高清福利片

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World-first opioid trial on acute spinal pain

21 March 2019
Providing evidence on back pain relief and opioids once and for all

Addressing a global epidemic in the prescription of opioids for back pain, the OPAL trial, led by Associate Professor Christine Lin, Sydney School of Public Health, is the first clinical trial that will provide evidence for the effect opioids have on pain relief in acute spinal pain patients.

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More than 80% of the population are plagued by back pain and according to the 2018 Lancet series, the majority of patients are receiving the wrong care 鈥 particularly the inappropriate over-prescription of opioids.

While we have good evidence on harms with opioid analgesics such as addiction, overdose, and death; we have no evidence on whether opioids are effective for a new episode of spinal pain
Professor Chris Maher

鈥淭he OPAL trial is a direct response to one of the main findings from : while we have good evidence on harms with opioid analgesics such as addiction, overdose, and death; we have no evidence on whether opioids are effective for a new episode of spinal pain.

"Given this background, OPAL is one of the most important trials in this field and the results are eagerly awaited by the back pain community,鈥 says听, co-author of The Lancet series on back pain and OPAL trial Chief Investigator.

The OPAL trial looks to address this by providing practioners with evidence on the benefits and harms of opioids in patients with acute spinal pain. It differs from studies that 鈥渃ompare opioids against other pain medicines, which can tell you which medicine is superior but does not tell you whether the medicine should be used at all in the first place if there is no placebo-controlled evidence to support that,鈥 according to , Lead Investigator of OPAL.

The trial, currently in participant recruitment phase, is a collaboration between the University of Sydney, UNSW and Erasmus University Medical Center (Netherlands).

The double-blind study is conducted by randomly allocating opioid medicine or placebo to participants for up to 6 weeks. Their pain level and other clinical outcomes will be assessed at regular intervals. Side effects and long term effects will also be assessed.听

Interestingly, the OPAL trial made a recent discovery - although opioids are being heavily prescribed, some general practitioners (GPs) avoid prescribing opioids as a blanket rule. 鈥淭his is not an ideal situation because there may be people for whom pain relief from opioids is justified and their right to pain relief is being denied,鈥澨鼳ssociate Professor Lin听explains.鈥

We will provide a definitive answer and rigorous evidence to inform patients whether opioids are beneficial.
Associate Professor Christine Lin

鈥淲hat the OPAL study will do is provide quality evidence to help doctors decide whether opioids should be used in acute spinal pain. We will provide a definitive answer and rigorous evidence to inform patients whether opioids are beneficial if they experience a new episode of spinal pain.鈥

Translating OPAL into practice

  • Associate Professor Christine Lin听is currently conducting a systematic review of the international opioid deprescribing guidelines with Professor Fiona Blyth (USYD), Dr Danijela Gnjidic (USYD), Professor听Jane Ballantyne (University of Washington), Professor听Rick Deyo (Oregon Health & Science University) and Professor Michael von Korff (Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute)
  • In addition to the OPAL trial, Associate Professor Lin听is also working with听Dr Carl Schneider and Dr Danijela Gnjidic from Sydney Pharmacy School听to create a guideline for clinicians on reducing the use of opioids

Lead investigator

Associate Professor Christine Lin
Associate Professor Christine Lin

Chief investigator

Professor Chris Maher
Professor Chris Maher