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5%
Lidocaine Gel Is Ineffective for Treatment of HIV-associated Distal
Symmetric Polyneuropathy
The
aim of this randomized, controlled trial was to investigate the
analgesic efficacy and safety of 5% lidocaine gel in painful HIV-associated
distal
sensory polyneuropathy (DSP).
Painful
DSP, the most common neurologic complication in HIV infection, is
difficult to treat.
Lidocaine
5% gel was effective in alleviating neuropathic pain in an open-label
study of HIV DSP.
In
a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover, multi-center study,
64 subjects were randomized to receive 5% lidocaine or vehicle gel
for 2 weeks (phase A). A washout period of 2 weeks was followed
by a crossover to the alternate agent for another 2 weeks (phase
B).
The
primary outcome was difference in average pain scores (Gracely pain
scale) between the 2 groups during the second week of each treatment
period.
Secondary
outcomes included differential effect of the first treatment, difference
in global pain relief, and pain response by neurotoxin exposure.
Results
The
baseline pain scores of the 2 groups were similar. The average pain
scores during the second week of each phase of the lidocaine gel
group did not differ from those of the placebo group (phase A: lidocaine
1.09, placebo 1.15; phase B: lidocaine 1.16, placebo 1.10).
There
also was no difference noted in secondary outcomes.
The
pain responses of lidocaine gel-treated subjects with current exposure
to neurotoxic antiretrovirals (1.18) did not differ compared with
those without (1.10) (P = 0.358).
There
were no significant adverse effects.
The
authors conclude, “Lidocaine 5% gel is a safe but ineffective agent
in the treatment of pain in HIV-associated DSP.”
02/02/05
Reference
L Estanislao and others (The Lidodem HIV Neuropathy Group).
A Randomized Controlled
Trial of 5% Lidocaine Gel for HIV-Associated Distal Symmetric Polyneuropathy. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
37(5): 1584-1586. December 15, 2004.
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