Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications

Over the past two decades, a steeply growing number of persons with chronic non-cancer pain have been using opioid analgesics chronically to treat it, accompanied by a markedly increased prevalence of individuals with opioid-related misuse, opioid use disorders, emergency department visits, hospital...

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Main Author: Udi E Ghitza
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00080/full
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spelling doaj-9da3953f12104d4fb052b141de6372f62020-11-24T22:43:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402016-05-01710.3389/fpsyt.2016.00080197521Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implicationsUdi E Ghitza0National Institute on Drug Abuse Center for Clinical Trials NetworkOver the past two decades, a steeply growing number of persons with chronic non-cancer pain have been using opioid analgesics chronically to treat it, accompanied by a markedly increased prevalence of individuals with opioid-related misuse, opioid use disorders, emergency department visits, hospitalizations, admissions to drug treatment programs, and drug overdose deaths. This opioid misuse and overdose epidemic calls for well-designed randomized-controlled clinical trials into more skillful and appropriate pain management and for developing effective analgesics which have lower abuse liability and are protective against stress induced by chronic non-cancer pain. However, incomplete knowledge regarding effective approaches to treat various types of pain has been worsened by an under-appreciation of overlapping neurobiological mechanisms of stress, stress-induced relapse to opioid use, and chronic non-cancer pain in patients presenting for care for these conditions. This insufficient knowledge base has unfortunately encouraged common prescription of conveniently-available opioid pain-relieving drugs with abuse liability, as opposed to treating underlying problems using team-based multidisciplinary, patient-centered, collaborative-care approaches for addressing pain and co-occurring stress and risk for opioid use disorder. This paper reviews recent neurobiological findings regarding overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid misuse and chronic non-cancer pain, and then discusses these in the context of key outstanding evidence gaps and clinical-treatment research directions which may be pursued to fill these gaps. Such research directions, if conducted through well-designed randomized controlled trials, may substantively inform clinical practice in general medical settings on how to effectively care for patients presenting with pain-related distress and these common co-occurring conditions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00080/fullChronic PainOpioid PeptidesOpioid-Related DisordersAddictionsubstance use disordersopioid addiction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Udi E Ghitza
spellingShingle Udi E Ghitza
Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Chronic Pain
Opioid Peptides
Opioid-Related Disorders
Addiction
substance use disorders
opioid addiction
author_facet Udi E Ghitza
author_sort Udi E Ghitza
title Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
title_short Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
title_full Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
title_fullStr Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
title_full_unstemmed Overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: Clinical implications
title_sort overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid use disorder and chronic pain: clinical implications
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychiatry
issn 1664-0640
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Over the past two decades, a steeply growing number of persons with chronic non-cancer pain have been using opioid analgesics chronically to treat it, accompanied by a markedly increased prevalence of individuals with opioid-related misuse, opioid use disorders, emergency department visits, hospitalizations, admissions to drug treatment programs, and drug overdose deaths. This opioid misuse and overdose epidemic calls for well-designed randomized-controlled clinical trials into more skillful and appropriate pain management and for developing effective analgesics which have lower abuse liability and are protective against stress induced by chronic non-cancer pain. However, incomplete knowledge regarding effective approaches to treat various types of pain has been worsened by an under-appreciation of overlapping neurobiological mechanisms of stress, stress-induced relapse to opioid use, and chronic non-cancer pain in patients presenting for care for these conditions. This insufficient knowledge base has unfortunately encouraged common prescription of conveniently-available opioid pain-relieving drugs with abuse liability, as opposed to treating underlying problems using team-based multidisciplinary, patient-centered, collaborative-care approaches for addressing pain and co-occurring stress and risk for opioid use disorder. This paper reviews recent neurobiological findings regarding overlapping mechanisms of stress-induced relapse to opioid misuse and chronic non-cancer pain, and then discusses these in the context of key outstanding evidence gaps and clinical-treatment research directions which may be pursued to fill these gaps. Such research directions, if conducted through well-designed randomized controlled trials, may substantively inform clinical practice in general medical settings on how to effectively care for patients presenting with pain-related distress and these common co-occurring conditions.
topic Chronic Pain
Opioid Peptides
Opioid-Related Disorders
Addiction
substance use disorders
opioid addiction
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2016.00080/full
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