Towards precision pain medicine for pain after cancer: the Cancer Pain Phenotyping Network multidisciplinary international guidelines for pain phenotyping using nociplastic pain criteria

Jo Nijs, Astrid Lahousse, César Fernández-de-Las-Peñas, Pascal Madeleine, Christel Fontaine, Tomohiko Nishigami, Christine Desmedt, Marian Vanhoeij, Kenza Mostaqim, Antonio I Cuesta-Vargas, Eleni Kapreli, Paraskevi Bilika, Andrea Polli, Laurence Leysen, Ömer Elma, Eva Roose, Emma Rheel, Sevilay Tümkaya Yılmaz, Liesbet De Baets, Eva HuysmansAli Turk, İsmail Saraçoğlu

Onderzoeksoutput: Articlepeer review

14 Citaten (Scopus)
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Samenvatting

Pain after cancer remains underestimated and undertreated. Precision medicine is a recent concept that refers to the ability to classify patients into subgroups that differ in their susceptibility to, biology, or prognosis of a particular disease, or in their response to a specific treatment, and thus to tailor treatment to the individual patient characteristics. Applying this to pain after cancer, the ability to classify post-cancer pain into the three major pain phenotypes (i.e. nociceptive, neuropathic, and nociplastic pain) and tailor pain treatment accordingly, is an emerging issue. This is especially relevant because available evidence suggests that nociplastic pain is present in an important subgroup of those patients experiencing post-cancer pain. The 2021 International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) clinical criteria and grading system for nociplastic pain account for the need to identify and correctly classify patients according to the pain phenotype early in their treatment. These criteria are an important step towards precision pain medicine with great potential for the field of clinical oncology. Within this framework, the Cancer Pain Phenotyping (CANPPHE) Network, an international and interdisciplinary group of oncology clinicians and researchers from seven countries, applied the 2021 IASP clinical criteria for nociplastic pain to the growing population of those experiencing post-cancer pain. A manual is provided to allow clinicians to differentiate between predominant nociceptive, neuropathic, or nociplastic pain after cancer. A seven-step diagnostic approach is presented and illustrated using cases to enhance understanding and encourage effective implementation of this approach in clinical practice.
Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)611-621
Aantal pagina's11
TijdschriftBritish Journal of Anaesthesia
Volume130
Nummer van het tijdschrift5
Vroegere onlinedatum24 jan 2023
DOI's
StatusPublished - mei 2023

Bibliografische nota

Funding Information:
The Research Foundation Flanders (FWO), Belgium (11B1920N to AL, 1108621N to EH, G040919N to LL; and AP, a postdoctoral fellow). Stand Up To Cancer (Kom op tegen Kanker) (ANI25 to ER, KM, and LL), a Belgian cancer charity. FWO (G040919N to LL). JN holds a Chair in oncological rehabilitation funded by the Berekuyl Academy, the Netherlands. Grant support for ER was provided by a Chair funded by the Berekuyl Academy/European College for Decongestive Lymphatic Therapy, the Netherlands, and awarded to the Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium. PB is funded by the Research, Innovation and Excellence Structure (DEKA) of the University of Thessaly.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s)

Copyright:
Copyright 2023 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

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