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A Patient's Guide to
Managing Hormone-Refractory Prostate Cancer
Chapter 17. Managing
Pain
Be prepared
The time to take pain management seriously is before you experience serious
pain as a result of prostate cancer. When you do have serious pain--as a
result of the disease or as a result of a treatment side effect--nothing
else will matter. No matter what stage of the disease you are dealing with,
read this section, and know that its message will be available should you
need it.
You will hear, from medical professionals, that there is no need to suffer
pain from cancer. That may be true…theoretically. However, I know of no one
with metastatic cancer who has not experienced severe pain for some reason,
pain that by its severity became the foremost issue in their battle.
Eventually, a resolution was found; in the meantime there was considerable
suffering. This chapter is intended to help you reduce that suffering to a
minimum by giving you the knowledge and a strategy for working with your
doctor to relieve the pain and restore your quality of life.
Assessment of pain is subjective; therefore, what constitutes adequate
relief is also subjective. You want to control the pain to a level that
permits you to enjoy a good quality of life.
You may have to be persistent with your caregivers, but you should insist on
treatment for any level of pain that interferes with your ability to enjoy
life.
It is important to control pain. Serious pain invariably leads to
depression, which becomes a threat to life.
This paper does not cover every treatment for pain, but it should be enough
that you can use the information to initiate meaningful discussions with
your doctors.
Drug dependency is a controllable issue
The risk of addiction should not keep you from getting adequate pain relief.
For most of us, the problem of pain is more severe than the problem of
dependency. Dependency, for most of us, is a non-issue, unless you are
already an alcoholic or an addict.
I became physically dependent on morphine during a single week, but found
myself eager to stop because of the unpleasantness of feeling drugged. I
stopped over a few days with some discomfort, but no difficulty. If you have
become dependent, you should stop gradually to minimize the discomfort and
prevent the serious risks associated with stopping “cold turkey.” Your
normal condition is that your quality of life is better when you don’t have
to take pain relievers.
Dosing
In starting a pain management regimen, your purpose is to keep the pain
under control, to the extent that you can enjoy your normal activities. It
takes 2 to 3 days for an opioid pain drug to build to an effective level in
your blood stream and suppress the pain on a continuing basis. Do not stop
taking the opioid medicines when you no longer feel the pain. First discuss
that with the doctor. If you do stop, you may find yourself back in pain, at
the beginning of the process, and have to spend several days in pain
rebuilding the drug level in your blood.
Constipation and Diarrhea with Opioids
When you use opioids, you are likely to experience constipation at the
outset and during the usage. Be prepared with suppositories and laxatives.
Metamucil may help.
When you discontinue an opioid, especially morphine, you may experience
diarrhea. Be prepared for it with Imodium or other over-the-counter remedy.
Do not let diarrhea go on without treatment because it can dehydrate your
system dangerously.
Whose help do you need?
Your primary contact for pain management is your oncologist, who is
experienced in dealing with pain associated with cancer. If you are unable
to find an acceptable solution, you may wish to consult a pain specialist
(frequently an anesthesiologist with special training), usually available at
larger hospitals.
Try to determine the source of the pain
Eliminating the source is always better than treating the symptom. If you
can determine the source, it may be easy to eliminate the pain. However,
with prostate cancer, the source is often in the bone, a difficult area to
treat. In some cases, nerves are involved in persistent pain, and the source
may be at a location different from the perceived pain. In still other
cases, the source may be unknown, and you can only treat the symptom.
Gastrointestinal pain may require a different approach than use of the
normal pain relief drugs. For example, acid reflux can cause severe pain up
and down the chest; sometimes it will respond to Pepto-Bismol or other acid
control medication. An ulcer may need different treatment. Pain may even be
caused by one of the drugs you are taking.
You are always better off if you can eliminate the pain at its source.
Determine the level of pain
Pain is a subjective issue; the headache that is “killing” one person may be
ignored by the next. However, the only opinion that counts is that of the
person with the pain. The pain level is a continuum; the numeric levels
listed below are designated as an aid to communication. The level will need
to be communicated to the doctor in order that the appropriate treatment can
be used.
Most medical practitioners are used to dealing with a scale of 1 to 10 in
severity. A level of 1 is a pain that is trivial; a level of 10 is the worst
pain you’ve ever experienced. For example, many people have indicated that
kidney stones cause level 10 pain. Hitting your thumb with a hammer is a
brief introduction to level 10 pain. For that instant, nothing else matters.
What the doctor needs to know is your estimate of the severity of your pain.
Level Description
0 No pain.
1-2 Annoying, but bearable, such as a common headache; you may seek a remedy
or you may ignore the pain.
3-4 Sufficiently painful to cause you to seek a remedy.
5-6 Interferes with your ability to focus on normal
activities; stronger relief is needed.
7-8 Dealing with the pain has become your first priority;
You are prevented from doing normal activities. This is near to unbearable.
9-10 The worst pain you have ever experienced. The pain is unbearable.
Recently, Federal law has required that all hospitals include in their
review of your health status whether you are currently experiencing pain and
what the level is.
Treating level 1-2 pain
Take Tylenol, Ibuprofen or Advil according to the directions. If you are
being treated with chemotherapy, you may want to avoid aspirin because it
thins the blood by reducing platelet function and compounds the suppressing
action of the chemotherapy.
Treating level 3-4 pain
From this point all drugs require a prescription. First, try Tylenol with
codeine if you are fairly tolerant of the pain. If you cannot comfortably
tolerate the pain, try Vicodin.
If those do not control the pain, try Oxycontin next. (This name means “oxy”
for oxycodone—an opioid--and “contin” for continuous-release dose.) The
typical starting dose is one 10-mg tablet every 12 hours. This drug has an
effective time in the body of 12 hours, so it should be dosed on that
schedule. If more is needed, that larger dose should also be taken every 12
hours, rather than more frequently.
If the pain is not controlled, then the Oxycontin dose may be ramped up.
Over a long period, with pain that is nearly under control, the dose might
be ramped up by an additional 10 mg per dose every month. If the pain is
more severe, the ramping schedule can be shortened to every 2-3 days.
If the Oxycontin is not sufficient to control the pain, then MScontin
(morphine) can be started at 15 mg every 12 hours. Again, maintain the
12-hour schedule when ramping up.
Treating level 5-6 pain
Continue with Oxycontin or MScontin, ramping up as necessary to control the
pain.
At this time, consideration should also be given to hospitalization if you
are ramping up with morphine. High doses can lead to respiratory failure, so
emergency care may need to be at hand. This is a decision for the doctor.
Ramping up should be done no faster than necessary in order to give the
brain time to assimilate the drug. If the ramping up is done too quickly,
the individual will temporarily experience the notorious and unpleasant side
effects of opioids: lethargy, loss of mental alertness, confusion, loss of
emotional control, etc.
Treating level 7-8 pain
Hospitalization is required. To achieve the necessary higher doses of
morphine, intravenous dosing is needed. It will be necessary to have
emergency care at hand during administration of the higher doses.
Once the effective dose has been established by ramping up the IV, the dose
can be converted to pills for home use. An IV dose of 1 mg of morphine is
equivalent to 3 mg in a pill taken orally.
Treating level 9-10 pain
This pain requires continued ramping up of morphine doses from the previous
level.
Fentanyl (an opioid) can be administered via a patch (Duragesic) or by a
drip when the patient cannot tolerate Oxycontin or morphine. Patches are
used when nausea and vomiting are a problem. A fentanyl portable pump can
also be worn, like a “fanny-pack,” for continuous administration.
Breakthrough pain
If you are taking prescription drugs for chronic pain, you should also
discuss with the doctor what drug can be supplied in case you experience
temporary “breakthrough pain.” You should be prepared--ahead of time--in
case the regular dose effect is overwhelmed by the pain. Do not wait to
discuss this until the pain spikes—unless you are in the hospital, where
help is always at hand.
Some examples of prescription drugs for breakthrough pain include Percocet
and Endocet.
If you are fighting pain at levels 7 to 10 and still have breakthrough pain,
there is a high-powered version of fentanyl with the brand name Actiq. It
comes in the form of a “lollipop” that can be sucked; the medicine is
absorbed by the mucous membranes of your mouth and in the GI tract. Because
of the strength of this drug, you must already be accustomed to an opioid
drug to avoid overdosing.
Nerve pain is more difficult to treat
Neurological pain can be a difficult problem to control. Identifying the
source may be the first problem.
For example, tumors growing in the spine can block the channel for the
spinal nerves (stenosis) and lead to painful compression. Strangely, though,
this pain may show up in a leg rather than at the point of compression. The
answer to this type of pain may be surgery to remove the compression. The
problem also entails the risk of permanent nerve damage.
Chemotherapy often results in “peripheral neuropathy,” (PN) or pain and
numbness at the extremities. We have been able to mitigate some of the
effects of PN by dosing glutamine amino acid, which helps in the repair of
damaged cells. The dose is 10 grams t.i.d. plus 50 mg magnesium and 50 mg
vitamin B-6 daily. Avoid taking with hot foods. (Discuss this with your onco
before starting.)
Another treatment for nerve pain is Neurontin. If the other pain-relievers
are ineffective, this may be an alternative.
Radiation and radioisotope injections for bone pain
External-beam radiation can sometimes be used (in a technique called “spot
welding”) to alleviate localized pain due to cancer in the bones. However,
the treatment is localized and may not be useful if there are many bone
metastases.
Strontium-89 (Metastron) and samarium-151 (Quadramet) can be injected in a
generalized treatment of bone pain. From our experience, we prefer Quadramet.
These radioisotopes seek the bone, especially areas with bone lesions, i.e.,
tumors. Radiation is an effective and quick tool for eliminating pain,
although the injected radioisotopes can cause an initial pain flare before
the original pain subsides. Relief with these radioisotopes can last for as
long as a year.
There is a price to pay for the use of radiation. It also damages bone
marrow, especially when used in the pelvic area, where large concentrations
of bone marrow exist. A reduction in bone marrow will limit the amount of
chemotherapy that can be administered because chemotherapy also affects the
bone marrow and suppresses the immune system.
Radiation cannot be repeated indefinitely because of the damage to the bone
marrow, which is the source of white blood cells for the immune system and
red blood cells for oxygen transport. Radiation also damages other healthy
tissue in the body and may result in severe side effects, such as diarrhea
and bleeding.
Chemotherapy for pain management
Chemotherapy can relieve bone pain by suppressing the cancer—the source of
the pain. It is not unusual to experience quick pain relief on starting an
effective chemotherapy. (See the sections on chemotherapy.) Any strategies,
including hormone therapy, that inhibit the cancer may also relieve pain.
Bisphosphonates for bone pain
The bisphosphonate drugs (Zometa, Aredia, Fosamax) have also been shown to
relieve pain by suppressing bone metastases. Anyone with HRPCa should be
using one of these drugs. (See Chapter 13. Protect bone integrity.)
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