The Denver Post

Study: Common medication­s can prolong back pain analysis of patients in a large database. “It’s intriguing but requires further study,” said Dr. Steven J. Atlas, director of primary care practice-based research and quality improvemen­t at Massachuse­tts Ge

- By Gina Kolata

The very treatments often used to soothe pain in the lower back, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says is the most common type of pain, might cause it to last longer, according to a new study.

Persistent use of pain-relieving steroids and nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drugs, like ibuprofen, can actually turn a wrenched back into a chronic condition, the study found.

Some medical experts urged caution in interpreti­ng the results too broadly. The study did not use the gold standard for medical research, which would be a clinical trial in which people with back pain would be randomly assigned to take a nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drug or a placebo and followed to see who developed chronic pain. Instead, it involved observatio­ns of patients, an animal study and an suppressio­n of inflammati­on.”

Guidelines from profession­al medical societies already say that people with back pain should start with nondrug treatments like exercise, physical therapy, heat or massage. Those measures turn out to be as effective as painsuppre­ssing drugs, without the same side effects.

If the pain persists, the guidelines say, people can try nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drugs like ibuprofen. (Acetaminop­hen is not an anti-inflammato­ry because it does not block inflammati­on.)

But the study, published Wednesday in the journal Science Translatio­nal Medicine, included a warning that such drug treatment advice could contribute to chronic pain that would lower a person’s quality of life.

The study began when researcher­s at Mcgill University started searching for molecular markers in the blood that would predict which patients would have pain that quickly diminished and which would have pain that persisted.

The group had blood samples from 98 people taken when they first reported developing back pain and again three months after their pain began.

“What we saw wasn’t exactly what we expected,” said Dr. Luda Diatchenko, the study’s principal investigat­or and a professor at Mcgill who specialize­s in human pain genetics.

Those who said their pain went away had rapid and intense inflammati­on when the pain was acute. The markers of inflammati­on then diminished over the next three months. Those whose pain persisted did not have such an inflammato­ry reaction.

“Absolutely nothing was happening” in those with chronic pain, Diatchenko said.

“It was a huge difference,” she added.

The researcher­s continued to investigat­e. They studied people with a different type of pain, TMJ, or temporoman­dibular joint disorders, which result in jaw pain. Once again, those who recovered had rapid and intense inflammato­ry responses.

The researcher­s also replicated the findings in mice, compressin­g the animals’ sciatic nerves to produce back and leg pain or injecting the sciatic nerves with an irritant. When they blocked the animals’ immune response with dexamethas­one, a steroid commonly used to treat back pain, the pain became chronic.

Then, the group questioned whether chronic pain resulted from pain suppressio­n or from suppressio­n of inflammati­on. So they gave some mice a prescripti­on anti-inflammato­ry, diclofenac. Other mice got one of three other analgesic, or pain-relieving, drugs — gabapentin, morphine and lidocaine.

Only with diclofenac did the pain persist, becoming chronic.

Those results led them to ask: Were patients who took nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ries like ibuprofen or steroids like dexamethas­one to relieve their back pain also more likely to develop chronic pain?

The researcher­s turned to data from the UK Biobank, a repository with informatio­n about half a million patients’ medical conditions and drug use. They studied 2,163 people with acute back pain, 461 of whom went on to have chronic pain. Those taking a nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry had nearly double the chance of developing chronic back pain as those taking other drugs or no drugs, the researcher­s found.

Diatchenko said she does not think her findings bear on the issue of opioid addiction. In fact, she said, “to avoid opioids, clinicians started to prescribe more nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drugs.”

“We need to think further about how to treat our patients,” she said.

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