TY - JOUR
T1 - Neuropathic pain phenotyping as a predictor of treatment response in painful diabetic neuropathy
T2 - Data from the randomized, double-blind, COMBO-DN study
AU - Bouhassira, Didier
AU - Wilhelm, Stefan
AU - Schacht, Alexander
AU - Perrot, Serge
AU - Kosek, Eva
AU - Cruccu, Giorgio
AU - Freynhagen, Rainer
AU - Tesfaye, Solomon
AU - Lledó, Alberto
AU - Choy, Ernest
AU - Marchettini, Paolo
AU - Micó, Juan Antonio
AU - Spaeth, Michael
AU - Skljarevski, Vladimir
AU - Tölle, Thomas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - Sensory profiles are heterogeneous in neuropathic pain disorders, and subgroups of patients respond differently to treatment. To further explore this, patients in the COMBO-DN study were prospectively assessed by the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory (NPSI) at baseline, after initial 8-week therapy with either duloxetine or pregabalin, and after subsequent 8-week combination/high-dose therapy. Exploratory post hoc cluster analyses were performed to identify and characterize potential subgroups through their scores in the NPSI items. In patients not responding to initial 60 mg/d duloxetine, adding 300 mg/d pregabalin for combination treatment was particularly effective regarding the dimensions pressing pain and evoked pain, whereas maximizing the duloxetine dose to 120 mg/d appeared more beneficial regarding paresthesia/dysesthesia. In contrast, adding 60 mg/d duloxetine to 300 mg/d pregabalin in case of nonresponse to initial pregabalin led to numerically higher decreases in all NPSI dimensions/items compared to maximizing the pregabalin dose to 600 mg/d. Cluster analysis revealed 3 patient clusters (defined by baseline scores for the 10 NPSI sensory items) with different pain profiles, not only in terms of overall pain severity, but also across NPSI items. Mean Brief Pain Inventory average pain improved in all clusters during combination/high-dose therapy. However, in patients with severe pain, the treatment effect showed a trend in favor of high-dose monotherapy, whereas combination therapy appeared to be more beneficial in patients with moderate and mild pain (not significant). These complementary exploratory analyses further endorse the idea that sensory phenotyping might lead to a more stratified treatment and potentially to personalized pain therapy.
AB - Sensory profiles are heterogeneous in neuropathic pain disorders, and subgroups of patients respond differently to treatment. To further explore this, patients in the COMBO-DN study were prospectively assessed by the Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory (NPSI) at baseline, after initial 8-week therapy with either duloxetine or pregabalin, and after subsequent 8-week combination/high-dose therapy. Exploratory post hoc cluster analyses were performed to identify and characterize potential subgroups through their scores in the NPSI items. In patients not responding to initial 60 mg/d duloxetine, adding 300 mg/d pregabalin for combination treatment was particularly effective regarding the dimensions pressing pain and evoked pain, whereas maximizing the duloxetine dose to 120 mg/d appeared more beneficial regarding paresthesia/dysesthesia. In contrast, adding 60 mg/d duloxetine to 300 mg/d pregabalin in case of nonresponse to initial pregabalin led to numerically higher decreases in all NPSI dimensions/items compared to maximizing the pregabalin dose to 600 mg/d. Cluster analysis revealed 3 patient clusters (defined by baseline scores for the 10 NPSI sensory items) with different pain profiles, not only in terms of overall pain severity, but also across NPSI items. Mean Brief Pain Inventory average pain improved in all clusters during combination/high-dose therapy. However, in patients with severe pain, the treatment effect showed a trend in favor of high-dose monotherapy, whereas combination therapy appeared to be more beneficial in patients with moderate and mild pain (not significant). These complementary exploratory analyses further endorse the idea that sensory phenotyping might lead to a more stratified treatment and potentially to personalized pain therapy.
KW - Diabetic neuropathy
KW - Duloxetine
KW - Neuropathic Pain Symptom Inventory
KW - Pregabalin
KW - Sensory symptoms
KW - Stratified treatment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84908110150&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.pain.2014.08.020
DO - 10.1016/j.pain.2014.08.020
M3 - Article
C2 - 25168665
AN - SCOPUS:84908110150
SN - 0304-3959
VL - 155
SP - 2171
EP - 2179
JO - Pain
JF - Pain
IS - 10
ER -