RATIONALE: Opioids lessen pain caused by cancer. It is not yet known whether opioids are more effective when given together with or without olanzapine in treating cancer pain. PURPOSE: This randomized clinical trial is studying opioids to see how well they work when given together with or without olanzapine in treating patients with moderate to severe cancer pain.
OBJECTIVES: * To assess the analgesic effect of olanzapine when administered in combination with opioids in patients with cancer pain. * To assess the opiod-sparing effect of olanzapine vs placebo. * To assess the effect of olanzapine on opioid adverse effects. OUTLINE: Patients undergo opioid titration with a step 3 opioid to maintain a less than 4/10 level of pain (on a 0-10 numeric pain rating scale) to establish a opioid starting dose. When the pain rating increases, patients are randomized to 1 of 3 treatment arms. * Arm I: Patients receive oral opioid and oral placebo once daily for 4 weeks. * Arm II: Patients receive oral opioid and 2.5 mg oral olanzapine once daily for 4 weeks. * Arm III: Patients receive oral opioid and 5 mg oral olanzapine once daily for 4 weeks. Patients undergo quality of life assessments at baseline and three times weekly by questionnaires using a scale from 0-3 and pain assessments periodically by Brief Pain Inventory, Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale, Linear Analogue Scale Assessments, and Mini-Mental State Examination.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Given orally
Given orally
Two-point pain improvement from baseline (0-10 numeric pain rating scale)
Comparison of active treatment vs placebo
Effect of olanzapine on opiod adverse effects
Relationships between endpoints
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