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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

How carprofen helps dogs with osteoarthritis pain and inflammation

By Brown, Dorothy Cimino et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2013·Department of Clinical Studies-Philadelphia, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Power of treatment success definitions when the Canine Brief Pain Inventory is used to evaluate carprofen treatment for the control of pain and inflammation in dogs with osteoarthritis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 150 dogs with osteoarthritis received either carprofen, a common pain medication, or a placebo to see how well it worked for their pain and discomfort. Owners reported their dogs' pain levels before treatment and again after two weeks. The study found that a significant improvement was noted when dogs showed a reduction of at least 1 point in pain severity and 2 points in pain interference. This means that carprofen was effective in helping dogs feel better and move more comfortably.

People also search for: dog arthritis pain relief · carprofen for dogs · how to tell if my dog is in pain

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the optimal method for use of the Canine Brief Pain Inventory (CBPI) to quantitate responses of dogs with osteoarthritis to treatment with carprofen or placebo. ANIMALS: 150 dogs with osteoarthritis. PROCEDURES: Data were analyzed from 2 studies with identical protocols in which owner-completed CBPIs were used. Treatment for each dog was classified as a success or failure by comparing the pain severity score (PSS) and pain interference score (PIS) on day 0 (baseline) with those on day 14. Treatment success or failure was defined on the basis of various combinations of reduction in the 2 scores when inclusion criteria were set as a PSS and PIS ≥ 1, 2, or 3 at baseline. Statistical analyses were performed to select the definition of treatment success that had the greatest statistical power to detect differences between carprofen and placebo treatments. RESULTS: Defining treatment success as a reduction of ≥ 1 in PSS and ≥ 2 in PIS in each dog had consistently robust power. Power was 62.8% in the population that included only dogs with baseline scores ≥ 2 and 64.7% in the population that included only dogs with baseline scores ≥ 3. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The CBPI had robust statistical power to evaluate the treatment effect of carprofen in dogs with osteoarthritis when protocol success criteria were predefined as a reduction ≥ 1 in PIS and ≥ 2 in PSS. Results indicated the CBPI can be used as an outcome measure in clinical trials to evaluate new pain treatments when it is desirable to evaluate success in individual dogs rather than overall mean or median scores in a test population.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24274882/