Survey Finds Patients and Doctors Unsatisfied with Treatments for Acute Pain
By Pat Anson
Nine out of ten (89%) patients who recently had short-term acute pain say it caused a major disruption in their lives, limiting their ability to sleep, exercise and enjoy leisure activity, according to a new survey. Many patients also expressed dissatisfaction with the pain medication they received and want to try a new one if their pain returns.
The survey was conducted by Vertex Pharmaceuticals, which is awaiting FDA approval of suzetrigine, its experimental non-opioid medication for acute pain. Vertex surveyed 1,001 adults and 547 doctors who were treated for or who treated acute pain. The company also commissioned a survey by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS), which asked similar questions of 49 of its members who treated patients with moderate-to-severe pain from surgery.
The resulting report, “The State of Pain in America,” is obviously intended to drum up support for suzetrigine by showcasing dissatisfaction with current treatment options for acute pain. But the surveys also provide some interesting insights into what patients and doctors think about opioids and pain care in general.
“The Vertex and AAOS surveys underscore that treating acute pain in today’s health care landscape can be complex, as are the complexities that patients and health care providers have when personalizing pain management, highlighting the unmet need in this therapeutic area for more options,” Vertex said.
About 80 million adults receive treatment for acute pain in the U.S. each year, about half of whom receive an opioid, according to Vertex. Many also take acetaminophen or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for pain relief.
Nearly a third of patients (31%) said they stopped taking analgesics before their acute pain resolved and 77% said they would be interested in trying a different medication – clear indications of dissatisfaction with their pain care.
Patients were also concerned with how acute pain impacted their lives:
70% Limited their ability to walk and exercise
69% Limited their sleep
65% Limited their hobby or leisure activity
65% Made them feel irritable or emotionally drained
Missed an average of 19 work days annually
The surveys also found that both patients and doctors were worried about the risk of opioid addiction:
49% of patients concerned about opioid addiction
78% of doctors concerned about patients becoming addicted to opioids
88% of doctors believe patients prefer to manage pain without opioids
67% of patients said they would request a non-opioid medication in the future
52% of patients want a pain medication with fewer side effects
In addition, 83% of providers and 74% of AAOS surgeons said there was a high need for a new class of non-opioid pain medication.
Whether suzetrigine is a solution to these issues is an open question. Unlike opioids, which act on pain receptors in the brain, suzetrigine is designed to block pain in the peripheral nervous system. That means it won’t have the same “liking” effects of opioids or be addictive.
But in clinical studies, suzetrigine was not more effective than a low dose of Vicodin in treating acute pain in patients recovering from minimally invasive surgeries.
The risk of a surgery patient misusing opioids or becoming addicted is actually quite low – less than one percent. One study even found that patients who received no opioids during surgery were more likely to have post-operative pain and require opioids during recovery.
Vertex hopes suzetrigine will be approved by the FDA in January for post-operative acute pain. The company is also studying the drug as a treatment for pain caused by diabetic peripheral neuropathy and for lumbosacral radiculopathy.