How effective are NSAIDs in the treatment of fibromyalgia?
— Warner W. Carr, MD
El Paso, Tex
As monotherapy, NSAIDs are no different from placebo in the treatment of fibromyalgia.1 The only documented successful use of NSAIDs in this setting has been as combination therapy— an NSAID with either a muscle relaxant (naproxen and cyclobenzaprine(Drug information on cyclobenzaprine)2) or an anxiolytic agent (ibuprofen and alprazolam(Drug information on alprazolam)3). However, NSAIDs have consistently produced pain relief comparable to that of narcotic analgesics in studies of patients with other chronic rheumatic conditions, such as rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis; soft tissue complaints, such as bursitis and tendinitis; and pain such as that produced by dental surgery.4 Since there is no effective treatment of fibromyalgia, we typically prescribe NSAIDs in the hope that they will provide some pain relief—and to avoid the habituation seen with narcotic analgesics. Tramadol(Drug information on tramadol), an analgesic with minimal narcotic properties, is somewhat effective in patients with fibromyalgia.5 However, its benefits are not dramatic.
—— Peng Thim Fan, MD
Clinical Professor of Medicine
Division of Rheumatology
University of California, Los Angeles,
School of Medicine
