Patient and clinician beliefs about potential barriers to treatment of neuropathic pain for adolescents with sickle cell disease

Author:

Rees Matthew1ORCID,Spraker‐Perlman Holly1ORCID,Moore Raechyl2,Lavoie Paul2,Schiff Linda3,Allen Jennifer M.4ORCID,Rai Parul2,Anghelescu Doralina L.5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Oncology St Jude Children's Research Hospital Memphis Tennessee USA

2. Department of Hematology St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Memphis Tennessee USA

3. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Memphis Tennessee USA

4. Department of Psychology St. Louis Children's Hospital St Louis Missouri USA

5. Department of Pediatric Medicine St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Memphis Tennessee USA

Abstract

AbstractPain is the hallmark symptom causing morbidity for people with sickle cell disease (SCD) and may present as nociceptive, neuropathic, or mixed type pain. Neuropathic pain (NP) is underrecognized and undertreated in patients with SCD and is associated with decreased patient‐reported quality of life. Surveys were completed by clinicians caring for adolescents with SCD in the outpatient setting. SCD patients ages 1418 at increased risk of NP completed a patient‐facing survey at a scheduled clinic visit. Ninety‐four percent of responding clinicians agreed that NP significantly contributes to reported pain in SCD. Clinicians believed that NP medications are effective for reducing chronic pain (62%) and decreasing opioid utilization (44%). Clinician‐identified barriers to prescribing NP medications included concerns about medication adherence (82%), lack of pediatric guidelines for NP medications (70%), and perceived patient concern about side effects (65%). More than 1/3 (35%) of clinicians reported that they were not comfortable managing NP medications. Clinician‐identified barriers to referral to a pain management specialist included scheduling concerns (88%) and perceived patient/family lack of interest (77%). Most patients expressed willingness to take a medication for NP (78%), see a pain management specialist (84%), or learn more about nonpharmacologic interventions (72%), although most (51%) also reported some concerns about taking a medication for NP, citing insufficient knowledge (34%), and potential for side effects (32%). A minority of respondents (15%) worried about referral to a pain management specialist. Clinician and patient perspectives provide insights that may guide education efforts or other interventions to improve treatment of SCD‐related NP.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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