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Guideline: Prioritize nondrug therapies for low back pain

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Guidelines are just the start

Despite the considerable effort invested in these systematic reviews and in providing clinicians with rational recommendations for care, doubts exist as to whether simply publishing this work will be sufficient to drive guideline-concordant care.

Systematic reviews and recommendations from governmental organizations and professional societies are not new and predate large increases in diagnostic and therapeutic services.

For example, the lack of evidence supporting opiates for low back pain did not prevent their dramatic increase in use. Moreover, these updated reviews and recommendations do not focus on diagnostic tests, such as magnetic resonance imaging, and invasive therapies, such as injections and surgery, which are major drivers of health care spending for low back pain.

If clinicians and their professional societies cannot demonstrate that their recommendations are improving the delivery of high-value services, what are the alternatives?

Likely what is needed is an “all of the above” approach: more pragmatic trials to evaluate proven therapies and their combinations in real-world settings; efforts to reduce the use of low-value services, such as payer coverage policies based on guideline recommendations; patient engagement through shared decision making; and pressure on insurers to cover nonpharmacologic, noninvasive therapies that have shown benefit.

Steven J. Atlas, MD, MPH, is at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He disclosed royalties from UpToDate and personal fees from Healthwise. These comments are from his editorial (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Feb 14. doi: 10.7326/M17-0923).


 

FROM ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE

Clinicians and patients should prioritize nonpharmacologic therapies for low back pain of any duration, according to an updated guideline from the American College of Physicians.

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Low back pain cost the United States $100 billion in 2006 alone, according to the guideline authors. To update the therapeutic recommendations of the 2007 version of this guideline, they searched Ovid MEDLINE, reference lists, and the Cochrane databases of controlled trials and systematic reviews. Nonpharmacologic trials ranged from two studies of tai chi to 121 studies of exercise, the reviewers noted in a separate publication (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Feb 14. doi: 10.7326/M16-2459). Studies of pharmacologic therapies ranged from 9 trials of benzodiazepines to 70 trials of NSAIDs (Ann Intern Med. 2017 Feb 14. doi:10.7326/M16-2458).

The updated therapeutic recommendations focus on clinical presentations. They define acute low back pain as lasting less than 4 weeks, subacute low back pain as lasting 4-12 weeks, and chronic low back pain as lasting more than 12 weeks. For acute and subacute low back pain, low to moderate quality evidence supports the efficacy of acupuncture, massage, spinal manipulation, superficial heat, lumbar supports, and low-level laser therapy, the guideline authors conclude.

They recommend considering nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs or skeletal muscle relaxants for patients who want medications for acute or subacute low back pain. There is moderate-quality evidence that NSAIDs confer a small analgesic benefit, compared with placebo, but their renal and gastrointestinal risks call for careful patient selection and use of the lowest possible doses and treatment durations, the authors emphasized.

Likewise, moderate-quality evidence supports the use of skeletal muscle relaxants for short-term pain relief, but patients should know that these drugs can lead to sedation and other adverse effects on the central nervous system, they stated.

Acetaminophen is no longer recommended for low back pain, having failed to shorten time to recovery, compared with placebo, in a large, multicenter, randomized trial (Lancet. 2014 Nov 1;384[9954]:1586-96).

Likewise, short-term oral or intramuscular corticosteroids have been found ineffective for acute low back pain, while benzodiazepines are ineffective for radiculopathy, the experts noted.

“Evidence was insufficient to determine effectiveness of antidepressants, benzodiazepines, antiseizure medications, or opioids, versus placebo, in patients with acute or subacute low back pain,” they added.

The guideline authors also noted insufficient evidence for many nondrug therapies for acute and subacute low back pain, including transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation, electrical muscle stimulation, inferential therapy, short-wave diathermy, traction, superficial cold, motor control exercise, Pilates, tai chi, yoga, psychological therapies, multidisciplinary rehabilitation, ultrasound, and taping.

For chronic low back pain, the guideline strongly recommends starting with nondrug therapies, including exercise, multidisciplinary rehabilitation, acupuncture, mindfulness-based stress reduction, tai chi, yoga, motor control exercise, progressive relaxation, electromyography biofeedback, low-level laser therapy, operant therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, or spinal manipulation.

Despite low-quality evidence for these modalities, “fewer harms are associated with these types of therapies than with pharmacologic options,” the authors wrote.

If nonpharmacologic interventions fail to improve chronic low back pain, the experts recommended NSAIDs in the first line, followed by second-line therapy with tramadol or duloxetine (Cymbalta). Recent evidence suggests that NSAIDs are less effective for low back pain than previously thought, while the trials that reported a modest analgesic benefit of duloxetine over placebo were industry funded, the authors note.

Opioids should only be considered for chronic low back pain that fails both nondrug and nonopioid therapies, “and only if the potential benefits outweigh the risks for individual patients, and after a discussion of known risks and realistic benefits,” the guideline authors emphasized.

This update does not cover topical therapies or epidural injections. Epidural steroid injections decreased pain associated with radiculopathy in the short term but did not confer long-term benefits, according to a recent separate review (Ann Intern Med. 2015 Sep 1;163[5]:373-81).

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality funded the work. One coauthor disclosed personal fees from Takeda Pharmaceuticals outside the submitted work, and membership in the American College of Physicians Clinical Guidelines Committee and the American College of Rheumatology Quality of Care Committee. The other authors had no conflicts. Two members of the ACP Clinical Guidelines Committee disclosed ties to Healthwise and UpToDate outside the submitted work.

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