Journal of Pain Research (May 2019)
Tapentadol for neuropathic pain: a review of clinical studies
Abstract
Ulderico Freo,1 Patrizia Romualdi,2 Hans G Kress31Anesthesiology and Intensive Medicine, Department of Medicine DIMED, University of Padua, 35100 Padua, Italy; 2Department of Pharmacy and Biotechnology, Alma Mater Studiorum-University of Bologna, 40126, Bologna, Italy; 3Department of Special Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, Medical University/AKH of Vienna, Vienna, AustriaAbstract: Neuropathic pain (NP) is an enormous burden for patients, caregivers and society. NP is a pain state that may develop after injury of the peripheral or central nervous system because of a wide range of diseases and traumas. A NP symptom component can be found also in several types of chronic pain. Many NP patients are substantially disabled for years. Due to its chronicity, severity and unpredictability, NP is difficult to treat. Tapentadol is a central-acting oral analgesic with combined opioid and noradrenergic properties, which make it potentially suitable for a wide range of pain conditions, particularly whenever a NP component is present or cannot be excluded. In randomized controlled trials, tapentadol has proved to be effective in relieving NP in diabetic peripheral neuropathy and in chronic low back pain. In observational studies, tapentadol reduced NP in chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathies, blood and solid cancers, and the NP component in neck pain and Parkinson’s disease. This narrative review aims to provide clinicians with a broad overview of tapentadol effects on NP.Keywords: neuropathic pain, tapentadol, pain therapy