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antiquity
05-22-2002, 07:12 AM
Implantable Pump Shoots Pain Relief Into Spinal Fluid

An implantable pump that delivers pain medication in a slow-release fashion directly into the spinal fluid could greatly improve the pain relief, overall quality of life and survival for cancer patients living in pain.

These are the findings of an international study completed at Johns Hopkins University Medical Institutions, the Medical College of Virginia and 25 other medical centers.

Researchers studied more than 200 people with a variety of cancers -- including lung, breast, prostate, colon and pancreatic cancers -- whose pain broke through morphine or other opiate drugs; six were treated at Hopkins.

Patients were randomly assigned to either receive an implantable pump delivering medications directly into the spinal fluid or to continue taking pain medicine by mouth.

Results of the study, presented Tuesday (May 21) at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Orlando, Fla., revealed that at the end of the six-month study, 54 percent of the pump patients were living, versus 37 percent of those on medical management.

In addition, patients on the pump had less pain and fewer side effects from pain drugs, including significantly less fatigue, less constipation or nausea, and improved mental status.

The pump used for the study, about the size and shape of a hockey puck, contains a prescribed amount of drug and is surgically inserted in the abdomen. A small tube reaches from the pump around the waist to deliver medication directly into the spinal fluid.

Physicians can tailor the dose for each patient, deciding when and how much medication to release, depending on pain levels. Doctors refill the pump by injecting medication through the abdomen into a tiny opening on the front of the device.

"This challenges our thinking about how to treat cancer pain," says Peter S. Staats, M.D., director of the Division of Pain Medicine at Johns Hopkins and a co-principal investigator for the study. "Normally we give the patients pain medication, and if it doesn't work we'll resort to something else as a last-ditch effort. This suggests that earlier intervention with an approach that minimizes systemic drugs has a significant benefit in a variety of domains. It presents a whole new paradigm in patient care."

Co-authors were: George E. Pool, M.P.H., Minneapolis; Patrick J. Coyne, R.N., M.S.N., Richmond, Va.; Thomas J. Smith, M.D., Richmond, Va.; Timothy Deer, M.D., Charleston, W.Va.; Lisa J. Stearns, M.D., Phoenix; Richard L. Rauck, M.D., Winston-Salem, N.C.; Richard L. Boortz-Marx, M.S., M.D., Minneapolis; and Eric Buchser, M.D., Morges, Switzerland.- -JHMI- - Abstract # 1436: Smith, T.J. et al, "An Implantable Drug Delivery System (IDDS) for Refractory Cancer Pain Improves Pain Control, Drug-related Toxicity and Survival Compared to Comprehensive Medical Management (CMM)."
The study was funded by Medtronic, Inc. - By Karen Blum

Related websites:

Johns Hopkins Division of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine

American Society of Clinical Oncology

Medtronic, Inc.

National Pain Foundation


[Contact: Karen Blum]


22-May-2002

AliceM
05-23-2002, 04:57 PM
Have you heard of any recent successes mixing the pain medication with the bacylphen. We asked our doctors here in SLC and they were very hestiant to pursue this possibility? It seems to me if you have a pump and great pain this might work. Thanks for any information.

exhale43
05-24-2002, 09:58 PM
My husband has a baclofen pump they had talk about giving the [pump a holliday cause the baclofen wasnt working that well so they put moriphine solution in it poor guy started seeing thing s moriphine was not good for him

whiterabbit11
05-25-2002, 11:57 PM
Seneca,
The pump you describe sounds exactly likke my baclofen pump made by Medtronics. Is it the same thing, different drug? For any of you wall street types, I heard on NPR and in the USA Today that Medtronics is a good one to buy into recently.WR

cheesecake
05-27-2002, 09:44 AM
There are some doctors who "create a cocktail" of pain meds with baclophen. I believe that this has been done in Chicago, Cleveland as well as Baltimore at Hopkins.

antiquity
06-02-2002, 11:58 PM
Whiterabbit, the pump the article mentions is made by Medtronic too so maybe it is the same as your baclofen pump.