Cognitive behavioral therapy modestly reduces chronic pain in patients on opioids – Healio

Cognitive behavioral therapy modestly reduces chronic pain in patients on opioids – Healio

Source/Disclosures

Disclosures:
DeBar reports receiving an NIH grant. Please see the study for all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.

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Patients with chronic pain receiving long-term opioid therapy who were assigned to cognitive behavioral therapy reported reductions in pain and pain-related disability, data show.

However, opioid use by the patients did not decrease, according to results from a randomized controlled trial published in Annals of Internal Medicine.

DeBar L, et al. Ann Intern Med. 2021;doi:10.7326/M21-1436.

“Opioids have historically been touted as a solution to long-term management, despite the lack of rigorous evidence. This approach created a host of patient and societal adverse effects. Consequently, viable nonopioid options for long-term management of chronic pain in primary care are needed,” Lynn DeBar, PhD, MPH, a senior investigator at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, and colleagues wrote.

Patients on long-term opioid therapy can benefit from behavioral treatment “that doesn’t carry corresponding risks that more biomedically focused treatment can have,” DeBar told Healio Primary Care.

Lynn DeBar

The researchers randomly assigned 850 adult patients on long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain to receive usual care (n = 417) or a cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention (n = 433). Overall, the mean age of patients was 60.3 years; 67.4% were women and 76.6% were white.

A behaviorist, nurse, physical therapist and pharmacist jointly taught pain self-management skills to patients in the intervention cohort during 12 weekly, 90-minute group sessions. The sessions were yoga-based and incorporated relaxation techniques, activity-rest cycling, pleasant activity scheduling, guided imagery and other distraction techniques, emotional regulation skills, cognitive restructuring, problem solving and relapse prevention and maintenance, according to DeBar and colleagues. The intervention team met with primary care physicians to review intake summaries and evaluations before and after the group sessions.

The most common pain diagnoses among participants were limb or extremity pain, joint pain and arthritic disorders (81%); back and neck pain (74%); and general and widespread pain (70%). The median daily dose of opioids taken by participants was 29.6 morphine milligram equivalents.

DeBar and colleagues found that patients in the intervention group experienced greater reductions in pain impact and pain-related disability compared with the usual care group. Also, one in four patients receiving CBT experienced clinically meaningful reductions in pain (greater than 30%) compared with one in six patients receiving usual care.

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Source: https://www.healio.com/news/primary-care/20211102/cognitive-behavioral-therapy-modestly-reduces-chronic-pain-in-patients-on-opioids