Bangkok Post

Medication not needed for back pain

For lower back pain, be active and wait it out, new guidelines say

- GINA KOLATA

Dr James Weinstein, a back pain specialist and chief executive of Dartmouth-Hitchcock Health System, has some advice for most people with lower back pain: Take two aspirin and don’t call me in the morning.

Earlier this month, the American College of Physicians published updated guidelines that say much the same. In making the new recommenda­tions for the treatment of most people with lower back pain, the group is bucking what many doctors do and changing its previous guidelines, which called for medication as first-line therapy.

Dr Nitin Damle, president of the group’s board of regents and a practicing internist, said pills, even over-the-counter pain relievers and anti-inflammato­ries, should not be the first choice. “We need to look at therapies that are nonpharmac­ological first,” he said. “That is a change.”

The recommenda­tions come as the United States is struggling with an epidemic of opioid addiction that often begins with a simple prescripti­on for ailments like back pain. In recent years, a number of states have enacted measures aimed at curbing prescripti­on painkiller­s. The problem has also led many doctors around the country to reassess prescribin­g practices.

The group did not address surgery. Its focus was on non-invasive treatment.

The new guidelines said that doctors should avoid prescribin­g opioid painkiller­s for relief of back pain and suggested that before patients try anti-inflammato­ries or muscle relaxants, they should try alternativ­e therapies like exercise, acupunctur­e, massage therapy or yoga. Doctors should reassure their patients that they will get better no matter what treatment they try, the group said. The guidelines also said that steroid injections were not helpful, and neither was acetaminop­hen, like Tylenol, although other over-the-counter pain relievers like aspirin, naproxen or ibuprofen could provide some relief.

Weinstein, who was not an author of the guidelines, said patients have to stay active and wait it out. “Back pain has a natural course that does not require interventi­on,” he said.

In fact, for most of the people with acute back pain — defined as present for four weeks or less that does not radiate down the leg — there is no need to see a doctor at all, said Dr Rick Deyo, a spine researcher and professor at the Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, Oregon, and an author of the new guidelines.

“For acute back pain, the analogy is to the common cold,” Deyo said. “It is very common and very annoying when it happens. But most of the time it will not result in anything major or serious.”

Even those with chronic back pain — lasting at least 12 weeks — should start with nonpharmac­ological treatments, the guidelines say. If patients still want medication, they can try over-the-counter drugs like ibuprofen or aspirin.

Scans, like an MRI, for diagnosis are worse than useless for back pain patients, members of the group said in telephone interviews. The results can be misleading, showing what look like abnormalit­ies that actually are not related to the pain.

Measures that help patients get back to their usual routines can help along the way, as Sommer Kleweno Walley, 43, of Seattle, can attest. Last spring, she slipped on the stairs in her house and fell down hard, on her back.

“After a couple of hours I could barely walk,” she said. “I was in real pain.”

She saw a physical therapist, but the pain persisted. Eleven days later, she showed up at the office of Dr Christophe­r J. Standaert, a spine specialist at the University of Washington Harborview Medical Center. She expected to receive an MRI, at least, and maybe a drug for pain.

But Standaert told her an MRI would not make any difference in her diagnosis or recovery and that the main thing was to keep active. She ended up getting anti-inflammato­ry medication and doing physical therapy. A few months later, her back stopped hurting.

It is surprising, some experts in back pain say, how often patients are helped by treatments that are not medical, even by a placebo that patients are told at the start is really a placebo.

Standaert cited a study in which patients with chronic low back pain were offered a placebo, and were told it was a placebo, along with their usual treatment — often an anti-inflammato­ry drug like ibuprofen or naproxen. Or, the patients remained with their usual treatment alone.

Those taking the placebo reported less pain and disability than those in the control group who did not take it. The placebo effect, although modest, was about the same as the effect in studies testing nonpharmac­ological treatments for back pain like acupunctur­e, massage or chiropract­ic manipula

tions. Many people with chronic back pain tend to shut down, avoiding their usual activities, afraid of making things worse, Standaert said. Helping them is not a matter of prescribin­g drugs but rather teaching them to set goals and work toward returning to an active life, even if they still have pain.

“They have to believe their life can get better,” Standaert said. “They have to believe they can get to a better state.”

The question is: Will the new guidelines be adopted?

“Patients are looking for a cure,” said Dr Steven J. Atlas, a back pain specialist at Massachuse­tts General Hospital, who wrote an editorial accompanyi­ng the article on the new recommenda­tions. “The guidelines are for managing pain.”

Added to the problem are the incentives that push doctors and patients toward medication­s, scans and injections, Deyo said. “There is marketing from profession­al organisati­ons and from industry,” he said. “We have the cure. You can expect to be cured. You can expect to be pain free.”

Medical insurance also contribute­s to the treatment problem, back experts say, because it does not pay for remedies like mindfulnes­s training or chiropract­ic manipulati­ons which, Deyo added, “are not cheap”.

Even if doctors want to recommend such treatments, there is no easy referral system, Atlas said.

“It is much easier to get a shot than to get a mind-body or cognitive behavioura­l therapy,” he added.

Weinstein has a prescripti­on: “What we need to do is to stop medicalisi­ng symptoms,” he said. Pills are not going to make people better and as for other treatments, he said. “Yoga and tai chi, all those things are wonderful, but why not just go back to your normal activities?”

“I know your back hurts, but go run, be active, instead of taking a pill.”

‘‘ What we need to do is to stop medicalisi­ng symptoms

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