“It is important to note that brain changes do not necessarily mean that something bad has happened. The next step is to carefully monitor patients taking opioids to see what happens when the brain changes,” Dr. Lin said in an email to Pain Medicine News. “Are the brain changes associated with good (e.g., pain relief) or bad (e.g., addiction) outcomes? It is important that we answer that question before we start suggesting that this research should change how physicians treat pain.”

The patients’ average ages were 39 years in the morphine group and 45 years in the placebo group (P=0.178), and the average duration of pain was 11.1 years in the morphine group and 5.2 years in the placebo group (P=0.115). There was a 29.9% reduction in pain in the morphine group over the month of the study and a 33.3% reduction in the placebo group.

Magnetic resonance imaging revealed significantly reduced gray matter with morphine in the left inferior orbitofrontal cortex, right gyrus rectus, bilateral presupplementary motor areas and left dorsal posterior cingulate. There also was significant volume loss in the superficial subregions of the bilateral amygdala, left insula, two regions of the left superior temporal gyrus, right precentral gyrus, right superior frontal gyrus, right inferior temporal gyrus and right rolandic operculum. Several of these overlapped with decreases documented in earlier studies. There also were gray matter volume increases in some areas such as the bilateral insula and right hippocampus. There were no significant volume changes in placebo patients.

“I hope the authors report back on how these patients do over time. It will be important to learn if the brain changes are reversible after opioids are discontinued,” said Dr. Kolodny.

—Rosemary Frei, MSc