3.3.2.0 Neu­ropathic Pain

Neu­ropathic pain can be se­vere and can im­pact qual­i­ty of life, limit mo­bil­i­ty, and con­tribute to de­pres­sion and so­cial dysfunc­tion (118). No com­pelling ev­i­dence ex­ists in sup­port of glycemic con­trol or lifestyle man­age­ment as ther­a­pies for neu­ro­path­ic pain in di­a­betes or predi­a­betes, which leaves only phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal in­ter­ven­tions (119).

Pre­ga­balin and du­lox­e­tine have re­ceived reg­u­la­to­ry ap­proval by the FDA, Health Cana­da, and the Eu­ro­pean Medicines Agen­cy for the treat­ment of neu­ro­path­ic pain in di­a­betes. The opi­oid tapen­ta­dol has reg­u­la­to­ry ap­proval in the U.S. and Cana­da, but the ev­i­dence of its use is weak­er (120). Com­par­a­tive ef­fectiveness stud­ies and tri­als that in­clude qual­i­ty-‍of-‍life out­comes are rare, so treat­ment de­ci­sions must con­sid­er each pa­tient’s pre­sentation and co­mor­bidities and often fol­low a trial-‍and-‍error ap­proach. Given the range of par­tial­ly ef­fective treat­ment op­tions, a tai­lored and step­wise phar­ma­co­log­ic strat­e­gy with care­ful at­ten­tion to rel­a­tive symp­tom im­provement, med­i­ca­tion ad­her­ence, and med­i­ca­tion side ef­fects is rec­om­mend­ed to achieve pain re­duc­tion and im­prove qual­i­ty of life (121-123).

Pre­ga­balin, a cal­ci­um chan­nel α2-δsub­unit lig­and, is the most ex­ten­sive­ly stud­ied drug for DPN. The ma­jor­i­ty of stud­ies test­ing pre­ga­balin have re­port­ed fa­vor­able ef­fects on the propor­tion of par­tic­i­pants with at least 30–50% im­provement in pain (120,122,124–127). How­ev­er, not all tri­als with pre­ga­balin have been pos­i­tive (120,122,128,129), espe­cially when treat­ing pa­tients with ad­vanced re­frac­to­ry DPN (126). Ad­verse ef­fects may be more se­vere in older pa­tients (130) and may be at­ten­u­at­ed by lower start­ing doses and more grad­u­al titra­tion. The re­lat­ed drug, gabapentin, has also shown efficacy for pain con­trol in di­a­bet­ic neu­ropa­thy and may be less ex­pen­sive, al­though it is not FDA ap­proved for this in­di­ca­tion (131).

Du­lox­e­tine is a se­lec­tive nore­pinephrine and sero­tonin re­up­take in­hibitor. Doses of 60 and 120 mg/‍day showed efficacy in the treat­ment of pain as­so­ci­at­ed with DPN in multicen­ter ran­domized tri­als, al­though some of these had high drop-‍out rates (120,122,127,129). Du­lox­e­tine also ap­peared to im­prove neu­ropa­thy-‍re­lat­ed qual­i­ty of life (132). In longer-‍term stud­ies, a small in­crease in A1C was re­port­ed in peo­ple with di­a­betes treat­ed with du­lox­e­tine com­pared with place­bo (133). Ad­verse events may be more se­vere in older peo­ple but may be at­ten­u­at­ed with lower doses and slow­er titra­tions of du­lox­e­tine.

Tapen­ta­dol is a cen­tral­ly act­ing opi­oid anal­gesic that ex­erts its anal­gesic ef­fects through both μ-‍opi­oid re­cep­tor ag­o­nism and no­ra­drenaline re­up­take in­hi­bi­tion. Extend­ed-re­lease tapen­ta­dol was ap­proved by the FDA for the treat­ment of neu­ro­path­ic pain as­so­ci­at­ed with di­a­betes based on data from two multicen­ter clin­i­cal tri­als in which par­tic­i­pants titrat­ed to an op­ti­mal dose of tapen­ta­dol were ran­domly as­signed to con­tin­ue that dose or switch to place­bo (134,135). How­ev­er, both used a de­sign en­riched for pa­tients who re­spond­ed to tapen­ta­dol and there­fore their re­sults are not gen­er­alizable. A re­cent sys­tematic re­view and meta-‍anal­y­sis by the Spe­cial In­ter­est Group on Neu­ropathic Pain of the In­ter­na­tion­al As­so­ci­a­tion for the Study of Pain found the ev­i­dence sup­port­ing the ef­fectiveness of tapen­ta­dol in re­duc­ing neu­ro­path­ic pain to be in­con­clu­sive (120). There­fore, given the high risk for ad­dic­tion and safe­ty con­cerns com­pared with the rel­a­tive­ly mod­est pain re­duc­tion, the use of extende-‍re­lease tapen­ta­dol is not gen­er­ally rec­om­mend­ed as a first- or sec­ond-‍line ther­a­py. The use of any opi­oids for man­age­ment of chron­ic neu­ro­path­ic pain car­ries the risk of ad­dic­tion and should be avoid­ed.

Tri­cyclic an­tide­pres­sants, ven­lafax­ine, car­ba­mazepine, and top­i­cal cap­saicin, al­though not ap­proved for the treat­ment of painful DPN, may be ef­fective and con­sid­ered for the treat­ment of painful DPN (107,120,122).