Tapentadol prolonged release in patients with chronic low back pain: Real-world data from the German Pain eRegistry

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Abstract

Aim: Comparison of tapentadol prolonged release (PR) with other oral WHO-III PR opioid analgesics (morphine, oxycodone ± naloxone, hydromorphone) in routine medical care of chronic low back pain. Patients & methods: Noninterventional, retrospective 12-week study using anonymized clinical practice data from the German Pain eRegistry. Six effectiveness, tolerability, and safety criteria were aggregated in a primary composite end point (treatment responder). Propensity scoring matched 2331 datasets per treatment cohort. Results: All six single criteria showed significantly better outcomes for tapentadol PR (all parameters p < 0.001). There were significantly more treatment responders under tapentadol PR (65.7 vs 14.2%; p < 0.001). Conclusion: Tapentadol PR showed significantly better effectiveness and tolerability in severe chronic low back pain unsuccessfully treated with WHO-I/II analgesics compared with the other oral WHO-III PR opioids investigated.

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APA

Überall, M. A., Elling, C., Eibl, C., Müller-Schwefe, G. H. H., Lefeber, C., Heine, M., & Heckes, B. (2022). Tapentadol prolonged release in patients with chronic low back pain: Real-world data from the German Pain eRegistry. Pain Management, 12(2), 211–227. https://doi.org/10.2217/pmt-2021-0058

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