
Advises 10 sessions over 12 weeks
Does not advise injection of therapeutic
substances into the back
COMBINED WITH PSYCHOLOGY
PROBLEMS WITH THE GUIDELINES
NICE summary: we recommend acupuncture and
manipulation because they work every bit as
good as placebo but we don't recommend
injections as they only work as well as placebo.
Advise patients to have osteopathy and
chiropractor services?????
Lack of regulation concerns!!!
Concerns from medical profession about potential
damage from poorly practiced spinal
manipulation.
PROBLEMS WITH GUIDELINES
No discussion with The British Pain Society
Multidisciplinary body
Conflict of interest with BPS chairman
Chairman had to resign
NEXT MONTH BPS & NICE will meet to look at
‘reformulating’ the guidelines.
WAYS OF REDUCING REFERRALS
Do not refer patients with NON specific back
pain
Do not refer patients with less than 1 year
history
Offer patients exercise, manual therapy,
acupuncture and psychology
DO REFER patients with known specific back
pain
DO REFER patients with potential mailignancy,
infection, fracture, radiculopathy or
inflammatory disorder
RECENT SURVEY OF GP’S ABOUT
SERVICES
Questionnaire about local chronic pain services
and questions exploring ways to improve pain
services.
48% satisfied with service
15% dissatisfied
37% neither
WAYS TO IMPROVE THE SERVICE
GP’s wanted: More pain education in GP surgeries
More advise through the internet
More hospital based study days
WAYS TO REDUCE NEW REFERRALS
GP’s requested a telephone helpline
Different triage system
Email helpline
More psychological training for community staff
Stricter criteria to accept patients to pain clinic
PRESCRIBING GUIDELINES FOR
PREGABALIN
Based on a guideline produced by the European
Federation of Neurological Studies
Algorithm for treatment of neuropathic pain
Neuropathic pain
Localised
Lignocaine patch
Satisfactory
TCA
Gabapentinoid
Pain Clinic
Lignocaine patch
TCA
Gabapentinoid
TRICYCLIC ANTIDEPRESSANTS
Amitriptyline starting dose 10-25 mg nocte
Dose may be increased to 50 mg nocte
Not an antidepressant dose and will not interact
with concurrent antidepressants
Convert to Nortriptyline if problems with
drowsiness (not licensed for pain / /equivalent
dose)
Contraindications include glaucoma,
hypertension and may lower seizure threshold in
epileptics
GABAPENTIN
Starting dose 300 mg od
Gradual increase over days up to 900 mg tds
Requires a lot of patient compliance
Usually safe to take with other medications
Effects may be seen in WEEKS
Dosage needs to be adjusted in patients with
renal dysfunction
Do not stop abruptly, needs to be done over
weeks
PREGABALIN
Starting dose 75 mg bd
Increase to 150 mg bd if tolerated
Can work up to 300 mg bd in some cases
Effects may be seen in DAYS
Safe in patients with renal dysfunction
LEICESTERSHIRE MEDICINES
STRATEGY GROUP
Neuropathic pain
Localised
Lignocaine patch
Satisfactory
TCA
Gabapentinoid
Pain Clinic
Lignocaine patch
TCA
Gabapentinoid
OTHER GUIDELINES
RCGP uses CREST guidelines (2006)
www.rcgp.org.uk
NICE guidelines (March 2010)
www.nice.org.uk
ANY QUESTIONS?
[email protected]