Antidepressants Should Be The First Line of Defense in Treating Chronic
Pain
By Ann Quigley, Contributing Writer 
Health Behavior News Service
New reviews of previous studies confirm that older-style antidepressants, as well as anticonvulsant drugs, can
help ease the disabling pain caused by nerve tissue damage.
Often felt as a burning, tingling or stabbing sensation, neuropathic pain can result from nerve injuries or from
conditions including chronically high blood sugar, complications from shingles or some cancer treatments.
For many years older tricyclic antidepressants, which are believed to work by dampening pain signals, have been
the first-line drugs for neuropathic pain.
“It is usual to start with an antidepressant like amitriptyline, and if this fails then try an
anticonvulsant,” says Phil Wiffen, a researcher at Churchill Hospital in Oxford, England. “The results of these
meta-analyses suggest this is probably still the best approach to take.” 1
Wiffen led several systematic evidence reviews on the effect of various antidepressants and anticonvulsives on
pain, appearing in the the Cochrane Library, a publication of The Cochrane Collaboration. The Cochrane an
international organization that evaluates medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions
about medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing medical trials on a topic.
Wiffen and Tiina Saarto, M.D., analyzed 50 trials of 19 antidepressants, which involved more than 2,500 study
participants. They found that tricyclic anti-depressants, particularly amitriptyline, can help ease the two most
common types of neuropathic pain: from diabetes and shingles.
The researchers recommend more studies of the effects of other antidepressants such as the newer selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and selective Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitors (SNRIs), as well as
alternative medicines such as St. John’s Wort, before they can be recommended for neuropathic pain.
These results on tricyclics may be encouraging but “antidepressants do not cure or totally eliminate all pain,”
says Dennis C. Turk, Ph.D., at the University of Washington.
“The amount of pain reduction is moderate at best. Typically the pain reduction averages around 40 percent in
50 percent of treated patients,” Turk says. “This means that a significant proportion of patients do not obtain
even moderate reductions in pain and even those who do continue to experience significant pain.”
The findings on anticonvulsants are similarly both encouraging and sobering. Originally developed to treat
epilepsy, anticonvulsants have been used to treat pain since the 1960s, and are believed to work by quieting
abnormal firings of nerves in the brain and central nervous system.
Anticonvulsant drugs currently used for neuropathic pain are: carbamazepine, gabapentin, clonazepam, gabapentin,
lamotrigine, oxcarbazepine, phenytoin, valproate and, most recently, pregabalin.
To evaluate the effectiveness of carbamazepine, Wiffen and colleagues examined 12 studies, which included more
than 400 participants. “There is evidence to show that carbamazepine is effective but trials are small,” write
Wiffen and colleagues.
Gabapentin is a newer drug that is becoming so popular that it has reaped more than $2 billion in yearly sales
in recent years, mostly for neuropathic pain treatment. After examining 15 studies of gabapentin that consisted of
nearly 1,500 participants, the researchers found its effectiveness to be comparable to carbamazepine.
Gabapentin has fewer side effects than carbamazepine so it may be a good choice for some, but it’s more
expensive, and cheaper treatments are equally effective.
“Gabapentin is not superior to carbamazepine,” Wiffen says. “It works, but so do carbamazepine and tricyclic
antidepressants, which are far more affordable.
In their general analysis of anticonvulsants, Wiffen and colleagues examined 23 trials consisting of more than
1,000 patients. These results of these studies were conflicting, suggesting the need for more studies of the
effectiveness of each anticonvulsant, along with comparison studies of anticonvulsants and antidepressants,
according to the researchers.
“The evidence here does not support the use of anticonvulsants as first-line remedies,” write Wiffen and
colleagues, adding that tricyclic antidepressants should be the first choice.
Turk says the newer antidepressants, the SSRIs and SNRIs – are worth trying even though the jury is still out on
their effectiveness for neuropathic pain, but the side effects are more manageable.
“Neuropathic pain can be extremely severe, disabling, and recalcitrant to treatment,” Turk says. “It is
therefore reasonable to try patients on antidepressants and combinations of antidepressants with other drugs in
what has come to be known as ‘rational polypharmacy."
|