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Drug Evaluations

Ketamine for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain

, MD, , MD MSc, , MD PhD, , PhD, , MD PhD & , MD PhD
Pages 2417-2429 | Published online: 09 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

Importance of the field: Worldwide the number of patients affected by chronic pain is growing and conventional treatment is often insufficient. Recently the importance of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) in the mechanisms and maintenance of chronic pain was established. Ketamine (introduced in the 1960s as an anesthetic) is the most studied NMDAR antagonist in the treatment of various chronic pain syndromes.

Areas covered in this review: The pharmacology, safety and toxicology of ketamine are discussed. Further, electronic databases were scanned for prospective, randomized controlled trials that assessed ketamine's analgesic effect in patients with chronic pain. The focus of this review is on trials published after 2008 that applied long-term intravenous infusions.

What the reader will gain: While most studies on intravenous ketamine show acute analgesic effects, three recent trials on long-term ketamine treatment (days to weeks) demonstrate the effectiveness of ketamine in causing long-term (months) relief of chronic pain. Despite these positive results, further studies are needed on safety/toxicity issues. Other administration modes are less effective in causing long-term pain relief.

Take home message: There is now evidence form a limited number of studies that pain relief lasting for months is observed after long-term intravenous ketamine infusion, suggesting a modulatory effect of ketamine in the process of chronic pain, possibly via blockade of upregulated NMDAR.

Acknowledgement

This study is supported in part by TREND (Trauma Related Neuronal Dysfunction), a non-profit consortium of academic hospitals, technical research groups and companies focused on the study of CRPS type 1 (Delft, The Netherlands).

Notes

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