Introduction
Phantom limb pain (PLP) is a neuropathic-type pain secondary to the presence of painful sensation in an absent limb, and dependent on central factors such as spinal plasticity and cortical reorganization, usually difficult to manage.1,2 PLP occurs in 50% to 80% of amputees,3 and it is also associated with psychological and peripheral nervous system factors.3-6
At present, there is no standard treatment, and evidence is limited.7-9 Few clinical trials have evaluated a specific pharmacological therapy for this intervention, and those that exist are of low methodological quality.9,10
Intrathecal analgesia is indicated for somatic and neuropathic pain associated or not with cancer.11 Ziconotide is a conotoxin originally isolated from the Conus magus mollusk and is currently the only non-opioid analgesic for intrathecal use approved both by the European Medicines Agency and the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). The objective of this work is to present the use of this drug as part of multimodal intrathecal management in patients with PLP.11
Materials and methods
Once the approval of the bioethics committee (Approval No. 2013 72) and patient informed consents were obtained, 2 cases of chronic PLP refractory to pharmacological treatment were selected in the pain department of the Institut de Cancérologie de l'Ouest in France, and treated by means of an implantable delivery system for intrathecal analgesia. The information was gathered from the patients' electronic clinical records.
Results
Case 1
A 79-year-old female patient with recurrent renal cancer presented with a pathological right humeral fracture that required osteosynthesis; however, amputation was warranted because of an infectious complication. Postoperatively, the patient developed PLP in the thoracic limb, accompanied by a sensation of an uncomfortably positioned limb, with pain of 9/10 on the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS). Despite treatment with gabapentin 1200mg/d, amitriptyline 10mg/d and transdermal fentanyl 25 μg/h, there was no adequate pain relief, and added sedation was considered unacceptable by the patient.
A Synchromed II (Medtronic, U.S.A.) intrathecal infusion system was then implanted with a percutaneous technique using a puncture at L2 under fluoroscopic guidance. The tip of the catheter was placed at the level of C1 (cervical), and treatment was initiated with morphine 0.5 mg, ropivacaine 6mg, and ziconotide 0.2 μg per day. Systemic opioids were interrupted during the postoperative period, and gabapentin and amitriptyline were gradually discontinued over a 1-week period. Side effects diminished over a 6-month follow-up period and the score on the NRS dropped to 2/10, with the patient reporting only phantom limb sensation.
Case 2
A 60-year-old male patient with a history of 3 decades of pain: in 1983 he sustained a traumatic amputation of the right upper limb with brachial plexus avulsion, and ensuing PLP. The patient received several treatments unsuccessfully, the most recent including transdermal fentanyl 100 μg/h and transmucosal rescue fentanyl 200 μg 3 times a day, carbamazepine 400mg/d and amitriptyline 25 mg/d. He had undergone sympathetic nerve blocks, placement of a spinal stimulation system (removed due to epidural abscess) and implantation of an additional cervical electrode (removed due to breakage). A lesional procedure was performed in the dorsal root entry area, interscalene block, and even motor cortex stimulatorwhich led to a good, though short-lived, clinical response (50% pain reduction). The device was inactive because, when the therapeutic effect was lost, the patient demanded discontinuation of the therapy.
At the time of assessment, he complained of PLP with a score of 6/10 on the NRS. The option of implanting a Synchromed II (Medtronic, U.S.A.) intrathecal infusion delivery system was selected. An Ascenda (Medtronic, U.S.A.) catheter was passed under fluoroscopic guidance beyond the cervical level (cisterna magna), through a puncture at L3 (Fig. 1). Treatment was initiated with morphine 1.7 mg, ropivacaine 9.9 mg and ziconotide 1.1 mg. A period of 2 months after the intervention, the patient reported 50% pain reduction with adequate tolerance.
Discussion
Intrathecal analgesia is a validated technique for the treatment of chronic pain refractory to conventional medical therapy. This route of administration has shown superiority when compared to systemic management.12 Multiple drugs have been described in the treatment of complex pain cases, including local anesthetics, opioids, ziconotide, baclofen, clonidine, and midazolam; however, only morphine, baclofen, and ziconotide have FDA approval.11
Ziconotide depends on presynaptic blockade of N-type spinal and cortical calcium channels and, as calcium influx diminishes, there is a drop in the release of pain neurotransmitters.13,14 The polyanalgesia consensus recommends this therapy as first-line in the management of neuropathic and nociceptive pain, associated or not with cancer.11 It is administered intrathecally and its adverse effects may include visual hallucinations, ataxia, creatinine kinase elevation (CPK), and hypotension.15 No undesirable adverse effects, particularly cognitive, were seen in either of these 2 cases, and there was no CPK elevation. Cerebral intraventricular analgesia has been described with good results, one of the first reports being that of a patient with a 23-history of pain due to brachial plexus avulsion.16 The efficacy of ziconotide in the treatment of refractory pain has been demonstrated in several scenarios.17-20 Intrathecal administration of opioids and local anaesthetics has been described exceptionally in cases of PLP of the lower extremity.21,22
Our report is consistent with prior publications like the trial by Staats et al19 in a population of HIV-related pain, in which 5 patients received ziconotide, achieving complete pain relief, with response to treatment in 50% of all the patients, compared to 17.5% in the placebo group (P =0.001).
Later, Wermeling and Berger18 described patients with complex regional pain syndrome, lumbar radiculitis, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who achieved substantial persistent relief even after infusion discontinuation.
Staquet et al20 reported cerebral intraventricular administration of a combination of ziconotide, morphine, and ropivacaine in patients with intractable cancer pain and central neuropathic pain, again with favorable results (reported pain score reduction from 9.5 to 3.5). The technique described in this work is particular because of the high cervical location in the 2 patients, given the presence of upper limb PLP.
The limitations of this study have to do with its descriptive nature and low recruitment, explained by the exceptional use of the technique; however, it opens the door to further studies with more weight that can provide evidence about the use of these drugs at the cervical and supraspinal level.
Conclusion
The use of implantable drug delivery devices for the administration of intrathecal analgesia with ziconotide at the cervical and supraspinal level appears to be a promising strategy for the treatment of refractory upper PLP. It must be considered as a therapeutic option offered in expert pain centers, considering the complexity of the technique and the inherent risks.
This work was presented at the World Congress on Pain Medicine and Regional Anesthesia in April 2018, in New York.
Ethical responsibility
Human and animal protection. The authors declare that no animal or human experiments were carried out for this research.
Data confidentiality. The authors declare having followed the protocols of their institution regarding patient data disclosure.
Informed consent. Informed consent was obtained from all the individual participants included in the study.