2016
DOI: 10.1002/phar.1711
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Novel Oral Therapies for Opioid‐induced Bowel Dysfunction in Patients with Chronic Noncancer Pain

Abstract: Opioid analgesics are frequently prescribed and play an important role in chronic pain management. Opioid-induced bowel dysfunction, which includes constipation, hardened stool, incomplete evacuation, gas, and nausea and vomiting, is the most common adverse event associated with opioid use. Mu-opioid receptors are specifically responsible for opioid-induced bowel dysfunction, resulting in reduced peristaltic and secretory actions. Agents that reverse these actions in the bowel without reversing pain control in… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Significant advances have been made in the area of opioid-induced bowel dysfunction in recent years, including development of new therapies and better understanding of underlying mechanisms and differences between the various constellations of symptoms related to the intake of opioids [2729]. Even though traditionally not consistent with the definition of a functional GI disorder (“underlying cause not known / well defined”), it was decided to include OIC among the functional bowel disorders in Rome IV, based on the frequent overlap and shared underlying mechanisms.…”
Section: Opioid-induced Constipationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant advances have been made in the area of opioid-induced bowel dysfunction in recent years, including development of new therapies and better understanding of underlying mechanisms and differences between the various constellations of symptoms related to the intake of opioids [2729]. Even though traditionally not consistent with the definition of a functional GI disorder (“underlying cause not known / well defined”), it was decided to include OIC among the functional bowel disorders in Rome IV, based on the frequent overlap and shared underlying mechanisms.…”
Section: Opioid-induced Constipationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Solo una proporción de pacientes con EIO no respondieron a la administración de PAMORA en los diferentes estudios y precisaron laxantes de rescate; lo anterior sugiere que los mecanismos fisiopatológicos del estreñimiento, aun en presencia de opioides, son más complejos y que otras causas (como los fármacos con acción anticolinérgica (13) o disfunción intestinal relacionada con el uso de quimioterápicos (65)) deben ser tenidas en cuenta. Por lo tanto, aunque los PAMO-RA constituyen un abordaje etiopatogénico del EIO, ello no obvia el uso de laxantes y pone en cuestión si laxantes y PAMORA deben usarse de forma concomitante, o si bien los PAMORA se deben usar como rescate en pacientes que no responden a los laxantes (66). El uso de laxantes se ha propuesto como primera línea en el estreñimiento en pacientes con enfermedades avanzadas (6), limitando el uso de PAMORA en los casos refractarios; por otra parte se ha recomendado el uso de PAMORA en aquellos pacientes con un Bowel Functional Index (BFI) ≥ 30 (67).…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…All serious adverse events were unrelated to treatment and therefore did not raise any serious safety concerns 35. Long-term safety information on the label for lubiprostone has remained the same since its approval in 2008, suggesting consistent safety data since product approval 70…”
Section: Safety Of Approved Prescription Oic Treatmentsmentioning
confidence: 93%