Management of Central Poststroke Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis - 21/09/24
Abstract |
Central poststroke pain (CPSP) is a neuropathic pain condition prevalent in 8 to 35% of stroke patients. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to provide insight into the effectiveness of available pharmacological, physical, psychological, and neuromodulation interventions in reducing pain in CPSP patients (PROSPERO Registration: CRD42022371835). Secondary outcomes included mood, sleep, global impression of change, and physical responses. Data extraction included participant demographics, stroke etiology, pain characteristics, pain reduction scores, and secondary outcome metrics. Forty-two original studies were included, with a total of 1,451 participants. No studies providing psychological therapy to CPSP patients were identified. Twelve studies met requirements for a random-effects meta-analyses that found pharmacological therapy to have a small effect on mean pain score (SMD = −.36, 96.0% confidence interval [−.68, −.03]), physical interventions did not show a significant effect (SMD = −.55 [−1.28, .18]), and neuromodulation treatments had a moderate effect (SMD = −.64 [−1.08, −.19]). Fourteen studies were included in proportional meta-analysis with pharmacological studies having a moderate effect (58.3% mean pain reduction [−36.51, −80.15]) and neuromodulation studies a small effect (31.1% mean pain reduction [−43.45, −18.76]). Sixteen studies were included in the narrative review, the findings from which largely supported meta-analysis results. Duloxetine, amitriptyline, and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation had the most robust evidence for their effectiveness in alleviating CPSP-induced pain. Further multicenter placebo-controlled research is needed to ascertain the effectiveness of physical therapies, such as acupuncture and virtual reality, and invasive and noninvasive neuromodulation treatments.
Perspective |
This article presents a top-down and bottom-up overview of evidence for the effectiveness of different pharmacological, physical, and neuromodulation treatments of CPSP. This review could provide clinicians with a comprehensive understanding of the effectiveness and tolerability of different treatment types.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Highlights |
• | Tricyclic antidepressants have more robust efficacy evidence than anticonvulsants. |
• | Opioids for central poststroke pain (CPSP) management are not supported by intervention research. |
• | There is a distinct lack of psychological intervention studies on CPSP. |
• | Acupuncture and virtual reality have some evidence for CPSP patient pain alleviation. |
• | M1-targeting repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation had the most robust evidence for efficacy out of all neuromodulation treatments. |
Key words : Central poststroke pain, neuropathic pain, thalamic pain, pharmacological review, neuromodulation review
Plan
Supplementary data accompanying this article are available online at www.jpain.org and www.sciencedirect.com. |
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