Benefits, Harms, and Stakeholder Perspectives Regarding Opioid Therapy for Pain in Individuals With Metastatic Cancer: Protocol for a Descriptive Cohort Study
Katie Fitzgerald Jones, Gretchen White, Antonia Bennett, Hailey Bulls, Paula Escott, Sarah Orris, Elizabeth Escott, Stacy Fischer, Megan Hamm, Tamar Krishnamurti, Risa Wong, Thomas W LeBlanc, Jane Liebschutz, Salimah Meghani, Cardinale Smith, Jennifer Temel, Christine Ritchie

TL;DR
This study aims to understand the benefits and harms of opioid therapy for pain in patients with advanced cancer and how stakeholders make opioid-related decisions.
Contribution
The study introduces a new protocol to prospectively examine opioid use and decision-making in metastatic cancer patients.
Findings
The study will enroll 630 patients and 40 care partners and clinicians to examine opioid therapy over two years.
Qualitative interviews will capture lived experiences of opioid use in advanced cancer patients.
The research will inform future interventions for opioid-related decision-making in cancer care.
Abstract
Opioids are a key component of pain management among patients with metastatic cancer pain. However, the evidence base available to guide opioid-related decision-making in individuals with advanced cancer is limited. Patients with advanced cancer or cancer that is unlikely to be cured frequently experience pain. Opioids are a key component of pain management among patients with metastatic cancer pain. Many individuals with advanced cancer are now living long enough to experience opioid-related harm. Emerging evidence from chronic noncancer pain literature suggests that longer-term opioid therapy may have limited benefits for pain and function, and opioid-related harms are also a major concern. However, whether these benefits and harms of opioids apply to patients with cancer-related pain is unknown. This manuscript outlines the protocol for the “Opioid Therapy for Pain in Individuals…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPain Management and Opioid Use · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment · Pharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies
