Real-world usage pattern, effectiveness and safety of oral tramadol/dexketoprofen trometamol fixed-dose combination in moderate-to-severe acute pain in Asia: a prospective, multicentre, observational study

ObjectivesThis study aims to determine the usage pattern, effectiveness and safety of oral tramadol 75 mg and dexketoprofen trometamol 25 mg fixed-dose combination (TRAM/DKP FDC) in the short-term treatment of moderate-to-severe acute pain in real-world clinical practice in Asia.DesignReal-world, pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open 2024-10, Vol.14 (10), p.e090926
Hauptverfasser: Ho, Kok Yuen, Gyanwali, Bibek, Dimayuga, Cesar, Eufemio, Edgar Michael, Bernardo, Edwin, Raju, Gopinathan, Chong, Keen Wai, Waithayayothin, Kritsadakorn, Ona, Leonardo, Castro, Marc Anthony L, Sawaddiruk, Passakorn, Salvador, Roehl C, Roohi, Sharifah Ahmad, Tangwiwat, Suwimon, Wilairatana, Vajara, Oon, Zhi Hao, Gupta, Ankur, Nagrale, Dinesh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectivesThis study aims to determine the usage pattern, effectiveness and safety of oral tramadol 75 mg and dexketoprofen trometamol 25 mg fixed-dose combination (TRAM/DKP FDC) in the short-term treatment of moderate-to-severe acute pain in real-world clinical practice in Asia.DesignReal-world, prospective, multicentre, observational, phase IV study.Setting13 tertiary-care hospital sites across the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore.ParticipantsAdult patients aged 18–80 years prescribed TRAM/DKP FDC for the short-term (up to 5 days) treatment of moderate-to-severe acute pain.Main outcome measuresPrimary endpoints were the proportion of patients prescribed TRAM/DKP FDC with different types of postsurgical and non-surgical treatments, and the average dosing frequency and duration of TRAM/DKP FDC treatment. Secondary endpoints were the proportion of patients achieving ≥30% pain reduction at 8 hours post the first dose (pain severity was assessed using the 11-point Numeric Pain Rating Scale); patient satisfaction at the end of treatment (based on a 5-point Patient Global Evaluation Scale (PGE)) and safety including the incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs).ResultsAmong 599 patients (median age 44 years, 61.3% female) enrolled in this study, 68.61% (n=411) were postsurgical and 31.39% (n=188) were non-surgical patients. TRAM/DKP FDC was prescribed in a diverse group of postsurgical patients (eg, orthopaedic, general and cancer surgery) as well as in non-surgical conditions (eg, lower back pain and musculoskeletal pain). In the majority of patients, TRAM/DKP FDC was prescribed every 8 hours (65.94%) and for 5 days (78.80%). There was a significant reduction in pain intensity throughout the study and 65% of patients achieved ≥30% pain reduction from baseline at 8 hours post the first dose of TRAM/DKP FDC on day 1. 95.69% of patients were satisfied with the treatment (rated good, very good and excellent on the PGE scale). Overall, 13.9% of patients reported ADRs; most were mild to moderate in severity. The most common ADRs were nausea, vomiting and dizziness.ConclusionThis study showed that TRAM/DKP FDC was used in diverse types of postsurgical and non-surgical patients in the real-world setting in Asia. It effectively reduced pain and was well tolerated with a high level of patient satisfaction.
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-090926