Limits on Rx Opioids Led to Unintended Consequences in Australia

By Pat Anson

An Australian study highlights some of the benefits and unintended consequences of efforts to limit the prescribing of opioid pain medication. Like the United States, there’s been a fair amount of controversy in Australia about opioid medication and the role it played in the so-called opioid crisis.

In response, Australian regulator took two steps in 2020 to limit prescribing: creating prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs), and limiting the amount of opioids and repeat prescriptions subsidized by the government.

To see how well the changes worked, researchers analyzed emergency department (ED) visits by patients prescribed opioids by primary care doctors in Victoria, the second most-populated state in Australia with over seven million people. Victoria was the first state to adopt a mandatory PDMP, which doesn’t stop a doctor from prescribing opioids but alerts them to possible misuse by a patient.

The research findings, published in the Medical Journal of Australia, show that ED visits by patients on prescription opioids fell by 11.8 visits per 100,000 people after opioids restrictions were implemented. At the same time, however, researchers identified a short-term but statistically significant increase of 7.3 ED visits per 100,000 people that were linked to non‐opioid substances.

The study didn’t identify what those non-opioid substances were, but researchers suspect that some were uncontrolled medications, such as pregabalin and antidepressants, which are often prescribed as alternative to opioids.

“As we expected, the new policies were associated with reduced opioid‐related harm; the reduced availability of prescription opioids presumably explains this change. We also expected that the changes would have unintended effects, and found an immediate increase in the non‐opioid substance‐related ED presentation rate that was greater among people prescribed opioids than in the control group,” researchers reported.

“One possible mechanism underlying the increase in non‐opioid substance‐related harms could be related to increased prescribing of unmonitored pain medicines, such as pregabalin and tricyclic antidepressants, following the introduction of the prescription drug monitoring program.”

PDMPs have also had unintended consequences in the United States. In a 2021 study, the Reason Foundation found that opioid prescribing declined in states that adopted PDMPs, but that overdoses involving heroin, illicit fentanyl and cocaine significantly increased – suggesting that some patients were substituting illicit drugs for prescription opioids.

The focus on prescription opioids may have been misplaced in Victoria. According to a 2023 report by the state’s coroner, the anti-anxiety medication diazepam was the lead drug involved in fatal overdoses (213 deaths) in Victoria, followed by heroin (204 deaths), methamphetamine (164 deaths), alcohol (153 deaths) and pregabalin (78 deaths). In contrast, oxycodone was involved in 41 deaths and codeine in 24 deaths.

Can AI Videos Replace In-Person Physical Therapy?

By Crystal Lindell

A UK-based technology company claims their Artificial Intelligence (AI) videos are good enough to replace in-person physical therapy for some back pain patients. 

Like the United States, the waiting time in the UK to see a medical specialist can be daunting. According to the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), the average wait time after a referral for simple back or spine pain is more than 18 weeks. Nearly 350,000 people in England were on waiting lists for treatment for musculoskeletal problems last year. 

But in a pilot study of over 2,500 NHS patients who used a physiotherapy (physical therapy) app operated by Flok Health, the waiting times were cut in half. 98% of referred patients continued watching the AI powered videos, while only 2% required or requested a transfer to traditional to face-to-face care with a therapist.

The app works by showing patients pre-recorded videos of actual human instructors, but then tailors the video clip order based on how AI interprets responses from the patient. 

“Each appointment is like a 30 minute video call, except our side of the call is created by our AI engine in real-time, just for you,” Flok Health explains on its website. “You can answer questions and your digital physio will respond to you live, in a continuously generated personal video stream.”

Patients are also prescribed a set of exercises for the coming week before the next appointment. Flok Health says the exercises are specifically selected based on “a detailed analysis of symptoms and movement patterns.” The app also guides patients through practicing their exercises between appointments, and helps them see their progress and stay on track.

Patients also have access to human physiotherapists and doctors. The company said they monitor patient recovery remotely and can arrange to speak to a patient if they have questions. 

The BBC's Scott Nover tried the app back in March and wrote about his experience with an AI generated physical therapist named “Kirsty.” He found her recommendations lacking, with his main complaint being that Kirsty wasn’t able to correct his form in real time like a live therapist would.

“The big difference here is that Kirsty can't see me. Her pre-recorded videos don't watch my movements and stretches. They rely on me following her instructions correctly and reporting if something is amiss,” Nover wrote.

“My back felt better after my sessions with Flok, but the app likely isn't for me. I'm clumsy and uncoordinated and need someone watching my form at all times – if not, I'm likely to hurt myself further.”

However, I could see a near-future scenario where AI is able to analyze patient form in real-time with technology that’s similar to that used in gaming counsels like XBox Kinect

Nover also pointed to a 2024 study for a similar AI-powered back pain treatment called selfBACK that found patients were unlikely to use it. Nearly one-third of patients never accessed the app, and another third rarely used it. 

It’s definitely easier to blow off an app than it is to blow-off an in-person physical therapy appointment with an actual human being, so those results make sense. 

As a patient, I’ve had both in-person physical therapy referrals given to me sometimes, and links to relevant videos with accompanying handouts provided to me at other times. 

To be frank, this Flok Health app sounds a lot like that latter. And I will confess that I was a lot less likely to follow a physical therapy treatment plan when it didn’t involve an actual physical therapist.

At the same time, at least in the United States, physical therapy can be very expensive, especially when there’s a high co-pay for each session. So having less expensive treatment options is a good thing. Although it’s unclear when Flock might be widely available to U.S. patients.

I’m skeptical that AI will be fully replacing physical therapists any time soon, but it sounds like tech companies are hoping they can make a massive dent in their client base and waiting times..

Bad News Continues for Non-Opioid Analgesics

By Pat Anson

The bad news keeps piling up for non-opioid analgesics that are often touted as safer and more effective alternatives to opioid pain medication.

A large new study found that pregabalin (Lyrica) raises the risk of heart failure in older patients, while Vertex Pharmaceuticals said it was stopping development of an experimental drug for post-operative pain because it was less effective than a low dose of hydrocodone.   

The pregabalin study, recently published in JAMA Network Open, compared the drug to gabapentin (Neurontin) among Medicare patients with chronic non-cancer pain. Both pregabalin and gabapentin are gabapentinoids, a class of nerve medication that was originally developed to prevent seizures in epileptic patients.

Because they are not opioids and widely perceived as safer, both drugs are now widely prescribed for a variety of pain conditions, usually off-label.  

In a subset of patients with cardiovascular disease, researchers found that hospitalizations and emergency department visits for heart failure were more common in pregabalin users compared to patients on gabapentin. The difference wasn’t significant (18.2 visits vs 12.5 per 1,000 person-years), but it was enough for researchers to recommend caution when prescribing pregabalin.

“Practicing clinicians should undertake a careful assessment of ongoing cardiovascular risk factors and perform adequate risk-benefit counseling for older patients before prescribing pregabalin for chronic pain,” wrote lead author Elizabeth Park, MD, Columbia University Irving Medical Center.

Pregabalin is believe to be riskier because it binds to calcium channels associated with heart failure and arrhythmias. Both the American Heart Association and European Medicines Agency already list pregabalin as a drug that increases the risk of heart failure.

"The study serves as an important reminder that not all gabapentinoids are created equal and that in the pursuit of safer pain control, vigilance for unintended harms remains paramount," said Robert Zhang, MD, and Edo Birati, MD, in an accompanying editorial.

"For older adults with chronic pain, particularly those with cardiovascular disease, clinicians should weigh the potential cardiovascular risks associated with pregabalin against its analgesic benefits. This is particularly relevant given the growing use of gabapentinoids in older populations and ongoing polypharmacy issues in this age group."

The research doesn’t give gabapentin a clean bill of health, since it also raises the risk of heart failure in older patients – just not as much as pregabalin. Last month another study found that gabapentin increases the risk of dementia and cognitive impairment.

Researchers have long been concerned about the effects of gabapentinoids on the brain, while many patients have complained the drugs cause brain fog, dizziness, weight gain and mood changes. Despite warnings that they are overprescribed for conditions they were never intended to treat, the use of gabapentinoids continues to grow in the United States. 

New Analgesic No Better Than Vicodin

The new analgesic being developed by Vertex Pharmaceuticals – called VX-993 -- will apparently never reach patients, after the company announced disappointing results from a Phase Two clinical trial.  VX-993 is a non-opioid that blocks pain signals in peripheral nerves before they reach the brain, which means it doesn’t have the same “liking” effects of opioids, which can lead to addiction.  

When given to patients recovering from bunionectomy surgery, VX-993 was slightly more effective than a placebo in reducing post-operative pain, but provided less pain relief than a low dose of a hydrocodone/acetaminophen combination (Vicodin).  

“Based on these results, as well as the totality of preclinical data and results from our previous bunionectomy clinical studies, VX-993 is not expected to be superior to our existing NaV1.8 inhibitors and therefore we will not be advancing it as monotherapy in acute pain,” Carmen Bozic, MD, Executive Vice President and Chief Medical Officer at Vertex, said in a statement.

VX-993 acts similarly to Journavx (suzetrigine), a non-opioid also developed by Vertex that acts on peripheral nerves. Journavx was recently approved by the FDA to treat moderate to severe acute pain, despite lackluster results in clinical trials that also showed it was no more effective than Vicodin.

The FDA’s approval of Journavx coincides with implementation of the NOPAIN Act, which makes non-opioid analgesics in outpatient surgical settings eligible for higher Medicare reimbursement rates. Journavx costs about three times as much as Vicodin.

What Is Legitimate Pain?

By Dr. Forest Tennant

The question posed by the headline of this article may at first seem ridiculous or unneeded. But a definition of “legitimate pain” is really needed.

Federal government regulations require physicians to get a DEA license to prescribe opioids and other controlled substances. The prescribing must be for a “legitimate medical purpose” -- which is obviously intended to mean legitimate pain. 

It may be surprising, but the federal government doesn’t have a definition for legitimate pain.  State medical boards throughout the United States also do not define legitimate pain, although they monitor physicians for the “legitimacy” of their treatments. 

Recent history has shown that many physicians have been investigated and prosecuted for prescribing opioids without a “legitimate medical purpose,” despite the fact that there is no written definition of legitimate pain to be found in medical regulations and guidelines.

The lack of a written definition of legitimate pain has allowed wide discretion and abuse by prosecutors and their hired medical consultants, making it difficult for doctors to defend themselves against a system that is seemingly rigged against them.

Government agencies, medical boards, professional groups, and insurance plans also call pain “illegitimate” if they don’t like the treatment, dosage, brand, doctor, or cost. 

As unbelievable as it may sound, I’ve read and heard some terribly biased and ignorant definitions of what is and isn’t legitimate pain. 

For example, I’ve heard that a simple need for opioids makes pain illegitimate. The new definition of pain, according to some physicians, is really “opioid use disorder,” which requires treatment for addiction. I’ve also read that pain is a character deficiency and a natural part of life that needs no treatment.

There are some well-meaning persons who claim that pain is whatever the patient says it is. Sorry patients, there are simply too many addicts prowling doctor’s offices with detailed, fraudulent claims of pain fabricated to obtain opioids. Common sense and science tell us to “find the cause of pain before you prescribe.”   

It’s hard to believe, but the International Association for the Study of Pain defines pain as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience.”  I can’t wait to ask United Healthcare and Medicare to pay for an expensive drug with this definition.

It is important to point out that the term “legitimate pain” is not only lacking in regulatory guidelines, but it is also not found in medical dictionaries.  Pain may be an experience, emotion or sensation, but it has historically been regarded as a symptom of an underlying disease or injury. 

For example, the Dunglison’s Medical Dictionary of 1874 says “pain is generally symptomatic.”  Medical practitioners today, however, need a new definition of pain because the term “legitimate” is now used to justify treatment with opioids and other controlled drugs. 

Here is my definition of pain, which I believe will generally satisfy all parties, including patients, practitioners, governmental bodies, insurance companies, and the media:

“A stressful symptom caused by a disease or injury that can be objectively identified by diagnostic tests or physical examination.”  

In the past, an argument was made that some causes of pain, such as fibromyalgia and headaches, can’t be objectively verified.  This may have been true in the past, but today’s technological advances in medical imaging and laboratory tests, along with a detailed physical examination, can objectively determine the cause of nearly every source of pain. 

An examination of my submitted definition not only implies that a medical practitioner has the right to treat the patient, it also implies that the practitioner has an obligation to treat both the pain and the cause. 

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. Readers interested in learning more about his research should visit the Tennant Foundation’s website, Arachnoiditis Hope. You can subscribe to its research bulletins here.   

The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.

Living With Chronic Pain Teaches You to Ignore the Haters

By Crystal Lindell

When I first started having chronic pain in 2013, one of the major hurdles I faced was that I suddenly had a lot of trouble handling my full-time job. Doing a 90 minute commute each way, managing stress, traveling for conferences – all of it became infinitely more difficult. 

A lot of bosses probably would have immediately started to look for ways to let me go at that point, but I was lucky enough to have one who didn’t. He was an incredible mentor, friend and advocate for me – both within the company and with third parties. 

In fact, I would often rave about him to others, bragging about how empathetic and compassionate he was about the whole situation. 

A few years later, my boss started to have really bad knee pain, to the point that he eventually needed a knee replacement. 

Before he could have the surgery though, we had to cover a week-long industry conference at an exhibition hall together, and the whole experience left him very drained. He was suddenly experiencing chronic pain. 

Near the end of the week our team was having dinner, and he leaned over to tell me something. 

“I’m sorry I was not more compassionate to you about your health problems. It’s so awful. I go to bed tired, I wake up tired. The pain is always there. It’s horrible. I should have been nicer,” he told me.

I was stunned. 

This was someone who I had always categorized as being among the most compassionate about my chronic pain. And here he was – now faced with it himself – feeling as though he should have been even nicer. 

I always point to that story when I talk about why I don’t take it personally when others judge how I manage my life with chronic pain. Until you’ve been through it, it’s really hard to truly understand what it’s like to live with it – and what you’d do to make it stop. 

Even the most compassionate people often find that they were not compassionate enough. That it’s worse than they previously understood. 

And most people are not compassionate. On the contrary,  over the years a lot of people have been really judgemental about my health choices. People love to offer unsolicited advice, talk behind my back, and make rude comments like these: 

“She just wants to get high all day.”

“If you really wanted to get better you’d take up running/yoga/pilates and lose weight.”

“How bad could it be? She’s just lazy.”

But one thing I’ve noticed repeatedly is that when life hands them a health problem of their own, they are quickly humbled. 

People who thought I wasn’t doing enough to get better suddenly feel overwhelmed by something as routine as an MRI.

People who thought I took too many pain pills suddenly ask me for tips on how to get their doctor to prescribe pain medication. 

People who sneered at my kratom use suddenly want a tutorial on how to use it. 

People who called me childish for advocating for universal health care suddenly realize that the health insurance industry doesn’t care if they live or die. 

And people who thought I wasn’t doing enough to further my career quit their jobs and stopped working altogether. 

To be honest, I get it. It’s really hard to conceptualize a life with chronic pain or any chronic health issue until it happens to you. And it’s easy to judge how someone else is handling it. 

So when they are humbled, I never say “I told you so.” Instead, I offer sympathy, and whatever advice they ask for. 

And I tell them the most important thing you can tell someone with chronic pain: You are not crazy, you are not alone, and you can still live a very fulfilling life regardless of your health issues. 

Before that happens though, before they are humbled, when they are still healthy and offering judgements, I do something else – I ignore them. Because I know that no matter what they say, they wouldn’t handle my chronic pain any better than I do. 

To quote one of the most famous song writers of our generation: 

“Haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate. Baby, I'm just gonna shake, shake, shake, shake, shake. I shake it off, I shake it off.”

Endometriosis Linked with Hundreds of Comorbidities

By Pat Anson

Endometriosis is one of the most frustrating and debilitating conditions a woman can have, causing physical, sexual and emotional pain that’s difficult to diagnose and treat.

Patients who have endometriosis are often told it’s “all in your head” or that “you’ll grow out of it.” Few of them do. Nearly 200 million people worldwide suffer from endometriosis, including about one in 10 American women.

A new study at the University California-San Francisco (UCSF) is providing new insights into endometriosis, linking it with hundreds of comorbidities such as cancer, Crohn's disease, and migraine. The research could improve how endometriosis is diagnosed and treated – ending some of the silence and misconceptions about the disease.

Researchers analyzed the electronic health records of over 43,000 people with endometriosis, comparing them to a large control group without the disease. Their findings are published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine 

“We now have both the tools and the data to make a difference for the huge population that suffers from endometriosis,” says senior author Marina Sirota, PhD, a professor of pediatrics and interim director of the UCSF Bakar Computational Health Sciences Institute. “We hope this can spur a sea change in how we approach this disorder.”

Endometriosis or “endo” occurs when blood-rich tissue that grows in the uterus is expelled each month during menstruation, spreading to the ovaries, fallopian tubes, abdomen and other nearby organs. The misplaced endometrial cells implant themselves in the new host tissue and grow, causing internal bleeding, inflammation and pain.

The wayward cells can be removed by surgery, but endometriosis is usually treated with hormones to suppress the menstrual cycle. Not everyone responds to surgery or hormonal therapy, which can have side effects. Removal of the uterus is a last-ditch treatment usually reserved for older women, but some women continue to have pain even after a hysterectomy.

“Endo is extremely debilitating,” said co-author Linda Giudice, MD, a physician-scientist in UCSF’s obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences department. “The impact on patients’ lives is huge, from their interpersonal relationships to being able to hold a job, have a family, and maintain psychological well-being.”

In analyzing patient data, researchers looked for comorbidities linking endometriosis with other medical conditions, and found over 600 of them. Some were previously known, such as infertility, autoimmune disease, and migraine. Some were unexpected: certain cancers, asthma, and eye-diseases. The findings support the growing understanding of endometriosis as a “multi-system” disorder that causes dysfunction throughout the body. 

“This is the kind of data we need to move the needle, which hasn’t moved in decades,” Giudice said. “We’re finally getting closer to faster diagnosis and, eventually, we hope, tailored treatment for the millions of women who suffer from endometriosis.”

The association of endometriosis with migraine, for example, opens the possibility of treating endometriosis pain with medications that block calcitonin gene–related peptides (CGRPs), a relatively new class of migraine drug. In recent years, the FDA has approved over half a dozen CGRP medications for migraine prevention and/or treatment.

CGRP medications tend to be expensive, but so is endometriosis. One study estimates that the lifetime cost of having endometriosis in the U.S. is about $27,855 per year per patient, or about $22 billion annually. 

FDA Wants 7-OH Kratom Derivative Classified as Illegal Drug

By Crystal Lindell

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is taking the initial steps to make the kratom derivative 7-OH an illegal Schedule One controlled substance – a classification that would put it in the same category as heroin. 

The FDA announced its plan this week, saying it was targeting 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH), an alkaloid that occurs naturally in kratom in trace amounts. Some kratom vendors are selling concentrated synthetic versions of 7-OH to boost its potency as a pain reliever and mood enhancer.

The FDA claims it is “not focused on natural kratom leaf products,” but in a report released as part of the announcement, the agency said it still “has concerns about the safety of kratom products more broadly."

The FDA said it is focused on 7-OH for now "because it is a substance with potent mu opioid agonist properties and significant abuse liability." The agency recently warned 7 companies to stop selling kratom products with concentrated levels of 7-OH.

“Vape stores are popping up in every neighborhood in America, and many are selling addictive products like concentrated 7-OH. After the last wave of the opioid epidemic, we cannot get caught flat-footed again,” said FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD.

“7-OH is an opioid that can be more potent than morphine. We need regulation and public education to prevent another wave of the opioid epidemic.”

To be clear, neither kratom or 7-OH are derived from poppy plants and they are not opioids. Kratom leaves come from Mitragyna speciosa, a tropical tree native to southeast Asia that belongs in the same botanical family as coffee

But because 7-OH acts on opioid receptors in the brain, the FDA claims it is essentially an opioid, a questionable argument the agency has also made about kratom itself. If that were true, you could say nicotine, caffeine, and even cow’s milk are opioids, because they also bind to opioid receptors. 

Curiously, the FDA’s news release did not mention any cases of someone overdosing on 7-OH or being harmed by it – even though the agency’s Adverse Event Reporting System has recorded two deaths and 13 other cases involving 7-OH. However, because of “ambiguity about the contributory role of 7-OH,” the FDA is downplaying the significance of those adverse events.

The only justification offered by the FDA for why 7-OH needs to be classified as a Schedule One controlled substance is the assertion that it is “increasingly recognized as having potential for abuse.” 

Jeff Smith, national policy director at Holistic Alternative Recovery Trust, a kratom advocacy group, told The New York Times the FDA has no data to support taking emergency action on 7-OH.

“If 7-OH posed the kind of urgent danger that would justify emergency action, evidence would have been presented,” Smith said. “It was not.”

Kirsten Elin Smith, a Johns Hopkins University assistant professor who studies kratom, told The Times that she was initially very concerned about 7-OH when it began showing up in kratom products. She has since changed her perspective. 

“If you had asked me a year ago, I would have said this is evil,” Smith said. “At this point I’m a little more equivocal."

The announcement from the FDA is only the first step in what can be a long process for classifying a substance under the Controlled Substances Act. The move requires the Drug Enforcement Administration to publish a notice in the Federal Register, present its evidence, and then allow for a public comment period.  

The DEA tried that with kratom in 2016, at the request of the FDA, but then backed down after a public outcry and opposition from Congress. A top federal health official later said the FDA's scheduling request was based on “embarrassingly poor evidence & data.”

A Pained Life: When Disaster Strikes

By Carol Levy

I am watching a TV show. A tornado hits the main character's house. Suddenly, her house and all her possessions are scattered everywhere, broken and crushed, her house virtually demolished.

I watch as she looks through the detritus, more and more frantic in an effort to find something – anything -- that wasn't broken or totally destroyed.

“How can you recover from something like that? She lost everything,” I thought to myself.

My eyes start to tear up, my stomach clutches. This feels familiar.

Then it hits meTrigeminal neuralgia did the same thing to me.

People often try to comfort disaster victims with heartfelt, but meaningless cliches: "You have your health" or "At least you're safe.”

The same words were said to me about my pain, even the line about still having my health. Well, yes, trigeminal neuralgia only caused severe pain to my face. The rest of me was physically whole. But was I healthy? No.

“There's always a chance they'll find something to help you,” was something else I heard -- even after 14 brain surgeries, including one that was 100% experimental. I have tried all there is to try. My neurosurgeon made that very clear to me.

This all started when I was 26, just beginning life. 

I wanted to be a singer.  The year before the pain began, I was in two musicals. It was in the lowest rung of professional theater, but it was what I wanted to do. The pay was less than what it cost me for the gas I used to get to the theater, but a paycheck is a paycheck.

With all my hopes and dreams of becoming a professional singer, and two whole shows on my resume, I packed my bags and moved to New York City, like so many other young people with the same dream.

For most of the first 6 months, I had a job as a receptionist. My boss promised me time off for auditions and classes. I was living my dream, holding the hope and fantasy of success in my hand.

Then, out of the blue, the pain started. Constant, spontaneous and triggered. Just a light touch from a wisp of hair could set it off. I didn’t know when the spontaneous pain would come, and had no control over the constant pain.

Soon, it affected my left eye. Any bright light or use of my eye caused breathtaking pain. The rest of me was fine, but I was now 100% disabled by pain.

It kept me virtually housebound, going out only for groceries, doctor's appointments, and the pharmacy. I stayed in as much as I could. Either the pain was so great I couldn't go out, or the fear of it being triggered kept me its prisoner.

Most of us are fine one minute, then wham, the pain strikes.

Our pain is like a tornado. For some, it comes on suddenly like a whirling dervish. For others, like the buildup to a tornado, it slowly gathers strength before demolishing who we were, what we had, and what we wanted to be. 

The pain took so much from me. The hopes and dreams I had before the pain were turned into rubble, yet I couldn’t let them go.

After a tornado the Red Cross comes in, neighbors and churches offer help.

But I find that isn't the case when it comes to chronic pain. Instead, people tend to look away or mouth platitudes, all while pretending our lives haven't been devastated.

I have had the pain for over 40 years. I still don't accept it. I keep looking for the life I expected to have.  It's never there.

Ultimately, the TV character finds one of her treasured belongings in the wreckage of her home.  She is ecstatic and relieved.  She suddenly sees the rest of the damage as merely a chore she has to deal with.

Maybe, just maybe, one day I can do the same.

Carol Jay Levy has lived with trigeminal neuralgia, a chronic facial pain disorder, for over 40 years. She is the author of “A Pained Life, A Chronic Pain Journey.”  Carol is the moderator of the Facebook support group “Women in Pain Awareness.” Her blog “The Pained Life” can be found here. 

Large Study Finds Medical Cannabis ‘Effective Treatment’ for Chronic Pain

By Pat Anson

Medical cannabis is an “effective treatment option” for chronic pain and significantly improves quality of life in long-term users, according to a large new study.

Researchers at George Mason University and the medical cannabis telehealth company Leafwell analyzed healthcare trends for over 5,200 chronic pain patients. Those who had used medical marijuana for at least one year reported fewer unhealthy days and significantly better quality of life. They also had slightly fewer emergency department and urgent care visits than non-users.

“The findings of this study suggest, in line with existing research, that medical cannabis is likely an effective treatment option for patients with chronic pain. Moreover, we found that, in addition to an increase in QoL (quality of life), medical cannabis exposure is associated with lower risk of urgent care and ED visits, when comparing patients who used medical cannabis for at least one year to cannabis-naïve patients,” researchers reported in the journal Pharmacy.

“This underscores the potential for not only QoL gains associated with medical cannabis use, but also positive downstream effects on the healthcare system resulting from treatment.”

The study did not distinguish between the types of medical cannabis consumed or what kind of chronic pain conditions that participants had. Most of the researchers work for Leafwell, which helps patients get medical marijuana cards in states where it is legal. The company does not manufacture or sell cannabis products.

Pain Relief #1 Reason for Use 

Pain relief is the most likely reason for people to use cannabis for medical reasons, followed by those seeking help with sleep, anxiety and stress, according to a new survey of over 4,000 cannabis users in California.

There were distinct differences between participants who used cannabis solely for medical reasons and those who used it for both medical and recreational purposes.

Medical users were more likely to be female, and to live in households with children. Their average age at first use was 34, compared to 23 among combined users, who were more likely to be male.

Medical users spent less money on cannabis, about $127 per month, compared to combined users ($186), and used it far less frequently (1-3 times a week vs. multiple times a day).

Medical users also had less desire to “feel the high” from cannabis (42% vs. 75%).

Medical/recreational users were more likely to smoke dried flower (65%), while medical users preferred edibles (48%), topical ointments (28%) and oils (18%).

“Cannabis use is growing with expanding legalization, necessitating more research to understand the ramifications of increased access, and better understand the factors influencing the choices and options available to users. Special attention should be given to medicinal users, who may represent a vulnerable group seeking symptom relief,” researchers at UC San Diego reported in the Journal of Cannabis Research.

While medical cannabis is gaining in acceptance, many healthcare providers still take a dim view of it. The American College of Physicians (ACP) recently released a cautious new guideline that recommends against the use of medical cannabis for most patients with chronic noncancer pain. Medical cannabis may produce small improvements in pain, function and disability, according to the ACP, but potential harms include addiction and cognitive issues, as well as cardiovascular, gastrointestinal and pulmonary problems.

Canada Facing Nationwide Shortages of Opioid Pain Medication

By Pat Anson

Pain patients in the United States have been dealing with persistent shortages of opioid pain medication for years. Now their counterparts in Canada face a similar issue.

Health Canada has issued a warning about nationwide shortages of oxycodone and acetaminophen combinations, along with medications that combine codeine with acetaminophen. Acetaminophen and oxycodone are sold under the brand names Percocet and Endocet, while acetaminophen-codeine combinations are often sold as Tylenol #3.

While the opioid shortages in the U.S. appear to be largely driven by a national opioid settlement that rations pain medication at the pharmacy level, the Canadian shortages are being blamed on manufacturing disruptions and increased demand.

“We recognize the importance of having acetaminophen with codeine or oxycodone products available for patients. Addressing this shortage is a top priority,” Health Canada said in a statement.

“We're communicating with health care providers, provincial and territorial governments, and distributors to coordinate the sharing of information about this shortage. We're also working with manufacturers and stakeholders to monitor the supply of acetaminophen with codeine or oxycodone and looking at options for increasing access to these products.”

The Canadian Pharmacists Association (CPA) expects the shortages to last a few more weeks, when a “significant resupply” is expected.

“The shortage is the result of manufacturing issues affecting one major supplier, which has increased pressure on other manufacturers. While the supply situation is expected to improve by mid-August, supply constraints are expected to continue until the end of September,” the CPA said in a statement.

A patient advocate says the opioid shortages don’t appear to be causing many problems for patients, at least not yet.

“As far as the shortages go, at least for those I was able to speak with, they are coping with it,” Barry Ulmer of the Chronic Pain Association of Canada told PNN.

“The real problem is the lack of actual doctors who will prescribe (opioids) and in doses needed. Even though Health Canada and the provincial regulators say opioids are O.K. to use, they still warn doctors about overprescribing and tapering is still a very real reality. Almost every doctor that I have known over the years have now retired or just plain quit because of this ongoing problem.”

Smaller Doses and Tapering Recommended

Until the shortages ease, the CPA is advising pharmacists to suggest non-opioid pain relievers for patients suffering from acute short-term pain, such as headaches and muscle strains.

For long-term pain patients already using oxycodone and codeine combinations, the CPA recommends limiting doses to 90 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) a day. Switching to another opioid and/or tapering is another alternative.

“If the current dose is high, give 50% or less of the new opioid converted to morphine equivalents. Otherwise, start with 60–75% of the previous dose converted to morphine equivalents,” the CPA said.

In the United States, either scenario would be considered a rapid taper, which can raise the risk of an overdose or mental health crisis. The CDC recommends more cautious tapering of patients, with a dose reduction of just 10% a month.

The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) first reported U.S. shortages of oxycodone-acetaminophen combinations in the summer of 2023. Not much has changed in the last two years.

In its June report, the ASHP said several drug manufacturers have oxycodone-acetaminophen combinations on back order, with no estimated resupply date. Only one drug maker, Major Pharmaceuticals, anticipates having new supplies in early August.

Some companies are phasing out the production of opioid medication. Endo Pharmaceutical stopped making Percocet in 2024, while Teva Pharmaceuticals discontinued production of immediate release oxycodone in 2023 and Transmucosal Immediate-Release Fentanyl Medicine (TIRF) in 2024. Opioid litigation has been very costly to Teva and other drug makers. In 2022, Teva paid $4.25 billion to settle thousands of opioid liability lawsuits.

Could a Stem Cell Arthritis Treatment for Dogs Work in Humans?

By Crystal Lindell

New research suggests that an experimental anti-cancer therapy can also relieve chronic osteoarthritis pain in dogs and may be useful as a pain treatment for humans.. 

The stem cell DNA therapy – called Elenagen – has shown promise in clinical studies as a treatment for cancer patients by reducing side-effects from chemotherapy. Because chronic nerve pain and inflammation often result from chemotherapy, researchers thought the anti-inflammatory effects of Elenagen might also reduce chronic pain.

In a pilot study, weekly intramuscular injections of Elenagen were given to 17 dogs suffering from severe osteoarthritis pain. After the injections, 90 percent of the dogs showed at least a one‑point drop in their pain severity scores and a two‑point drop in pain interference.

“These dog data suggest we can help the body to manufacture its own multi‑modal anti‑inflammatory—without opioids or steroids,” said Alexander Shneider, PhD, founder and CEO of CureLab Oncology, which is developing Elenagen. 

“The majority of older cats and dogs suffer from osteoarthritis and the chronic pain it causes. Indeed, my four-legged family member, Sparky, is one of them.”

Sparky wasn’t involved in this study, but the dogs that were showed a marked reduction in limping and increased activity and playfulness after just four injections. Before and after evidence of their improvement can be viewed here: 

Dogs were chosen because their size and frequent development of pain conditions such as osteoarthritis suggests that what works for them might also work for humans. 

In addition to its anti-inflammatory properties, Elenagen is said to be able to reprogram aged or dysfunctional mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) by “resetting” them – breaking the inflammation-pain cycle.

“The successful validation of this hypothesis may signal a potential, disease-modifying approach to treating chronic pain in both veterinary and human medicine,” CureLab said in a press release. 

No treatment‑related adverse events were observed in the dogs; their hematology and serum chemistry remained within normal limits. The actual structure of their joints also remained unchanged after the injections. 

The dogs’ functional improvement suggests that Elenagen targets pain biology directly, offering meaningful relief when other therapies fall short.

“These dog data suggest we can help the body to manufacture its own multi‑modal anti‑inflammatory-without opioids or steroids," said Shneider. 

Larger, placebo-controlled trials in both dogs and humans are planned for 2026. 

In clinical testing of Elenagen on human ovarian cancer patients, the drug slowed cancer progression and increased overall survival rates, with no harmful side effects. The company is also studying Elenagen as a treatment for cancer in cats and dogs.

The Underlying Causes of Chronic Pain Need Treatment, Not Just Symptoms

By Dr. Forest Tennant

In today’s healthcare system, a single disease or condition is usually given to a person as the cause of their severe chronic or intractable pain. These common labels include Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS), adhesive arachnoiditis, pudendal neuropathy, traumatic brain injury, small fiber neuropathy, and osteoarthritis.

The singular diagnosis is usually the more prominent cause of pain – and is often required for record keeping, insurance coverage, justification for medicinals, and for diagnostic testing.

An emerging fact, however, is that the person who has severe chronic pain and requires daily symptomatic relief almost always has pain in more than one body system or anatomic site. For example, in a recent study we found that persons with adhesive arachnoiditis have an average of three to four other painful conditions. This reality is best called by an older medical term: “multi-system disease.”

A multi-system disease is one that has a single cause that affects multiple body systems. Historically, an infectious bacteria or virus has been the cause of multi-system disease. The best known are syphilis and tuberculosis. The former originates in sex organs and the latter in the lung, but both infections can travel through the blood, infecting and forming disease in multiple body systems, such as the brain, spinal cord, and adrenal gland.

In the late 20th century, diabetes and autoimmune diseases such as systemic lupus became known as causes that may affect multiple body systems. In this century, it has been discovered that genetic connective tissue diseases such as Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Lyme disease, and the Epstein-Barr virus may affect multiple body systems and produce chronic pain.

Some patients develop severe chronic pain as a result of trauma or injury to a single body system, such as the brain, spine, joints and nerves. The pain may initially remain localized to that one body system. The majority of persons in pain treatment, however, subsequently develop pain in other anatomic locations or body systems.

The genetic, infectious, and autoimmune causes of multi-system disease appear to all be progressive, with a proclivity to affect, over time, additional tissues and systems. Our view is that the progressive nature of multi-system disease may not just cause intractable and disabling pain, but may also lead to the impairment of physical and mental functions that severely incapacitate an individual. Suicide or a shortened lifespan may be involved in severe cases.

Modern day pain treatment is fundamentally about symptomatic relief.  This includes opioids, neuropathic agents, anti-inflammatory drugs, and electromedical measures. It’s time that we recognize that the underlying causes of chronic pain should also be treated, and not just the symptoms. This is a clarion call to recognize multi-system diseases, determine their underlying cause, and simultaneously treat them and the pain that they cause.

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. Readers interested in learning more about his research should visit the Tennant Foundation’s website, Arachnoiditis Hope. You can subscribe to its research bulletins here.  

The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.    

On August 16, Dr. Tennant is hosting a free seminar in Westminster, Colorado on the latest research and treatments for adhesive arachnoiditis. Visit the conference website or click on the banner below for more information. All attendees are encouraged to register by August 1.

Continued Blaming of Purdue Pharma Won’t Solve the Opioid Crisis

By Lynn R. Webster, MD

On July 15, The Washington Post published an editorial urging states to use opioid settlement funds to expand naloxone access and addiction treatment programs.

These are sound public health goals. But the editorial’s framing — tying these investments to reparations for damage attributed to Purdue Pharma — rests on an oversimplified and misleading narrative that has shaped policy and public opinion for over a decade.

Purdue Pharma aggressively market OxyContin and contributed to early overprescribing. However, it was never the dominant supplier of prescription opioids. Analyses of pill counts, morphine milligram equivalents, and regional variation show that Purdue’s market share was often far less than one-third. While its actions were consequential, the disproportionate focus on Purdue distracts from the broader, ongoing drivers of the crisis.

Addiction is not caused by the availability of opioids alone, but also by the conditions that make people vulnerable: poverty, trauma, housing instability, and untreated mental illness. By fixating on corporate actors, we risk mistaking the spark for the fire — and neglecting the deeper issues that sustain the epidemic.

The editorial also perpetuates confusion between physical dependence and addiction. The former is a predictable response to long-term opioid use; the latter involves compulsive behavior and impairment. Blurring the two has led to harmful policies, including forced opioid tapers and abandonment of stable pain patients.

These policies have not reduced deaths. As prescription opioids became harder to obtain — often due to regulatory pressure — some patients turned to illicit alternatives; not to get high, but to avoid withdrawal or manage pain. This shift laid the groundwork for the explosion of heroin and illicit fentanyl use. Today, illicit synthetic opioids are involved in more than 70% of overdose deaths.

Framing settlement spending as payback reinforces a punitive narrative rather than advancing evidence-based solutions. Naloxone, youth prevention, and addiction treatment should be pursued because they work — not because they symbolize restitution.

The real challenge lies in addressing the conditions that lead to substance use in the first place. Reforming housing policy, expanding mental health care, and ensuring access to meaningful employment are more difficult— but are far more essential — than litigating against a defunct company.

We should also be asking why the healthcare system permitted aggressive opioid marketing, why insurers incentivized pill volume over outcomes, and why evidence-based addiction care and harm reduction remain chronically underfunded.

Managing the crisis requires more than blame. It requires accurate explanations, structural change, and sustained investment in public health — rather than narratives that feel satisfying but obscure the truth.

Lynn R. Webster, MD, is a pain and addiction medicine specialist, and serves as Executive Vice President of scientific affairs at Dr. Vince Clinical Research, where he consults with pharmaceutical companies.

Dr. Webster is the author of the forthcoming book, “Deconstructing Toxic Narratives – Data, Disparities, and a New Path Forward in the Opioid Crisis,” to be published by Springer Nature.

A Cautionary Tale: Why Lived Experience with Chronic Pain Matters

By Neen Monty,

I went undiagnosed with a serious, painful, progressive and incurable neurological disease for over a decade, because nearly every healthcare professional I saw assumed I was a hysterical woman with a low pain tolerance.

I am not that stereotype. I am the opposite.

Because doctors, GPs, neurologists, rheumatologists, nurses and physical therapists dismissed me and refused to do proper diagnostic tests, I now live with permanent disability and unrelenting, severe pain.

Had I been diagnosed by the first neurologist, the second, or even the third, I would have had a good chance at remission. At not being disabled. At not being in pain for every second of the rest of my life.

Early treatment leads to better outcomes in most diseases. Mine included.

It was assumed that the pain I was describing was from my rheumatoid arthritis. But, because my bloodwork showed no inflammation, it was assumed that I just had a low pain tolerance. And that I was a bit hysterical. A bit of a malingerer. A bit of a pussy.

Never assume.

Never once did they consider I was telling the truth about the severe neuropathic pain I was experiencing.

I was fobbed off by every doctor. I was told I had everything from plain old run of the mill anxiety to a functional neurological disorder. I was referred to a psychologist, who I did consult. But my mental health has no bearing on my pain.

These diagnoses were wrong. Dead wrong. And very harmful.

They made assumptions based on a stereotype I do not fit. They made snap judgments. They failed to do their jobs.

And the price was my life. The quality of my life.

Doctors talk about the fear of making a mistake that kills someone. But they never seem to consider the damage when they condemn you to a life of unrelieved, preventable suffering. They never consider their bias, their laziness, their ignorance, might steal someone’s future. Condemn someone to a lifetime of disability and pain.

Never. Even. Considered it.

But that’s what happened to me.

I am not posting this because I am bitter. I do not dwell on this. I get on with my life, I make the best of what I have.

But my story is important.

It is a very important cautionary tale that more doctors, therapists and health care professionals need to consider: Your mistakes can ruin lives. If you misjudge someone, if you get it wrong, you might be destroying someone’s future. If you write on their file that they are hysterical or a hypochondriac or an addict, every future healthcare professional’s diagnosis will be coloured by your mistake and your misjudgment. You are condemning the patient, and you are preventing them from receiving the care they need.

My lived experience is a warning.

Read my story and ask yourself, honestly, would you have made that diagnosis? Would you have missed that diagnosis? Do you listen to your patients? When treatment fails, do you go back to first principles, start from scratch, and look for an alternate diagnosis? Or do you decide the patient is lazy, non-compliant, hysterical, or lying?

Do you blame the patient? Reflect on that honestly. Ask yourself honestly.

This is why lived experience matters. Why it is essential in patient advocacy. And why so many advocacy organizations are failing. They don’t understand the problems that those of us who live with severe pain face. They speak about us, but not for us.

So please. Read. Reflect. Ask the hard questions. Because it’s not just about life or death.

It’s about the life someone has to live after you get it wrong.

I could have had a normal life.

I didn’t have to be this disabled.

I didn’t have to be in this much pain.

But by the time anyone took me seriously, my disease was long-standing. Entrenched. Irreversible.

Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP) is rare, but it is very real. The pain is constant. Every second of my life, I have pain.

And the kicker? No doctor wants to treat it.

No one believes it can be that bad. Not friends. Not family. Not doctors.

Every doctor I saw may not have known exactly which neurological disease was causing my symptoms, but they should have known it was a neurological disease they were looking at. They should have recognized the red flags. They should have followed up.

Instead, they saw hysteria. They saw hypochondria. They saw a woman who was “overreacting.” A woman with “health anxiety.”

CIDP is a horrific disease. It has stolen my life. And it didn’t have to. I am 54 years old. I have been in pain for almost 20 years now. I live with significant disability. It did not have to be this way.

Again, this is not about blame. I am not bitter.

But I ask you to read and reflect. Ask yourself, honestly. Would you have made that diagnosis? Would you?

Neen Monty is a patient advocate in Australia who lives with rheumatoid arthritis and Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP), a progressive neurological disease that attacks the nerves.

Neen is dedicated to challenging misinformation and promoting access to safe, effective pain relief. She has created a website for Pain Patient Advocacy Australia to show that prescription opioids can be safe and effective, even when taken long term. You can subscribe to Neen’s free newsletter on Substack, “Arthritic Chick on Chronic Pain.”

How Federal Budget Cuts May Impact Chronic Pain Care

By Mara Baer,

President Trump recently signed a sweeping budget reconciliation bill – known as the One Big Beautiful Bill -- that makes significant cuts to Medicaid of nearly $1 trillion. The legislation will fundamentally change the way Medicaid is administered by states and reduce health care coverage for millions over time.

The Republican-led effort was positioned to reform and right-size the Medicaid program, which over 70 million Americans rely on for healthcare coverage. But the reality is that for many people, including those living with chronic pain, significant losses of access to care and coverage will result. The new law’s provisions will:

  1. Establish new work requirements for Medicaid eligibility for people aged 19-64

  2. Reduce provider fees and related federal funding, further reducing state Medicaid revenues

  3. Mandate more frequent Medicaid eligibility determinations

  4. Disallow access to Affordable Care Act tax credits for those failing to meet the new work requirements.

While some of the law’s provisions do not take effect until 2026 or later, states must act now to implement complex and costly requirements. Many have already begun the process. For example, in my home state of Colorado, a special legislative session is being considered to try and tackle some of the financial impacts.

Some of the key direct impacts on people with Medicaid who live with chronic pain include:

  • Coverage losses. Work requirements for Medicaid beneficiaries to attest they are working at least 80 hours a month or get a work exemption. High impact chronic pain, which significantly interferes with daily life activity,  already prevents as many as 21 million Americans from working. Their ability to meet the new work requirements will be left to individual states, with some states having more onerous standards than others.

  • Widening disparities. Data shows that chronic pain patients on Medicaid have worse pain severity and mental and physical functioning than non-Medicaid beneficiaries. As individuals lose their coverage or have reduced access to pain care, the disparity between these groups will widen. 

  • Reduced access to multi-modal care. Research has found that there are disparities in coverage of chronic pain treatments by Medicaid and commercial insurance, with insurers providing more “restorative” therapies, such as physical therapy and chiropractic care. With state budget cuts, states will have to become even leaner in benefit structures and access, leading to possible reductions in comprehensive pain care, further widening the gap in insurance coverage.

  • Fewer mental health services. Medicaid is the largest payer for mental health services. Because chronic pain and mental health are so intertwined, pain patients losing Medicaid coverage or experiencing service reductions for mental health face potentially significant impacts. This may include increased need for crisis services and more emergency department services.

With states now having to figure out how to implement these changes, some will have to make hard choices. Will new limits on benefits be required? Will they need to expand the use of prior authorization to help manage costs? Reduce benefits to the adult population? Cut new and innovative health services?

It is hard to know, but any of these issues can hit chronic pain patients particularly hard. Staying up-to-date on what is happening in your state will be important.

In addition to these issues, Affordable Care Act subsidies that help people buy coverage are set to expire at the end of the year. Many anticipate that Republicans in Congress will allow this expiration to happen. Combined with the expected coverage losses from the budget reconciliation bill, the number of uninsured Americans is expected to increase by 17 million.

If we do some basic math, applying the statistic that 1 in 4 Americans live with chronic pain, that’s over 4 million people in chronic pain losing coverage. From my point of view, even one is too many.

Mara Baer has lived with Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome for over 10 years. She is a writer, speaker, and health policy consultant offering services through her women-owned small business, AgoHealth. Mara is a member of the National Pain Advocacy Center’s Science and Policy Council and writes a newsletter on Substack called Chronic Pain Chats.