Cancer Pain Information
Introduction • Management
with drugs • Interventions •
Pain Management Exercises • Anticancer Interventions
• Treating Older Patients •
Resources
Treating Older Patients
Older patients are at risk for under-treatment of pain because their sensitivity
to pain may be underestimated, they may be expected to tolerate pain well, and misconceptions
may exist about their ability to benefit from opioids. Issues in assessing and treating
cancer pain in older patients include the following:
- Multiple chronic diseases and sources of pain: Age and complicated medication regimens
put older patients at increased risk for interactions between drugs and between
drugs and the chronic diseases.
- Visual, hearing, movement, and thinking impairments may require simpler tests and
more frequent monitoring to determine the extent of pain in the older patient.
- Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) side effects, such as stomach and kidney
toxicity, thinking problems, constipation, and headaches, are more likely to occur
in older patients.
- Opioid effectiveness: Older patients may be more sensitive to the pain-relieving
and central nervous system effects of opioids resulting in longer periods of pain
relief.
- Patient-controlled analgesia must be used cautiously in older patients, since drugs
are slower to leave the body and older patients are more sensitive to the side effects.
- Other methods of administration, such as rectal administration, may not be useful
in older patients since they may be physically unable to insert the medication.
- Pain control after surgery requires frequent direct contact with health care providers
to monitor pain management.
- Reassessment of pain management and required changes should be made whenever the
older patient moves (for example, from hospital to home or nursing home).