‘19
September 3—7, 2019
The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
Program Guide
Download the Mobile App.
Mobile PAINWeek ● ● ● Access the conference schedule ● Link to session slides ● View course credit procedures ● ●
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PAINWeek Mobile:
● ● Visit
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PW18 APP 8.10.indd 1
8/10/18 12:52 PM
Make this 1st on your list.
PaiNWeeK would like to thank these organizations for their contribution to the success of the 2019 conference.
BioDelivery Sciences International ● Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc. ● Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. & AstraZeneca ● Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly and Company ● Salix Pharmaceuticals ● Teva ● Theranica LTD
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JEFFREY FUDIN
LYNN WEBSTER
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6
An imperfect burden on patients
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and providers
exploring opioid abuse deterrent methods beatrice setnick from the laboratory to the real user friday ● september 6
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contents Administration art direction and graphic design
Darryl Fossa business development
Mike Shaffer client and conference management
Redza Dempster editorial services
Holly Caster finance
Heather Woolf media management and production
Patrick Kelly operations and technology
Jeffrey Tarnoff program development
Debra Weiner program management
Charles Frometa Maya Holmes
PAINWeek 6 Erie Street Montclair, nj 07042 usa
accoutrements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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welcome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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about us . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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conference floor plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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keynote .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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welcome reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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accreditation .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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faculty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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satellite events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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course descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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exhibitors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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T (973) 415–5100 F (973) 233–9383 info@painweek.org www.painweek.org
Please note that PAINWeek staff will be capturing photographs and video onsite in professional settings throughout the conference. By attending PAINWeek, you acknowledge that there is a possibility that you may appear in such photographs and video, which may be used in future PAINWeek conferences and/or materials and publications. Photographs and video will only be taken in public areas of the hotel, and we will not use an identifiable photograph or likeness of you as the focus of an image or illustration. Copyright © 2019, PAINWeek, a division of Tarsus Medical Group. The PAINWeek logo, and “The National Conference on Pain for Frontline Practitioners” are trademarks of PAINWeek. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. All rights reserved.
th annual The front of the PAINWeek name badge contains both attendee information and a bar code that can be scanned quickly to capture data. Information that is collected by scanning into PAINWeek core sessions will only be utilized by PAINWeek and Global Education Group for the purpose of processing your cme application and certificate. If you scan your badge at a satellite event or exhibit booth, your contact information (name, address, degree, specialty, company, telephone, fax, npi, and email) will be provided to the respective party who scanned your badge. Please note that to comply with Sunshine Act reporting and corporate policies, third-party program organizers may not allow access to their program without scanning. Name badges must be worn for admittance to all PAINWeek 2019 events. Please return to registration if you have lost your name badge. There is a $50 fee for replacement badges. A photo id is required. Information provided was accurate as of 8/19/2019. For the most up-to-date information please visit m.painweek.org.
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welcome ● about us ● conference floor plan ● keynote ● welcome reception ● accreditation
ccoutrements 11
welcome
Kevin Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
Senior Faculty Member, Executive Editor of PWJ
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September 3—7 Dear PAINWeek Delegates: On behalf of our entire team, it is with sincere pleasure that I welcome both new and returning attendees to PAINWeek 2019! It has been amazing for me to watch this annual conference—celebrating its 13th year!—grow into the largest in the country devoted to pain and its management. There has always been one guiding principle for me as a physician: every consideration and decision should be able to be reduced to a single common denominator—the good of the patient. Therefore, it can (and probably should) be as unsettling to you as it is to me to watch what is happening in the field of pain management. The “pendulum” from years past has become a virtual tornado of controversy. Now more than ever, the lack/absence of a good, foundational knowledge base for clinicians could be disastrous for patients with pain. Attending this conference means that you have already made decisions about your role not only as a patient advocate and guardian, but also potentially as a vector of pain education to peers and other colleagues in your community and clinic setting. It also means you realize that it really does “take a village” to adequately address one of the most common reasons that people seek medical attention, and you are ready to become a part of the much needed solution to the tragic interwoven problems that we witness in our society. The most complimentary things I can point out about PAINWeek: 1) the breadth of its subject matter, with over 120 hours of ce/cme sessions, and 2) the delivery of education to all of us as a unified group of frontline clinicians and allies looking to address shared relevant goals. With numerous course tracks to explore, you have the ability to navigate the conference in a way that serves you best. Regardless where your interests may lie, there is a tremendous amount of education to be had at PAINWeek: from general topics such as the basics of pain assessment, the role of utilizing a biopsychosocial approach, and safe and responsible opioid analgesic prescribing; to special interest sessions focusing on complementary and alternative treatments, avoiding regulatory scrutiny, issues about public policy, the law as it pertains to us and patients, and future analgesic treatments, just to name a few. A few things to note: PAINWeek 101 on Monday evening is intended for first-time attendees and is a special opportunity to orient yourself and prepare for the most beneficial experience possible. The certified-for-credit Keynote Presentation on Wednesday evening will be followed by refreshments and the opportunity to converse and network with faculty and colleagues at the Welcome Reception in the Exhibit Hall. Don’t miss the scientific poster session and reception on Thursday, with podium presentations on Friday. I have always said that the PAINWeek has a distinct “pulse,” and you are the heartbeat. It is your collective interest and enthusiasm that keep it thriving. In addition to the live interaction that PAINWeek is famous for, share on social media. You made the right choice to come, now make the most of it!
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about us The beat goes on‌
By Debra Weiner
One might be tempted to say that 2019 has been an annus horribilis in the world of pain management. Two long-standing pain organizations dissolved, a media maelstrom continues to flourish, while those who need relief the most have had to do without or, at the very least, with much less. However, something very positive has also emerged: PAINWeek registration has grown approximately 20% from last year. Clearly the current controversy has also strengthened the need and desire for multidisciplinary pain education offering options including, but not l imited to, medication management. So, here we are at our 13th PAINWeek. What you see every September is the result of an enormous team effort, and we have been very fortunate that much of our team has been together longer than most marriages. However, there are a few changes to the family tree. This year saw the departure of Keith Dempster, Steve Porada, and Sean Fetcho, along with the return of Mike Shaffer. Several years ago, Mike started his career with us directly out of college. Since then he has held senior positions at digital agencies and pharma companies, and we are most happy to welcome him back into the fold. We always do things a bit differently, like writing quirky job descriptions that contain questions like “name 3 famous people you would want to invite to a dinner party.� Fortunately, this garnered the attention of Charles Frometa, and he has become an indispensable asset in helping to manage sponsored events at the national and regional PAINWeek events. Another serendipitous moment occurred when Maya Holmes came to our shores. She is proactive, eager to learn new things, and happens to have well-developed audience recruitment skills. Maya has been able to turn many phone queries into paid registrations!
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We churn out a great deal of content, which necessitates having a very gifted editor—like Holly Caster. Holly handles a broad range of editorial activities stretching across our print, digital, and live activities. She is the one who oftentimes is tasked with transforming fragmented narratives into readable material. An editorial alchemist of sorts. So how did we ever live without Heather Woolf? Heather is a wonder woman who keeps the ship fueled, the shelves stocked, and is the 12-cylinder engine of our PAINWeekEnd meetings. Oh, and she can bench press 400 lbs with her Lululemonclad legs! Patrick Kelly is a tenured crew member who came to us a decade ago and works across many domains: video and web content editing, program management, audience accumulation activities, and at least 10 other critical areas of importance. Suffice it to say that the only way we would ever willingly let him go is if Netflix picked up one of his reality show treatments. Which (gasp) could actually happen! I’ve lost count of how many original pieces of art that Darryl Fossa has produced over the years. Presumably hundreds. Whether he is here at the office or sitting in a Berlin café, he’s working. He sketches on planes, trains, buses, and while waiting at tram stops. While the rest of us work happily in our respective sand boxes, Red Dempster is managing the expectations, victories, and disappointments of our clients. He operates very much like a chief of staff (à la West Wing). Of course, the person I spend the most time with is Jeffrey Tarnoff. We’ve been sitting across from each other for 17 years now, and it remains as fresh as it was when we put the key into the lock of our first office door. He is the engineer to my architect. I come up with new ideas, he kicks the tires. We each play to our strengths and mostly stay in our respective lanes. Through times of abundance and seasons of drought, we have stuck together, and some way, somehow, figured out what we needed to do to keep this enterprise moving forward. This is us.
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STEVE PASSIK THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 5
A MODEST PROPOSAL
addressing the components and complexities of coordinated care
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conference floor plans Rose. Rabbit. Lie.
level 2
The Chelsea Tower
Opium
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Wicked Spoon Buffet
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Condesa
1 2
Con
8 7 6
level 2 Boulevard Tower
Holsteins
3
The Juice Standard
Jason of Beverly Hills Molly Brown’s Swimwear Retrospecs & Co
Skin 6|2 Cosmetics
China Poblano
Monogram
All Saints Stitched
CRSVR
Scientific Poster Session
Milk Bar
The Chandelier
Marquee Entrance
7 6 5
Condesa
Block 16
Bellavista Boardroom
Condesa Jardins Boardroom
Condesa
2
News Stand
Eggslut
Momofuku
REVIV Dry Bar
Please note: The Henry (restaurant) is located on level 1
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level 3 The Chelsea
The Chelsea Tower
Elevator to Guest Rooms Business Center
Restroom
Ballroom
PDM Meal Programs
Castellana
On Demand
Brera
Elevator
PaiNWeek
Grac
Commons
Restroom
PDM Meal Programs
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Commons
Ent
Grac
Castellana Ballroom
Gracia
Ent
level 3 Scarpetta Red Plate Beauty & Essex
Elevator
Restroom
Jaleo STK
GRACIA GRACIA GRACIA 7 Gracia 5 Gracia 7 8 Entrance
SESSION SESSION ROOM Entrance ROOM
Gracia Commons GRACIA Entrance
Gracia 1
Elevator
Elevator
Entrance
Gracia 3
Blue Ribbon Zuma
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Estiatorio Milos
level 4 The Chelsea Tower Elevator to
ELEVATOR TO Guest GUEST ROOMS Rooms
Green GREEN Room ROOM
Yaletown
Commons Yaletown COMMONS YALETOWN
NOLITA 1
COURSE ROOM
ROOM
Nolita
NOLITA 2
COURSE Nolita ROOM
3
Nolita COURSE
NOLITA
3 2 1
RESTROOM
Restroom
PAINWEEK STORE Registration REGISTRATION AreaAREA
1
ELEVATOR Elevator
Mont-Royal Commons
MONT-ROYAL COMMONS 1
Keynote COURSE COURSE & ROOM ROOM Session General
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Commons CHELSEA Exhibit Annex COMMONS BOOK SIGNINGS
Mont-Royal MONT-ROYAL MONT-ROYAL Ballroom 2
Belmont
RESTROOM Restroom
CHELS 1, 2, 3
Ent
S
Bar
BAR
Restroom RESTROOM ELEVATOR Elevator
POOL Pool
Retail RETAIL
Overlook OVERLOOK GrillGRILL
Bar CHELSEA 1, 2, 3 & 5
Entrance CYBER CAFÉ
BAR
POSTER ABSTRACTS
Belmont EXHIBIT Exhibit HALL Hall
CHELSEA 4 COURSE ROOM
ELEVATOR Elevator
Elevator ELEVATOR RESTROOM Restroom
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BOULEVARD POOL Boulevard Pool
WEEK RE
level 4
Bar BAR
keynote
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wr
Sponsored by
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MARK GAROFOLI
FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 6
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gary jay
thursday september 5 the danger of idiopathic intracranial hypertension
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accreditation PaiNWeek 2019 September 3–7 Las Vegas, nv
Physician Accreditation Statement
Global Education Group is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education to provide continuing medical education for physicians.
This activity is provided by Global Education Group.
Physician Credit Designation
Global Education Group designates this live activity for a maximum of 39.0 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Pharmacist Continuing Education
Target Audience
Accreditation Statement
The educational design of this activity addresses the needs of physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, nurses, pharmacists, psychologists, and social workers involved in the treatment of patients with pain.
Global Education Group is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.
Purpose Statement
Credit Designation Global Education Group designates this continuing education activity for 39.0 contact hours (3.90 CEUs) of the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education.
PAINWeek® provides practical knowledge and tools for busy pain management practitioners to utilize in their daily practice.
Educational Need
Please see www.painweek.org for full ACPE information and UAN numbers.
“Chronic pain is on the doorstep of every healthcare provider on Main Street. It doesn’t matter whether you’re in Kentucky or Iowa or Ohio or California or New York, it is everywhere. To me someone who says to a patient ‘I don’t treat chronic pain because I’m not a pain management physician’ is really saying there are 7,000 board certified pain clinicians in the United States. That’s a fact. More or less 7,000 vs the number of people in the United States who suffer with chronic pain which, according to the Institute of Medicine, is somewhere around a 100 million people. If you do the math, there’s not enough healthcare providers in that 7,000 to see patients 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year.” —Kevin L. Zacharoff MD, FACIP, FACPE, FAAP
Please note: Pharmacy learners will not be eligible to receive partial credit. Individual courses must be attended in their entirety in order to be eligible to receive credit for those 1.0 or 2.0 credit hour sessions. PHARMACY LEARNERS: Instructions for Credit—In order to receive credit, pharmacist participants must complete an entire course, fill out the application and evaluation form, which will be sent to you via email after the conference. Please note that an NABP number and date of birth (mm/dd) will be required to complete these forms and earn credit.
Over 120 hours of content will be presented!
Learning Objectives
Nursing Continuing Education
After attending PAINWeek® 2019, learners should be better able to:
Global Education Group is accredited with distinction as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.
●● Review the intent of the CDC guidelines ●● Describe primary and secondary pain generators that contribute to chronic pain ●● Describe the role of opioid-sparing techniques in anesthesia ●● Identify patients who may benefit from interventional procedures ●● List the specific items that should be included in a complete EHR when caring for chronic pain patients ●● Discuss integrative treatment approaches to chronic pain ●● Explain the specific pain pathways that can be acted upon by common pharmacotherapy classes ●● List non-opioid analgesics appropriate for treating acute and chronic pain ●● Summarize basic ethical principles as they apply to the assessment and management of patients with chronic pain ●● Discuss how to modify your medical marijuana authorization patterns based on legal realities and empirical data ●● Cite the clinical practice implication differences between urine drug screening (UDS) and urine drug tests (UDT)
This educational activity for 39.0 contact hours is provided by Global Education Group. Nurses should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
Psychologist Continuing Education
Global Education Group (Global) is approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Global maintains responsibility for this program and its content. This activity has been approved for a maximum of 39.0 CE credits for psychologists. The instructional level of this activity is introductory. Psychologists should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. Please note: Attendance of psychology learners will be monitored. As with all conference participants, psychology learners will be required to scan in using their coded badge. Psychology learners must then formally sign out for each session in which they are applying for continuing education credit.
For full learning objectives, please visit m.painweek.org.
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Nurse Practitioner Continuing Education
Disclosure of Conflicts of Interest
Global Education Group is accredited by the American Association of Nurse Practitioners as an approved provider of nurse practitioner continuing education. Provider number: 110121. This activity is approved for 39.0 contact hour(s). Activity ID #2610L. This activity was planned in accordance with AANP CE Standards and Policies. See www.painweek.org for total AANP Rx hours.
Global Education Group (Global) requires instructors, planners, managers and other individuals and their spouse/life partner who are in a position to control the content of this activity to disclose any real or apparent conflict of interest they may have as related to the content of this activity. All identified conflicts of interest are thoroughly vetted by Global for fair balance, scientific objectivity of studies mentioned in the materials or used as the basis for content, and appropriateness of patient care recommendations.
Physician Assistants
The AAPA accepts AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ from organizations accredited by the ACCME.
The faculty reported the following financial relationships or relationships to products or devices they or their spouse/life partner have with commercial interests related to the content of this CME activity:
American Academy of Family Physicians Continuing Education
m.painweek.org
This Live activity, PAINWeek 2019, with a beginning date of 09/03/2019, has been reviewed and is acceptable for up to 39.00 Prescribed credit(s) by the American Academy of Family Physicians. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity.
The planners and managers reported the following financial relationships or relationships to products or devices they or their spouse/life partner have with commercial interests related to the content of this CME activity:
ALL OTHER LEARNERS: Instructions for Credit—In order to receive credit, participants must attend the course and complete the application and evaluation form, which will be sent to you via email after the conference. Participants can only claim the hours they were actually in attendance for CME credit. Statements of credit are available to print upon completion of online forms. Please note that registration fees apply to this conference. For information about the accreditation of this program, please contact Global at 303-395-1782 or cme@globaleducationgroup.com.
Name of Planner or Manager
Reported Financial Relationship
Ashley Marcostica, rn, msn
Nothing to disclose
Kristen Delisi, np
Nothing to disclose
Lindsay Borvansky
Nothing to disclose
Andrea Funk
Nothing to disclose
Liddy Knight
Nothing to disclose
Kelvin Burton, md
Nothing to disclose
Americans with Disabilities Act
Event staff will be glad to assist you with any special needs (ie, physical, dietary). Please contact Patrick Kelly at (973) 415–5109 prior to the live event.
Supported in part by an educational grants from St. Jude and Boston Scientific.
Disclosure of Unlabeled Use
This educational activity may contain discussion of published and/ or investigational uses of agents that are not indicated by the FDA. Global Education Group (Global) does not recommend the use of any agent outside of the labeled indications. The opinions expressed in the educational activity are those of the faculty and do not necessarily represent the views of any organization associated with this activity. Please refer to the official prescribing information for each product for discussion of approved indications, contraindications, and warnings.
Disclaimer
Participants have an implied responsibility to use the newly acquired information to enhance patient outcomes and their own professional development. The information presented in this activity is not meant to serve as a guideline for patient management. Any procedures, medications, or other courses of diagnosis or treatment discussed in this activity should not be used by clinicians without evaluation of patient conditions and possible contraindications on dangers in use, review of any applicable manufacturer’s product information, and comparison with recommendations of other authorities.
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genda
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tuesday 9.3 7:00a – 7:50a
BHV Moving Beyond the Obvious: The Pivotal Role of Psychology in Pain Management 01 Level 3 Gracia 1 Ravi Prasad phd
7:00a – 7:50a
INT 01
Injections, Nerve Blocks, Pumps, and Spinal Cord Stimulation
Level 4 Nolita 1
Paul J. Christo md, mba
Status Traumaticus: A Trauma Informed Approach to Chronic Pain Management
7:00a – 7:50a
SIS 01
8:30a – 9:30a
PDM Managing Chronic Pain With Abuse-Deterrent Extended-Release Opioids: 01 Clinical Evidence and Implications*
Level 4 Nolita 3
Brian F. Kaufman do, facp, facoi
Sponsored by Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc.
Level 3 Brera Ballroom
Miguel de la Garza md
9:40a – 10:30a
BHV Icebergs, Oceans, and the Experience of Pain 02
Level 4 Nolita 3
Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc Mel Pohl md
9:40a – 10:30a
CPS 01
La Femme Migraineur
Level 3 Gracia 1
Meredith Barad md
9:40a – 11:00a
SIS 02
The World According to Cannabinoids: Clinical and Research Updates
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc Ethan B. Russo md
10:30a – 11:00a 10:40a – SIS 12:00p 03
Break The Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight: Reconsidering the CDC Guideline
Level 4 Nolita 3
Gary W. Jay md, faapm
11:10a – BHV The Death of Caesar: Psychological Stages of Grief and Chronic Pain 12:00p 03
Level 4 Nolita 1
David Cosio phd, abpp
11:10a – CPS Hanging By a Thread: Facial & Orofacial Pain 12:00p 02
Level 3 Gracia 1
Meredith Barad md
11:10a – INT 12:00p 02
Spinal Stenosis: Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Treatment
Level 3 Gracia 3
Sean Li md
12:30p – 1:30p 1:40p – INT 03 2:30p
Lunch Break Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine for Nonresolving Inflammation
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Jay Joshi md
1:40p – SIS 04 2:30p
Salt of the Earth: The Importance of Sodium Channels in Pain Management
Level 4 Nolita 1
Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba
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tuesday 9.3 1:40p – SIS 05 2:30p
Insight into Preclinical Drug Discovery and Translational Medicine
Level 3 Gracia 3
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
1:40p – WRK Innovations in Pain Medicine Ultrasonography: 01 4:30p Image Guidance, Diagnosis, and Emerging Applications
Level 3 Gracia 5
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ming-Chih Kao md, phd Einar Ottestad md Scot H. Sarver
2:40p – BHV Lip Service: Using Words as the Foundation for Effective Pain Management 04 3:30p Level 4 Nolita 3 Jamie Clapp pt, dpt, ocs Heather Poupore-King phd
2:40p – SIS 06 3:30p
Chapter None: Patient-Centered or Paper-Centered Pain Management?
Level 3 Gracia 1
Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
2:40p – SIS 07 3:30p
Geriatric Pain Management: Minimally Invasive Interventions
Level 4 Nolita 1
Mayank Gupta md
3:40p – Break 4:30p 4:40p – BHV Pain Catastrophizing: Making a Mountain Out of a Mole Hill 05 5:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
David Cosio phd, abpp
4:40p – CPS Neck and Upper Extremity Pain Syndromes 03 5:30p
Level 3 Gracia 3
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
4:40p – INT 04 5:30p
Neuromodulation for Advanced Practice Providers
Level 4 Nolita 1
Mayank Gupta md
4:40p – SIS 08 5:30p
Malpractice for Dummies: Getting Sued and Surviving to Talk About It
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Sean Li md
4:40p – SIS 09 6:00p
Eyes Without a Face: Music Therapy and Pain Management in Alzheimer’s Disease
Level 4 Nolita 3
Joanne V. Loewy da, lcat, mt-bc John F. Mondanaro ma, lcat, mt-bc, ccls Andrew R. Rossetti mmt, lcat, mt-bc
5:40p – BHV Follow the Yellow Brick Road: Reducing Clinician Burnout 06 6:30p
Level 4 Nolita 1
Corinne E. Cooley dpt, ocs Heather Poupore-King phd
5:40p – CPS Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome 04 6:30p
Level 3 Gracia 5
Paul J. Christo md, mba
5:40p – INT 05 6:30p
Interventional Pain Management: Opioid-Sparing Technologies
Level 3 Gracia 1
Sean Li md
*Not certified for credit
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wednesday 9.4 7:00a – 7:50a
ACU Acute Pain in Patients with Active Substance Use Disorder 01
Level 4 Nolita 1
Debra B. Gordon rn, dnp, faan
7:00a – 7:50a
IPPS The Force Is with You: Mind Tricks for Chronic Pain Patients 01
Level 3 Gracia 1
Jorge F. Carrillo md
Pain Terminology: Knowing the Difference Makes a Difference!
7:00a – 7:50a
PEF 01
8:30a – 9:30a
PDM Chronic Pain: Unmet Needs, New Frontiers* 02 Sponsored by Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly and Company
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Level 3 Brera Ballroom
Jeremy Adler ms, pa-c Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc
9:30a – 12:30p
WRK Hitting the Bullseye in Pain Management: Using All the Arrows in Your Quiver! 02 Level 3 Gracia 5 Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
9:40a – 10:30a
IPPS The BIG BANG: Chronic Overlapping Pain Conditions in Women 02
Level 3 Gracia 1
Sawsan As-Sanie md, mph
Pain Pathways Made Simple
9:40a – 10:30a
PEF 02
9:40a – 11:00a
MDL Inside the Trojan Horse: 01 Addressing Current Legal Actions Against Healthcare Practitioners
Level 4 Nolita 1
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Jennifer Bolen jd Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
10:30a – Break 11:00a 10:40a – ACU The Dynamics of Managing Acute Postoperative Pain in the 12:00p 02 Current Opioid-Sparing Environment
Level 3 Gracia 3
Rami Ben-Joseph phd Keith A. Candiotti md Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
11:10a – PEF Chronic Pain Assessment 12:00p 03
Level 4 Nolita 1
Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba
11:10a – SIS 12:00p 10
Causalytics —You’re in Pain, and It’s All Your Fault
Level 4 Nolita 3
Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
11:10a – SIS 12:00p 11
How Healing Works, and What It Means for Chronic Pain Management
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Wayne Boice Jonas md
12:30p – PDM Rethink Relief When Treating Chronic Pain Patients* 03 1:30p Sponsored by BioDelivery Sciences
Level 3 Brera Ballroom
Anand Thakur md
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wednesday 9.4 1:40p – PMC Pain Management Coaching: Integrative and Complimentary Strategies for Chronic Pain 01 2:30p Level 4 Nolita 3 Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc
1:40p – SIS 12 2:30p
Tumbling Dice: Preventing a Benzodiazepine Crisis and Understanding Protracted Withdrawal Syndrome
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd Steven L. Wright md, faap, fasam
1:40p – PEF Pain Therapeutics 04 3:30p
Level 4 Nolita 1
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph
1:40p – WRK Rotate the Molecule! Rationalizing Excessive Opioid Prescribing with Buprenorphine 03 4:30p Level 3 Gracia 5 Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
2:40p – ACU Case-Based Challenges in Acute Pain Management 03 3:30p
Level 3 Gracia 3
Debra B. Gordon rn, dnp, faan
2:40p – IPPS Let’s Get Physical! Musculoskeletal Pelvic Pain 03 3:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
Colleen M. Fitzgerald md, ms
2:40p – PMC How Pain Coaching Impacts Patient Outcomes 02 3:30p
Level 4 Nolita 3
Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc Deborah Morrow lcsw, ladc, icaadc, emt
2:40p – SIS 13 3:30p
Psych Twister: Using Metaphors, Mindfulness, and Values to Promote Behavioral Change
Level 4 Yaletown 1
Heather Poupore-King phd Kristen M. Slater psyd
3:40p – Break 4:30p 4:40p – ACU Enhancing Recovery After Surgery: How Certified Nurse Anesthetists Are Improving Outcomes 04 5:30p Level 3 Gracia 3 Garry J. Brydges dnp, mba, acnp-bc, crna, faan
4:40p – IPPS The Golden Girls Dilemma: Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause 04 5:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
Georgine M. Lamvu md, mph, facog
4:40p – PEF Clinical Pearls: Unraveling the Secrets of Imaging Studies 05 5:30p
Level 4 Nolita 1
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
4:40p – SIS 14 5:30p
Maleficent Morphine Milligram Equivalents & Dosing Dilemma Disasters
Level 4 Nolita 3
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
5:45p – 6:45p
KEY 01
Keynote: Are the Monsters Coming to Main Street?
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Jennifer Bolen jd Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
6:45p – 9:00p
Welcome Reception
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom *Not certified for credit
37
thursday 9.5 7:00a – 7:50a
APP 01
Medication Assisted Therapy: New Opportunities in Treatment
Level 4 Nolita 1
Brett B. Snodgrass fnp-c, cpe, facpp, faanp
7:00a – 7:50a
PEF 06
Life Hacks to Teach Chronic Pain Patients
Level 3 Gracia 5
Laura Meyer-Junco pharmd, bcps
7:00a – 7:50a
PHM Which Came First… 01 Pain or Substance Use Disorder?
Level 3 Gracia 1
Abigail T. Brooks pharmd, bcps Courtney M. Kominek phamrd, bcps, cpe
7:00a – 8:00a
SYM Manage Pain and Minimize Misuse/Abuse: 01 Using Abuse-deterrent Opioids to Enhance Patient Quality of Life
This program is supported by an educational grant from Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. This activity is jointly provided by Global Education Group and Rockpointe Corporation.
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, fccp, fashp, ffsmb Jeffrey Gudin md
8:30a – 9:30a
PDM Opioid Treatment Challenges: 04 Therapies for Managing the Complexities of Opioid Treatment*
Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals
Level 3 Castellana Ballroom
Youseff Josephson do
9:40a – APP No Guts, No Glory: 10:30a 02 Mystery of the Microbiome
Level 3 Gracia 3
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc
9:40a – 10:30a
PEF 07
Navigating the OTC Analgesic Aisle: What a Pain in the Aspirin!
Level 4 Nolita 3
Laura Meyer-Junco pharmd, bcps
9:40a – SIS 10:30a 15
Alcohol as Analgesia: Does It Really Numb the Pain?
Level 4 Nolita 1
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ravi Prasad phd
9:40a – 11:00a
MDL A New Leaf: 02 A Legal and Medical Perspective on Marijuana Use When
Prescribing Controlled Substances
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Jennifer Bolen jd Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
10:30a – 11:00a
Break & Exhibits
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
10:40a – AHS American Headache Society: 12:00p 01 Migraine Education Program (Part 1)
Level 3 Gracia 3
Larry Charleston IV md, msc, fahs Scott Powers phd, abpp, fahs Nina Riggins md, phd
38
thursday 9.5 11:10a – APP Achieving Change from Within: 12:00p 03 Use of Motivational Interviewing
Level 4 Nolita 3
Ravi Prasad phd
11:10a – PHM Kratom or Bait’em? 12:00p 02 Understanding the Pharmacology of Kratom
Level 3 Gracia 1
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
11:10a – SIS 12:00p 16
Buprenorphine: A Molecule for All Seasons
Level 4 Nolita 1
Martin D. Cheatle phd
12:30p – PDM Fremanezumab-vfrm Injection: 05 1:30p An anti-CGRP for the Preventive Treatment of Migraine in Adults* Sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals
Level 3 Castellana Ballroom
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe Andrew M. Blumenfeld md, fahs
1:40p – MAS Blinded by the Light: 01 2:30p The Danger of Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension
Level 3 Gracia 5
Gary W. Jay md, faapm
1:40p – PEF The Curbside Consult in Pain Management 08 2:30p
Level 4 Nolita 1
Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
1:40p – SIS 17 2:30p
The Static Pendulum: Pain, Drugs, and Ethics
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
1:40p – AHS American Headache Society: 02 3:30p Migraine Education Program (Part 2)
Level 3 Gracia 3
Larry Charleston IV md, msc, fahs Scott Powers phd, abpp, fahs Nina Riggins md, phd
1:40p – SIS 18 3:30p
Understanding Analgesic Trials
Level 4 Nolita 3
Rami Ben-Joseph phd Errol M. Gould phd Srinivas Nalamachu md Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd Charles E. Wollmuth
2:40p – PEF The Unbearable Lightness of… 09 3:30p Multimodal Treatment Plans
Level 3 Gracia 5
Kathryn A. Schopmeyer pt, dpt, cpe
2:40p – PHM Mirror Mirror on the Wall: 03 3:30p Who's the FDA's Fairest ADF of All?
Level 3 Gracia 1
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
*Not certified for credit
39
thursday 9.5 2:40p – SIS 19 3:30p
Back to the Future: Current and Future Opioid Abuse Risk Assessment and Mitigation Strategies
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Martin D. Cheatle phd
2:40p – SIS 20 3:30p
A Modest Proposal: Addressing the Components and Complexities of Coordinated Care
Level 4 Nolita 1
Steven D. Passik phd
3:40p – 4:30p
Break & Exhibits
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
3:30p – PDM Novel Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) Device 06 4:30p For the Acute Treatment of Migraine* Sponsored by Theranica LTD
Level 3 Gracia 7
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe Andrew Blumenfeld md, fash
4:40p – APP Through the Eyes of an Expert Witness: 04 5:30p The Importance of Chart Documentation in the Chronic Pain Patient
Level 3 Gracia 1
Brett B. Snodgrass fnp-c, cpe, facpp, faanp
4:40p – SIS 21 5:30p
The Elephant in the Room: Helping Patients to Navigate the "O" Impasse
Level 3 Gracia 5
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ravi Prasad phd
4:40p – SIS 22 5:30p
Central Sensitization and Ketamine Infusions
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jay Joshi md
4:40p – SIS 23 6:00p
Deuces Wild: Fudin & Gudin Argue the New Rules of the Game
Level 4 Nolita 1
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp Jeffrey A. Gudin md
5:40p – APP Starting an Acute Pain Service Is Harder Than You Think… 05 6:30p AKA: "OMG Why Did I Agree to Do This Again?!”
Level 3 Gracia 1
Mechele Fillman msn, np-c
5:40p – PEF Spilled Beans and Hard Stops: 10 6:30p How Legislation, Guidelines, and Reimbursement Policies Impact Patient Care
Level 4 Nolita 3
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe
5:40p – PHM Putting the FUN in Dysfunctional: 04 6:30p Pain Management Options in Renal and Hepatic Dysfunction
Level 3 Gracia 3
Abigail T. Brooks pharmd, bcps Courtney M. Kominek pharmd, bcps, cpe
6:30p – POS Scientific Poster Session and Reception* 01 8:30p
Level 2 Condesa Commons
Co-Chairs: Srinivas Nalamachu md Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
*Not certified for credit
40
41
friday 9.6 7:00a – 7:50a
CBN Lost in the Weeds: 01 The Past, Present, and Future of Hemp in Pain Management
Level 3 Gracia 3
Stephen J. Ziegler phd, jd
7:00a – 7:50a
MDL I’m Not a Doctor, But I Play One in DC 03
Level 3 Gracia 5
Michael C. Barnes jd, miep
7:00a – 7:50a
PHM Everybody’s Greasing Up, But Should You Rub It In? 05 A Review of Topical Analgesics and Available Evidence in Clinical Trials
Level 3 Gracia 1
Timothy J. Atkinson pharmd, bcps, cpe
9:40a – 10:30a
CBN Reefer Madness Revisited: 02 Taking the Insanity Out of Medical Cannabinoids
Level 4 Nolita 1
Michael E. Schatman phd, cpe, daspe
9:40a – 10:30a
NRO An Elusive Villain: 01 Pain Associated with Lyme Disease and Other Spirochetal Infections
Level 3 Gracia 1
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe
9:40a – 10:30a
PHM Opioid Math Calculations: 06 Conversions, Titrations, and Breakthroughs
Level 3 Gracia 3
Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
9:40a – SIS 11:00a 24
Medical Stasi: The Standardization Proclamation and Its Consequences
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballrom
Jennifer Bolen jd Paul J. Christo md, mba Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
10:30a – 11:00a
Break & Exhibits
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
10:40a – POS Poster/Podium Presentations* 12:00p 02
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
Co-Chairs: Srinivas Nalamachu md Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
11:10a – NRO When Darkness Falls: 12:00p 02 Managing Pain in Fibromyalgia and Restless Leg Syndrome
Level 3 Gracia 1
Gary W. Jay md, faapm
11:10a – SIS 12:00p 25
The Visible Few: An Imperfect Burden on Patients and Providers
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp Lynn R. Webster md, facpm, fasam
12:30p – PDM Opioid Therapy Insights: A Holistic Approach to Managing Patients* 07 1:30p Sponsored by Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. & AstraZeneca
Level 3 Brera Ballroom
Paul Choi md
42
friday 9.6 1:40p – CBN The Global Legalization of Marijuana: 03 2:30p A Reasonable Solution to Treat Pain…Or a Pipe Dream?
Level 4 Nolita 1
Stephen J. Ziegler phd, jd
1:40p – PHM He SAID, She SAID. What's the Deal with NSAIDs? 07 2:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
Timothy J. Atkinson pharmd, bcps, cpe
1:40p – 2:30p
SIS 26
The Sirens of Titan: Treatment Options for Managing Opioid Withdrawal and Overdose
Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Frank Breve pharmd, mba Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
1:40p – MAS Back Pain: It's All About the Diagnosis 02 3:30p
Level 3 Gracia 3
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
1:40p – SIS 27 3:30p
Applying Mechanism-Based Classification to Clinical Reasoning for Complex Persistent Pain
Level 3 Gracia 5
Miroslav Backonja md Sarah Palyo phd Kathryn A. Schopmeyer pt, dpt, cpe
2:30p – 4:30p
Exhibit Hall Closing Reception
Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
2:40p – NRO The Spider’s Stratagem: Arachnoiditis 03 3:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe
3:40p – 4:30p
Break
4:40p – NRO Not Glad All Over: Chronic Widespread Pain 04 5:30p
Level 3 Gracia 1
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe
4:40p – SIS 28 5:30p
Opioid Moderatism: Seeking Middle Ground
Level 4 Nolita 3
Michael E. Schatman phd, cpe, daspe
4:40p – SIS 29 5:30p
Analgesics of the Future
Level 4 Nolita 1
Jeffrey A. Gudin md
4:40p – PHM Thug Drugs…Revisited 08 6:00p
Level 3 Gracia 3
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
5:40p – CBN Cannabis and Opioids Together: Syn or Synergy? 04 6:30p
Level 4 Nolita 1
Christopher M. Herndon pharmd, bcps, cpe Bradlee Rea pharmd
5:40p – SIS 30 6:30p
The Cracked Mirror: Exploring Opioid Abuse Deterrent Methods from the Laboratory to the Real User
Level 4 Nolita 3
Beatrice Setnik phd
*Not certified for credit
43
saturday 9.7 7:30a – 8:20a
INTG Acupuncture for Addressing the Intersection of Pain, OUD, and PTSD 01
Level 4 Nolita 3
Edward S. Lee md
7:30a – 8:20a
PHM Better with Age? 09 Pain Management of the Older Adult
Level 3 Gracia 3
Maria C. Foy pharmd, bcps, cpe Tanya J. Uritsky pharmd, bcps
7:30a – 8:20a
SIS 31
Let’s Get on the Same Prescribing Page: Standardizing Opioid Prescribing Practices Among Sickle Cell Disease Patients
Level 3 Gracia 1
Collin V. Montgomery aprn Leigh Ann Wilson lcsw
7:30a – 8:20a
VHA Moving Mountains: 01 Shifting the Pain Management Paradigm
Level 3 Gracia 5
Jessica D. Johnson pharmd, bcacp Judith A. Miller psyd, hbc, cdac Robert Towle pt, ms, cert mdt, cscs
8:30a – 9:30a
ENC Pain Pathways Made Simple 01
Level 4 Nolita 1
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
8:30a – 9:30a
INTG Nutritional Pain Management 02
Level 4 Nolita 3
Robert A. Bonakdar md, faafp, facn
8:30a – PHM Testing the Waters: 10 9:30a Urine Drug Screening for the Perplexed Among Us
Level 3 Gracia 1
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
9:40a – 10:30a
MDL Embrace Changes and Prevent Overdose: 04 A Basic Blueprint for Legal Risk Mitigation and Response
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jennifer Bolen jd
9:40a – 10:30a
PAL 01
That’s Debatable! Does Cannabis Reduce Opioid Death, and Does Gabapentin Increase It?
Level 4 Nolita 1
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
9:40a – 10:30a
VHA VA’s Stepped Care Model for Pain Management and Whole Health: 02 Patient-Centered Biopsychosocial Pain Care
Level 3 Gracia 5
Heidi Klingbeil md Friedhelm Sandbrink md
10:30a – Break 11:00a 10:40a – MYO Transformative Care for Myopain: 12:00p 01 Enhancing Long-Term Success in Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia (Part 1)
Level 4 Nolita 3
James R. Fricton dds, ms Ginevra Liptan md
11:10a – ENC Clinical Pearls: 12:00p 02 Unraveling the Secrets of Imaging Studies
Level 3 Gracia 3
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
44
saturday 9.7 11:10a – INTG Manual Therapies for Pain Management 12:00p 03
Level 4 Nolita 1
Michael J. Kurisu do, abihm
11:10a – PHM Frankie Says RELAX: 12:00p 11 The INs and OUTs of Skeletal Muscle Relaxants
Level 3 Gracia 1
Amanda M. Daniels pharmd, bcps Christopher M. Herndon pharmd, bcps, cpe
12:30 – Lunch Break 1:30p 1:40p – PAL You’re Using WHAT for Pain Management? 02 2:30p Psilocybin, Ecstasy, and Ketamine
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
1:40p – SIS 32 2:30p
Improving Safety of Chronic Opioid Prescribing by Incorporating Clinical Pharmacists on Teams
Level 3 Gracia 5
Andrew S. Friedman md Amanda Locke pharmd, mba, bcacp
1:40p – VHA Opioid Therapy and Opioid Tapering: 03 2:30p Guidance for Clinicians to Improve Outcomes A Case-Based Pro/Con Discussion Format
Level 3 Gracia 1
Sanjog S. Pangarkar md Friedhelm Sandbrink md Robert D. Sproul pharmd
1:40p – MYO Transformative Care for Myopain: 02 3:30p Enhancing Long-Term Success in Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia (Part 2)
Level 4 Nolita 3
James R. Fricton dds, ms Ginevra Liptan md
2:40p – INTG Expanding Options for Chronic Pain Treatment: 04 3:30p The Integrative Pain Management Program
Level 3 Gracia 5
Emily Hurstak md, mph, mas
2:40p – MDL Get Your Specimens in Order: 05 3:30p The Importance of Individualized Test Orders and Timely Test Utilization
Level 3 Gracia 3
Jennifer Bolen jd
2:40p – PAL Doing Business or Risky Business? 03 3:30p Benzodiazepines and Opioids in Palliative Care
Level 4 Nolita 1
Maria C. Foy pharmd, bcps, cpe Tanya J. Uritsky pharmd, bcps
2:40p – VHA Opioids and Mental Health— 04 3:30p Suicide Prevention as Highest Priority
Level 3 Gracia 1
Elizabeth M. Oliva phd Friedhelm Sandbrink md
*Not certified for credit
45
46
47
aculty
49
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe
Michael C. Barnes jd, miep
Professor of Neurology Albany Medical College Director, Comprehensive Pain Center Albany Medical Center Department of Neurology Albany, ny
Attorney, Managing Partner DCBA Law & Policy llp Washington dc Nothing to disclose
Rami Ben-Joseph phd Consultant NEMA Research Naples, fl
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Vertex Grant/Research Support: Allergan, Amgen, DSI, Lilly, Novartis, Teva, Honoraria: Lilly, Pfizer, Teva, Vertex Stock Shareholder: Elsevier Advisory Board: Pfizer
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Neumentum
Jennifer Bolen jd
Sawsan As-Sanie md, mph
Founder Legal Side of Pain Knoxville, tn
Associate Professor University of Michigan Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Ann Arbor, mi
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Paradigm Labs Advisory Board: Innovative Laboratory Solutions/Best Test Cups
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Abbvie, Myovant
Robert A. Bonakdar md, faafp, facn
Timothy J. Atkinson pharmd, bcps, cpe
Assistant Clinical Professor Department of Family and Preventative Medicine University of California School of Medicine San Diego, ca Director of Pain Management Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine La Jolla, ca
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Pain Management Director PGY2 Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacy Residency Department of Veterans Affairs VA Tennessee Valley Healthcare System Murfeesboro, tn Clinical Advisor, Pharmacy Pain Specialist Axial Healthcare Nashville, tn
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Elsevier, Lippincott, Oxford University Press, Standard Process
Frank Breve pharmd, mba
Adjunct Clinical Professor Temple University School of Pharmacy Instructor P142: Social and Economic Aspects of Healthcare Philadelphia, PA Clinical Pharmacist Consultant, President and ceo Mid-Atlantic PharmaTech Consultants, llc Ventnor, NJ
Consultant/Independent Contractor: axialHealthcare Honoraria: Rockpointe Advisory Board: Purdue Pharma
Miroslav Backonja md
Clinical Professor University of Washington Department of Neurology Seattle, wa Executive Director Scientific Solutions Pain and Inflammation Franchise Worldwide Clinical Trials Morrisville, sc
Nothing to disclose
Abigail T. Brooks pharmd, bcps
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist West Palm Beach VA Medical Center West Palm Beach, fl
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Meredith Barad md
Clinical Associate Professor Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine Anesthesia–Adult Pain Clinical Assistant Professor Neurology & Neurological Sciences Stanford University Pain Management Center Associate Division Chief of Pain Education and Associate Program Director Redwood City, ca
Garry J. Brydges dnp, mba, acnp-bc, crna, faan
Clinical Assistant Professor of Acute Care Clinical Coordinator University of Texas School of Nursing Nurse Anesthesia Program Chief Nurse Anesthetist University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center Houston, tx Nothing to disclose
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Lilly Other/Royalty: Allergan, ATI, Teva
50
Keith A. Candiotti md
Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba
Emanuel M. Papper Professor and Chair University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative Medicine and Pain Management Miami, fl
Vice Chair Clinical Affairs Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Baltimore, MD Chairman Inova Health System Falls Church, va
Nothing to disclose
Jorge F. Carrillo md
Associate Professor University of Central Florida College of Medicine Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology Gynecologic Surgeon Orlando VA Medical Center Orlando, fl
Nothing to disclose
Corinne E. Cooley dpt, ocs
Physical Therapist Stanford Pain Management Center Orthopedic & Sports Rehabilitation Chronic Pain Physical Therapy Redwood City, ca
Nothing to disclose
Larry Charleston IV md, msc, fahs
Nothing to disclose
Associate Professor of Neurology University of Michigan Health System Department of Neurology Ann Arbor, mi
David Cosio phd, abpp
Psychologist University of Illinois College of Medicine Division of Pain Medicine Psychologist Jesse Brown Veterans Affairs Medical Center Anesthesiology/Pain Clinic Chicago, il
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Allergan Advisory Board: Alder, Biohaven
Martin D. Cheatle phd
Associate Professor Director Pain and Chemical Dependency Program Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania Center for Study of Addiction Philadelphia, pa
Nothing to disclose
Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc
Professional Certified Coach International Coach Federation Lexington, ky
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Paul J. Christo md, mba
Associate Professor Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine Division of Pain Medicine Baltimore, md
Amanda M. Daniels pharmd, bcps
Adjunct Clinical Instructor of Pharmacy Practice Southern Illinois University Edwardsville School of Pharmacy Edwardsville, il Clinical Pharmacy Specialist - Pain Management STL VA Medical Center St. Louis, mo
Consultant/Independent Contractor: BTG International, Daiichi Sankyo Other/Royalty: Algiatry, LLC–Media Work
Nothing to disclose
Jamie Clapp pt, dpt, ocs
Supervisory Physical Therapist Intrepid Spirit Center Interdisciplinary Pain Management Fort Bragg, nc
Mechele Fillman msn, np-c
Nurse Practitioner Christus St. Vincent Regional Medical Center Santa Fe, nm
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
51
Colleen M. Fitzgerald md, ms
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
Associate Professor Loyola University Stritch School of Medicine Department of Ob/Gyn, Department of FPM&R Division of Urology Medical Director Loyola University Medical Center ob/gyn Maywood, il
Assistant Clinical Professor University of West Virginia School of Pharmacy Morgantown, WV Consultant/Independent Contractor: Daiichi Sankyo, Clinical Pharmacists Advisory Panel, Member
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe
Nothing to disclose
Clinical Pharmacist, Palliative Care OhioHealth Riverside Methodist Hospital Columbus, oh
Maria C. Foy pharmd, bcps, cpe
Nothing to disclose
Patient Care Coordinator Palliative Care Abington Memorial Hospital Abington, pa
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe CEO & Medical Director HealthQ2 Richmond, va
Speakers Bureau: Daiichi Sankyo
Nothing to disclose
James R. Fricton dds, ms
Professor Emeritus University of Minnesota Department of Diagnostic and Surgical Sciences Minneapolis, mn Senior Researcher Investigator Health Partners Health Partners Institute Bloomington, mn
Debra B. Gordon rn, dnp, faan
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Andrew S. Friedman md
Errol M. Gould phd
Teaching Associate University of Washington Department of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine Co-Director Harborview Integrated Pain Care Program Harborview Medical Center Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine Seattle, wa
Clinical Assistant Professor University of Washington Department of Medicine Head Virginia Mason Medical Center Section of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Seattle, wa
Senior Director Global Head of Clinical Development and Medical Affairs Nalproprion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Henderson, nv Stock Shareholder: Nalpropion Pharmaceuticals
Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam Educational Consultant Former Director Wasser Pain Centre Pain and Chemical Dependency Division Toronto, Ontario
Nothing to disclose
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
Adjunct Associate Professor Western New England College of Pharmacy Western New England University Department of Pharmacy Springfield, ma Adjunct Associate Professor of Pharmacy Practice Albany College of Pharmacy & Health Sciences Union University Albany, ny
Nothing to disclose
Jeffrey A. Gudin md
Attending Physician Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Management Englewood Hospital and Medical Center Clinical Associate Professor Department of Anesthesiology, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School Newark, nj
Consultant/Independent Contractor: BioDelivery Sciences International, Firstox Laboratories Speakers Bureau: Acutis Diagnostics, AstroZeneca, Daiichi Sankyo Advisory Board: AcelRx Pharmaceuticals, Daiichi Sankyo, GSK, Quest Diagnostics
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Averitas, Daiichi, Nektar, Quest, Scilex Speaker's Bureau: BDSI, DSI, Salix, Scilex Advisory Board: BDSI Salix
52
Mayank Gupta md
Jay Joshi md
CEO-President Kansas Society of Interventional Pain Physicians Chairman, Department of Surgery St. Luke‘s Health System Overland Park, ks
CEO and Medical Director National Pain Centers Vernon Hills, il Nothing to disclose
Ming-Chih Kao md, phd
Consultant/Independent Contractor/Speakers Bureau: Nevro Corp., Vertos Grant/Research Support: Biotronik, Nevro Corp., Vertos Advisory Board: Vertos
Clinical Assistant Professor Stanford Pain Management Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Redwood City, ca
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms
Instructor Stanford University Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine Stanford, CA
Nothing to disclose
Brian F. Kaufman do, fasam, facp, facoi
Pain Management Physician, Addiction Medicine CAP Quality Methadone Treatment Services Westbrook, me Owner/Practitioner Total Health & Spine Wells, me
Nothing to disclose
Christopher M. Herndon pharmd, bcps, cpe Associate Professor Southern Illinois University Pharmacy Practice Edwardsville, il Pharmacist Clinician Scott Air Force Base and Southern Illinois Healthcare Foundation Family Medicine, 375th Medical Group Belleville, il
Nothing to disclose
Heidi Klingbeil md
Chief, Rehabilitation Medicine James J. Peters VA Medical Center Bronx, ny Associate Professor of Rehabilitation & Regenerative Medicine Columbia University New York, ny
Nothing to disclose
Emily Hurstak md, mph, mas
Nothing to disclose
Clinical Instructor University of California, San Francisco Assistant Director San Francisco Free Clinic San Francisco, ca
Courtney M. Kominek pharmd, bcps, cpe
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist–Pain Management Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans’ Hospital Columbia, MO
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Gary W. Jay md, faapm
Michael J. Kurisu do, abihm
Clinical Professor University of North Carolina Department of Neurology Chapel Hill, nc
Clinical Director Center for Integrative Medicine University of California San Diego Department of Family Medicine Medical Director Osteopathic Medical Center San Diego, ca
Nothing to disclose
Jessica D. Johnson pharmd, bcacp
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center North Chicago, il
Nothing to disclose
Georgine M. Lamvu md, mph, facog
Gynecologic Surgeon and Pelvic Pain Specialist Veterans Administration Medical Center Department of Surgery Orlando, fl
Nothing to disclose
Wayne Boice Jonas md
Professor Department of Family Medicine Georgetown University Washington dc
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Abbvie, Uroshape Grant/Research Support: National Vulvodynia Association, Pfizer Speakers Bureau: Abbvie Advisory Board: Daiichi Sankyo
Nothing to disclose
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Edward S. Lee md
Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Medical Director Integrative Health and Wellness Salsibury VA Healthcare System Salisbury, NC
Professor and Executive Director Advanced Post-Graduate Education in Palliative Care Pharmacy Practice and Science Program Director Online Master of Science and Graduate Certificate in Palliative Care University of Maryland School of Pharmacy Baltimore, md
Honoraria: Helms Medical Institute
Sean Li md
Regional Medical Director and Partner Premier Pain Centers, llc Shrewsbury, nj Attending Pain Physician Riverview Medical Center Red Bank, nj
Nothing to disclose
Laura Meyer-Junco pharmd, bcps
Clinical Assistant Professor University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) College of Pharmacy Rockford Campus Clinical Pharmacist Mercy Health System and Hospice Care of America Rockford, il
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Avanos, Biotras, Nalu, Nevro, SI-Bone, Vertiflex, Vertos Medical Grant/Research Support: Avanos, Nevro, Semnur Pharmaceutical, Sollis Pharmaceutical, Vertiflex Advisory Board: Biotras, Nevro, Vertiflex Stock Shareholder: Nevro, Nuvectra, Suture Concepts
Nothing to disclose
Ginevra Liptan md
Judith A. Miller psyd, hbc, cdac
Founder and Medical Director The Frida Center for Fibromyalgia Portland, or
FHCC Pain University Program Director/Dean Pain Advisory Review Committee (PARC) Co-Chair Health Behavioral Coordinator Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center North Chicago, il
Nothing to disclose
Amanda Locke pharmd, mba, bcacp
Nothing to disclose
Director PGY2 Ambulatory Care Residency Program Ambulatory Pharmacy Manager Virginia Mason Hospital and Medical Center Seattle, wa
John F. Mondanaro ma, lcat, mt-bc, ccls
Clinical Director Mount Sinai Beth Israel Louis & Lucille Armstrong Music Therapy Program New York, ny
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Joanne V. Loewy da, lcat, mt-bc
Director and Associate Professor Mount Sinai Beth Israel-Icahn School of Medicine Louis Armstrong Center for Music & Medicine New York, ny
Collin V. Montgomery aprn
Adjunct Faculty Instructor College of Nursing Advanced Practice Registered Nurse University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Adult Clinical Sickle Cell Program Little Rock, ar
Nothing to disclose
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc Nurse Practitioner–Pain Medicine Stanford Health Care Division of Pain Medicine Stanford, ca
Nothing to disclose
Deborah Morrow lcsw, ladc, icaadc, emt Pain Program Coordinator Eastern Oklahoma VA Center Muskogee, ok
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Novartis Honoraria: Amgen, Lilly
Nothing to disclose
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Palliative Care Pharmacy Specialist MedStar Washington Hospital Center Washington dc Nothing to disclose
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Srinivas Nalamachu md
Steven D. Passik phd
Clinical Assistant Professor Kansas University Medical Center Rehabilitation Medicine Kansas City, ks President and Medical Director International Clinical Research Institute Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Overland Park, ks
Vice President Collegium Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Scientific Affairs, Education and Policy Cantor, ma Other/Royalty: Full time employee at Collegium
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
Director, Research NEMA Research Inc. Senior Partner Naples Anesthesia and Pain Associates Naples, fl
Consultant/Independent Contractor: BDSI, Collegium, Daiichi Sankyo Grant/Research Support: Collegium Honoraria: BDSI, Collegium, Daiichi, Ferring, Lilly, Pernix, Pfizer, Purdue Speakers Bureau: BDSI, Collegium, Ferring, Pernix, Purdue Advisory Board: Pernix, Pfizer, Lilly Stock Shareholder: Myoscience
Consultant/Independent Contractor: BDSI, DSI, Heron, Inspirion, Neumentum, Salix Grant/Research Support: NEMA Research, Salix Speakers Bureau/Honoraria: BDSI, DSI, Salix Advisory Board: Heron Stock Shareholder: Neumentum Other/Royalty: Physician Brothers
Elizabeth M. Oliva phd
VA Opioid National Opioid Overdose Education and Naloxone Distribution Coordinator Menlo Park, ca
Mel Pohl md
Nothing to disclose
Clinical Assistant Professor University of Nevada School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Chief Medical Officer Las Vegas Recovery Center Las Vegas, nv
Einar Ottestad md
Clinical Associate Professor Stanford University School of Medicine Division of Pain Medicine Palo Alto, ca President World Academy of Pain Medicine Ultrasonography North Reading, ma
Nothing to disclose
Heather Poupore-King phd
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Ipsen, Nine Continents Medical, Tulavi Medical Advisory Board: Bioness
Clinical Assistant Professor Stanford Pain Management Center Division of Pain Medicine Redwood City, ca
Sarah Palyo phd
Nothing to disclose
Health Sciences Assistant Clinical Professor University of California, San Francisco Department of Psychiatry Manager of the Intensive Pain Rehabilitation Program and Behavioral Pain Programs San Francisco VA Medical Center Medical Health San Francisco, ca
Scott Powers phd, abpp, fahs
Scientific Director Clinical Research and Trials Cincinatti Children’s Hospital Pediatric Psychologist Research, Division of Behavioral Medicine & Clinical Psychology Cincinatti, oh
Nothing to disclose
Advisory Board: Allergan–AllerganMIND
Sanjog S. Pangarkar md
Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine Director of Pain Service West Los Angeles Veterans Hospital Los Angeles, ca
Ravi Prasad phd
Nothing to disclose
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Johnson and Johnson Advisory Board: Bicycle Health, Lumina Analytics Stock Shareholder: Bicycle Health
Clinical Professor University of California, Davis School of Medicine Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine Sacramento, ca
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Robert B. Raffa phd
Michael E. Schatman phd, cpe, daspe
Professor Emeritus and Past Chair Temple University School of Pharmacy Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences Philadelphia, pa
Adjunct Clinical Assistant Professor Tufts School of Medicine Department of Public Health & Community Medicine Editor-in-Chief Journal of Pain Research Boston, ma
Honoraria: BDSI, Salix, US WorldMeds Stock Shareholder: Neumentum
Consultant/Independent Contractor: kalĂŠo, Quest Diagnostics, Salix Speakers Bureau: kalĂŠo Advisory Board: Salix
Bradlee Rea pharmd
Outpatient Pain Management Clinical Pharmacist Kaweah Delta Health Care District Visalia, ca
Kathryn A. Schopmeyer pt, dpt, cpe
Nothing to disclose
Physical Therapy Program Coordinator, Pain Management San Francisco VA Healthcare System San Francisco, ca
Nina Riggins md, phd
Assistant Clinical Professor University of California, San Francisco Department of Neurology Division of Headache and Facial Pain San Francisco, CA
Nothing to disclose
Beatrice Setnik phd
Adjunct Professor University of Toronto Department of Pharmacology & Toxicology Toronto, CA Chief Scientific Officer, Scientific & Regulatory Affairs Altasciences Raleigh, nc
Nothing to disclose
Andrew R. Rossetti mmt, lcat, mt-bc
Appointment Associate Professor University of Barcelona Masters Program in Music Therapy Barcelona, Spain Coordinator, Music Therapy Program in Radiation Oncology Mount Sinai Beth Israel Medical Center Louis Armstrong Center for Music & Medicine New York, ny
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Full-time employee of Altasciences
Kristen M. Slater psyd
Clinical Instructor Stanford Pain Management Redwood City, ca
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Ethan B. Russo md
Director of Research and Development International Cannabis and Cannabinoids Institute (ICCI) Vashon, wa
Brett B. Snodgrass fnp-c, cpe, facpp, faanp Clinical Director Palliative Care Services Baptist Memorial Health Care Memphis, tn
Consultant/Independent Contractor: ICCI consults with companies pursuing preparation of cannabis as a pharmaceutical or supplement. ICCI does not currently make or market any products Advisory Board: CB1 Capital (no payment to date) Stock Shareholder: GW Pharmaceuticals (stock for my wife)
Honoraria: Salix, Scilex
Robert D. Sproul pharmd
Friedhelm Sandbrink md
Program Director, OVAMC Pain Management and Program Manager Pharmacy Pain Management & Palliative Care Orlando VA Medical Center Pain Program Orlando, fl
Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurology George Washington University Director, Pain Management Program Washington VA Medical Center Department of Neurology Washington DC
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
Robert Towle pt, ms, cert mdt, cscs
Scot H. Sarver
Senior Physical Therapist Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center North Chicago, il
Executive Director/Founder World Academy of Pain Medicine Ultrasonography Reading, ma
Nothing to disclose
Nothing to disclose
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Tanya J. Uritsky pharmd, bcps
Clinical Pharmacy Specialist in Pain and Palliative Care Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia, pa Nothing to disclose
Lynn R. Webster md, facpm, fasam Vice President PRA Healthsciences Salt Lake City, ut
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Alcobra, Bonti, Charleston Labs, Daiichi Sankyo, Depomed, Egalet, Indivior, Insys, Kempharm, Mallinckrodt, Merck, Pain Therapeutics, Pernix, Pfizer, Shionogi, Teva, Trevena, Trevi, Vallon Pharmaceuticals Advisory Board: BDSI, Charleston Labs, Depomed, Egalet, Ensysce Biosciences, Inspirion Therapeutics, Insys Therapeutics, Mallinkcrodt Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Teva, Trevena
Leigh Ann Wilson lcsw
Medical Social Worker University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Adult Sickle Cell Program Little Rock, ak Nothing to disclose
Charles Wollmuth
Research Associate NEMA Research, Inc. Naples, fl Nothing to disclose
Steven L. Wright md, faap, fasam Physician Wright Medical, llc Littleton, co
Consultant/Independent Contractor: Alliance for Benzodiazepine Best Practices, Cordant Labs, Pyxant Labs Speakers Bureau: Alliance for Benzodiazepine Best Practices, Cordant Labs, Daiichi Sankyo, Indivior, Pyxant Labs, US World Meds
Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap Faculty and Clinical Instructor Course Director Pain and Addiction SUNY Stony Brook School of Medicine Stony Brook, ny Ethics Committee Chair St Catherine of Siena Medical Center Smithtown, ny Nothing to disclose
Stephen J. Ziegler phd, jd
Mayday Pain & Scholar Fellow and Professor Emeritus of Public Policy Purdue University Department of Public Policy Fort Wayne, in Nothing to disclose
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PREVENTING A BENZODIAZEPINE CRISIS & PROTRACTED WITHDRAWAL SYNDROME
JOSEPH PERGOLIZZI, JR.
ROBERT RAFFA STEVEN WRIGHT
59
WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER 4
atellite vents
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would like to thank our corporate partners for their participation in this year’s satellite events. PAINWeek is appreciative of the supportive role that members of this community continue to play in our efforts to provide frontline practitioners with quality educational programs. These satellite events are not part of the official 2019 PaiNWeek National Conference and are planned solely by the sponsoring organizations/companies. Course descriptions for these activities will be provided by individual event organizers. Please contact the organizers for further details. Seating is strictly limited for all events. Preference may be given to preregistrants. If you are registered, please still plan on arriving at the door no later than 15 minutes prior to start time to ensure that your seat is held for you. A limited number of meals or refreshments will be served where indicated. Nonmedical professionals or members of industry may only be allowed to participate at the discretion of the program organizers. Typically organizers do not accommodate family members, office staff, or guests of healthcare professionals. There are no fees to attend any of these satellite events.
Non-CME activities
Not certified for credit
PDM-01 Breakfast Managing Chronic Pain With AbuseDeterrent Extended-Release Opioids:
Clinical Evidence and Implications
Sponsored by Collegium Pharmaceutical, Inc.
Miguel de la Garza md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Brera Ballroom
8:30a – 9:30a
● Breakfast will be served Contact: Briana Guiney (646) 416–5137 ● bguiney@mei-nyc.com
PDM-02 Breakfast Chronic Pain:
Unmet Needs, New Frontiers
Sponsored by Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly and Company
Jeremy Adler dmsc, pa-c
Information provided has not have not involved any verification of the findings, conclusions, and opinions by PAINWeek. Opinions expressed by speakers do not necessarily reflect those of PAINWeek. No responsibility is assumed by PAINWeek for any injury and/or damage to persons or property as a matter of products liability, negligence or otherwise, or from any use or operation of any methods, products, instruction, or ideas contained in the material herein. Because of the rapid advances in the medical sciences, PAINWeek recommends that independent verification of diagnoses and medication dosages should be made by each healthcare professional. Information provided was accurate as of press time. For the most up-to-date information please visit m.painweek.org.
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, rn-bc, anp-bc
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Brera Ballroom
8:30a – 9:30a
● Breakfast will be served Contact: Giana Sirota (212) 733–0237 ● giana.sirota@pfizer.com
PDM-03 Lunch Rethink Relief When Treating Chronic Pain Patients Sponsored by BioDelivery Sciences
Anand Thakur md
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Brera Ballroom
12:30p – 1:30p
● Lunch will be served Contact: Susan Myers (919) 582–9050 ● smyers@bdsi.com
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CME activity
PDM-04 Breakfast Opioid Treatment Challenges:
Certified for credit
Therapies for Managing the Complexities of Opioid Treatment Sponsored by Salix Pharmaceuticals
Youseff Josephson do
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Castellana Ballroom
8:30a – 9:30a
SYM-01 Coffee Manage Pain and Minimize Misuse/Abuse:
● Breakfast will be served Contact: Debbie Keeffe (973) 240–0180 ● dkeeffe@westfieldgroupusa.com
Using Abuse-deterrent Opioids to Enhance Patient Quality of Life This program is supported by an educational grant from Daiichi
PDM-05 Lunch Fremanezumab-vfrm Injection:
Sankyo, Inc. This activity is jointly provided by Global Education Group and Rockpointe Corporation.
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, fccp, fashp, ffsmb
An anti-CGRP for the Preventive Treatment of Migraine in Adults
Jeffrey Gudin md
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
Sponsored by Teva Pharmaceuticals
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe Andrew M. Blumenfeld md, fahs
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Castellana Ballroom
● Coffee will be served
12:30p – 1:30p
Contact: (888) 661–3010 ● cme@rockpointe.com
● Lunch will be served Contact: Jordan Halter (973) 352–6764 ● jhalter@hlxusa.com
PDM-06 Refreshments Novel Remote Electrical Neuromodulation (REN) Device For the Acute Treatment of Migraine Sponsored by Theranica LTD
Charles E. Argoff md, cpe Andrew Blumenfeld md, fash
Thursday , September 5 Level 3 Gracia 7
3:30p – 4:30p
● Refreshments will be served Contact: Scott Szymanski (203) 994–4511 ● s.szymanski@theranica.com
PDM-07 Lunch Opioid Therapy Insights:
A Holistic Approach to Managing Patients Sponsored by Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. & AstraZeneca
Paul Choi md
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Brera Ballroom
12:30p – 1:30p
● Lunch will be served Contact: Ashley O’Berry (212) 885–3973 ● ashley.oberry@prohealthmeded.com
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7:00a -8:00a
PLEASE JOIN US FOR AN INTERACTIVE PRESENTATION Sponsored by Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., AstraZeneca, & Inspirion Delivery Sciences
Opioid Therapy Insights: A Holistic Approach to Managing Patients Friday, September 6, 2019 • 12:30 pm – 1:30 pm
L O C AT I O N
Brera Ballroom, Level 3 The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas Las Vegas, Nevada
F A C U LT Y
Paul J. Choi, MD, DABA Medical Director DaVita HealthCare Partners Medical Group Huntington Beach, California
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION
In this interactive, industry-sponsored presentation, we will discuss when to consider an abuse-deterrent opioid for chronic pain. We will also explore treatment options for opioid-induced constipation in adult patients with chronic non-cancer pain.
This program is being sponsored by Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. The speaker is being compensated for the presentation. The program is not CME accredited and may not be used for CME accreditation. In adherence with PhRMA guidelines, spouses or other guests are not permitted to attend company-sponsored programs. Please be advised that information such as your name and the value and purpose of any educational item, meal or other items of value you may receive may be publicly disclosed. If you are licensed in any state or other jurisdiction, or are an employee or contractor of any organization or governmental entity that limits or prohibits meals from pharmaceutical companies, please identify yourself so that compliance with such requirements can be ensured.
© 2019 Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. All Rights Reserved. PP-US-PAIN-0424 8/19 © 2019 AstraZeneca. All Rights Reserved. US-31796 8/19
heather poupore-king & kristen slater
using metaphors, mindfulness, and values to promote behavioral change
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wed sept 4
CHARLES ARGOFF
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6
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PARTS 1 & 2 LARRY CHARLESTON SCOTT POWERS NINA RIGGINS
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THURS SEPT 5
escriptions
ourse
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ACU
MYO
Acute Pain Management
International Myopain Society
AHS
NRO
American Headache Society
Neurology
BHV
PAL
Behavioral Pain Management
Palliative Care
CBN
PEF
Medical Cannabinoids
Pain Educators Forum
CPS
PHM
Chronic Pain Syndromes
Pharmacotherapy
ENC
PMC
Encore
Pain Management Coaching
INT
POS*
Interventional Pain Management
Poster Session
INTG
SIS
Integrative Pain Management
Special Interest Session
IPPS
SYM
International Pelvic Pain Society
Symposia
KEY
VHA
Keynote
Veterans Health Administration
MAS
WRK
Master Class
Workshop
MDL
Medical/Legal
*Not certified for credit
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ACU-01 Acute Pain in Patients with Active Substance Use Disorder
per person per year. Acute pain is a consequence of most surgical interventions. Certain procedures result in higher pain trajectories that, if not adequately addressed, can lead to poorer outcomes and increased costs. Clinical pathways are being developed to address improving outcomes in the most cost-efficient manner. This course examines new options on the horizon for the management of moderate to severe in-hospital acute pain management; the impact of scheduled vs not scheduled analgesics related to the management of in-hospital acute postoperative pain management; health economic and outcomes measures related to inhospital acute moderate to severe postoperative pain; and enhanced recovery after surgery.
Debra B. Gordon rn, dnp, faan
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 1
7:00a –7:50a
Opioid use and addiction have soared in the United States over the past 20 years, and drug overdoses have become the leading cause of injury death. Persons with opioid use disorder (oud), particularly those injecting opioids, frequently require hospitalization and encounter need of acute opioid analgesia for trauma, surgery, infection, and other medical conditions. Treatment of acute pain in persons with oud present challenges for acute pain management including altered nociception thresholds, physical dependence and withdrawal, tolerance, impaired immune response, and behavioral issues such as opioid seeking and poor coping skills. Clear goals of care and use of engaging communication methods are essential to deliver optimal inpatient care and smooth plans for hospital discharge. This session will cover key principles to working with this population including 1) improving patient safety and healthcare outcomes by treating underlying oud; 2) optimizing pain relief for necessary surgical and medical treatment by providing multimodal analgesia; 3) facilitating access to medication treatment programs upon discharge; 4) empowering patients and providers by promoting clear, just, and equitable treatment of pain; and 5) protecting communities by promoting discharge opioid prescribing habits that minimize risk.
ACU-03 Case-Based Challenges in Acute Pain Management Debra B. Gordon rn, dnp, faan
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 3
Acute pain is associated with negative outcomes, and
efforts to prevent and control pain are necessary. Goals for acute postoperative pain management include reducing the incidence and severity of pain, particularly that which impacts patient function, such as movement. Also important is minimizing side effects from analgesics, preventing postoperative complications, enhancing recovery, and preventing chronic pain if possible. The purpose of this session will be to discuss common challenges including pain assessment, opioid safety, and individualizing multimodal analgesia. Patient cases will be used to illustrate decision-making when applying basic principles of multimodal treatment to perioperative treatment plans.
ACU-02 The Dynamics of Managing Acute Postoperative Pain in the Current Opioid-Sparing Environment
ACU-04 Enhancing Recovery After Surgery:
Rami Ben-Joseph phd Keith A. Candiotti md
How Certified Nurse Anesthetists Are Improving Outcomes
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 3
2:40p – 3:30p
10:40a –12:00p
Garry J. Brydges dnp, mba, acnp-bc, crna, faan
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 3
Considering the significant risks of surgery, initiatives to improve safety and outcomes would have a broad impact on public health. The number of surgical procedures worldwide has grown to >232 million annually. Studies report that Americans undergo an average of 9.2 surgical procedures per lifetime: 3.4 inpatient, 2.6 outpatient, and 3.2 nonoperating room invasive procedures. The per capita rate of surgery continues to increase through age 75, peaking at 0.16 operations
4:40p – 5:30p
The healthcare community is at a crossroads as the
opioid crisis rages in America: how to provide effective pain management while preventing opioid abuse and addiction. This session will explore evidence-based opioid-sparing pain management techniques and how they are improving patient outcomes and quality of life while also reducing overall costs.
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AHS-01 American Headache Society:
on nurse practitioners and physician assistants: providing greater access to care by easing the restrictions on who could provide mat after completion of continued education. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants caring for patients with chronic pain and addiction need continued education and empowerment to accept this level of responsibility. This session will look at the history of addiction, past therapies, current therapies, and the future of addiction, specifically how it intersects with chronic pain management.
Migraine Education Program (Part 1) Larry Charleston IV md, msc, fahs
Scott Powers phd, abpp, fahs Nina Riggins md, phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
10:40a – 12:00p
Developed by the American Headache Society®, the Migraine Education Program includes new advances and addresses acute and preventive treatment options. In addition, we’ll highlight epidemiologic data on the scope and distribution of migraine with an emphasis on diagnosing chronic migraine. Recent insights into the mechanisms of the complaint will set the stage for improving treatment outcomes for this most disabling of headache disorders. Part 1 will cover Diagnosis of Migraine and Episodic Migraine; Transitions, Risk Factors, and Barriers to Care; and case studies and Q&A.
APP-02 No Guts, No Glory:
Mystery of the Microbiome
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
Several recent studies have found intriguing links
between gut microbes, rheumatoid arthritis, and other diseases. Additional studies have shown the interactions between the central nervous system, enteric nervous system, and the gastrointestinal tract, suggestive that gut microbiota appears to influence the development of emotional behavior, and stress- and pain-modulation systems. In the age of modern medicine, it is easy to forget that we change our body chemistry every time we eat. The quality and composition of our food has the power to increase or decrease body wide inflammation and modulate pain. Our relationship to food and the way we eat is also cultural and influenced by stress and our environment. The research evidence is robust for dietary interventions and improved health. The changes needed are simple, but not necessarily easy. This lecture will focus on the role that modulation of the microbiome plays in pain, and the ways to optimize the health of the individuals’ gut microbes for pain management and overall well-being.
AHS-02 American Headache Society:
Migraine Education Program (Part 2) Larry Charleston IV md, msc, fahs
Scott Powers phd, abpp, fahs Nina Riggins md, phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
9:40a – 10:30a
1:40p – 3:30p
See AHS-01 for course description. Part 2 will cover Pathophysiology of Migraine and Episodic Migraine; Acute Treatment Strategies; and Preventative Treatment Strategies.
APP-01 Medication Assisted Therapy: New Opportunities in Treatment
Brett B. Snodgrass fnp-c, cpe, facpp, faanp
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
APP-03 Achieving Change from Within:
7:00a – 7:50a
Use of Motivational Interviewing
Medication assisted therapy (mat) for addiction has
Ravi Prasad phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 3
been available since 2000. Up until 2016, physicians have been the only healthcare providers able to prescribe buprenorphine for opioid addiction. On July 22, 2016, President Obama signed into law the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (cara). This is the first major federal addiction legislation in 40 years and the most comprehensive effort undertaken to address the opioid epidemic. cara incorporated many needed resources to better manage patients with addiction, but one specific aspect of the legislation was focused
11:10a – 12:00p
Motivational interviewing (mi) is a counseling approach that was initially applied to address drinking behavior. At its core, it helps reduce patients’ ambivalence and move them toward action through use of their own intrinsic motivation. Over the years, mi has been applied broadly across different health domains to help shape outcomes. The approach can be particularly beneficial when working
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with patients who are perceived to be stuck and not making satisfactory progress in treatment. This presentation will introduce the audience to mi, review the concepts underlying it, and discuss its specific application in pain settings. A video of mi in action will be presented and, as time permits, a live mi demonstration will take place.
starting an acute pain service in the acute care setting, potentially bringing improved outcomes and consumer satisfaction, along with specific challenges. Finally, the value of apps as frontline clinicians on the acute pain service will be discussed.
BHV-01 Moving Beyond the Obvious:
APP-04 Through the Eyes of an Expert Witness:
The Pivotal Role of Psychology in Pain Management
Brett B. Snodgrass fnp-c, cpe, facpp, faanp
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
The Importance of Chart Documentation in the Chronic Pain Patient Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 1
Ravi Prasad phd
4:40p – 5:30p
Recent years have seen an increase in opioid related deaths, resulting in renewed interest in nonpharmacologic treatments for managing chronic pain. Although psychology has a long-standing history in pain care, many clinicians have a limited awareness of its historical and ongoing presence in this arena. This course seeks to fill the aforementioned knowledge gap by providing an overview of the role of psychology in pain etiology and treatment. Different types of psychological therapies and the evidence supporting their use will be reviewed. An emphasis will be placed on the interdisciplinary approach to pain treatment using biopsychosocial rather than biomedical models.
Caring for chronic pain patients in the current landscape is not for the faint of heart and is becoming increasingly more difficult with all the media attention on the “opioid crisis.” Appropriate chart documentation is truly key to keeping yourself and your practice safe in this environment. This session will focus on the use of electronic medical records and associated pitfalls, employing a “case” when opioids are prescribed, and the importance of making an appropriate diagnosis of chronic pain. APP-05 Starting an Acute Pain Service Is Harder Than You Think…
BHV-02 Icebergs, Oceans, and the Experience of Pain
AKA: “OMG Why Did I Agree to Do This Again?!”
Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc
Mechele Fillman msn, np-c
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 1
7:00a – 7:50a
Mel Pohl md
5:40p – 6:30p
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 3
There are no clear guidelines for developing an inpatient acute pain service. Nor are there any guidelines to help determine the mix of services. Who runs it? Anesthesia? Hospitalist? app? Dedicated hospital-based pain services are uncommon except in large academic centers. So what would motivate a smaller hospital to start a new service line? For one, the opioid crisis, where opioids are both in limited supply and overprescribed. There is a national cry for more appropriate opioid prescribing and to limit the number of pills given at any one time. Secondly, the Joint Commission’s requirements surrounding pain states, “The hospital provides information to staff and licensed independent practitioners on available services for consultation and referral of patients with complex pain management needs.” The rationale fulfillment: “Access to specialists through consultation, referral, or use of in-house experts reflects best practice.” This activity will explore the aspects of and rational for
9:40a – 10:30a
Today’s providers are limited by time and must work
with extreme efficiency. And yet for many, 100% of their time is used trying to treat 20% of their patients’ problems. This presentation will address the problem of chronic pain, provide simple tools to use during any office visit, and explain the power of positive and negative thoughts on the chronic pain experience.
BHV-03 The Death of Caesar:
Psychological Stages of Grief and Chronic Pain David Cosio p hd, abpp
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
11:10a – 12:00p
Individuals with chronic pain may lack awareness that they are feeling grief. People who suffer from chronic
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BHV-05 Pain Catastrophizing:
pain may experience losses in several areas: comfort, sexual function, career, income, self-efficacy, cognitive function, intimacy, pride, joy, self-esteem, self-control, independence, mental health, hope, dignity, and certainty. Providers may overlook a patient’s biggest loss: themselves. While everyone copes in their own way and experiences their chronic pain condition uniquely, there are common feelings that most of us share: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Elizabeth Kübler-Ross’s five stages of grief outlined in her 1969 book, On Death and Dying, may help patients better understand what they are going through. Frontline providers can help patients better cope with the grief that often has no resolution by understating the limitations of their illness, listening and trying to understand what they are going through, looking for signs and completing a thorough psychosocial assessment, and organizing psychoeducational support groups and other interventions. The goal is to transform their experience into something livable and bearable.
Making a Mountain Out of a Mole Hill David Cosio phd, abpp
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
Psychosocial factors have become increasingly recognized as important moderators and determinants of the pain experience. One such factor that has garnered great empirical attention is pain catastrophizing. Pain catastrophizing has been described for more than half a century, yet many frontline practitioners continue to be unfamiliar with the construct. It is conceptualized as a negative cognitive affective response to anticipated or actual pain and has been associated with a number of important pain related outcomes. There are several determinants for pain catastrophizing, including female sex, Asian/African race, age, certain genotypes, and hormonal/neurophysiological phenotypes. There are psychometrically sound self-report instruments that can be readily and reliably used with a variety of pain populations. High levels of pain catastrophizing on these measures should be considered a risk marker for adverse pain related outcomes. The primary treatment for pain catastrophizing is cognitive behavior therapy for chronic pain. Education, relaxation, and acceptance and commitment therapy skills have also shown promise.
BHV-04 Lip Service:
Using Words as the Foundation for Effective Pain Management Jamie Clapp pt, d pt, ocs Heather Poupore-King phd
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 3
4:40p – 5:30p
2:40p – 3:30p
BHV-06 Follow the Yellow Brick Road:
Chronic pain, as one of the most common reasons
adults seek medical care, requires foundational steps to set up treatment success. Patient education on diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis can have huge impacts on the outcomes of an individual seeking treatment. Communication is often believed to be an important component of multidisciplinary care and patient experiences. This session will show how to effectively communicate with patients in chronic pain in order to maximize outcomes. We will discuss potential avenues to provide education and information in a way that focuses on appropriate management of a patient’s diagnosis and resolution of fears they may bring from previous medical advice or personal experience. Understanding the benefits of placebo and nocebo effects, and taking these findings into consideration when providing procedural or intervention counseling and appropriate referral of patients, may have powerful impacts to current practice. Also to be discussed: patient expectation management—a challenging subject related to prognosis and developing tools on how to have those challenging conversations in a way that continues to promote activity engagement and reduce fear avoidance.
Reducing Clinician Burnout Corinne E. Cooley dpt, ocs Heather Poupore-King phd
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
5:40p – 6:30p
Providing comprehensive treatment for patients with chronic pain places significant demand on providers. Physician burnout—including emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal satisfaction and accomplishment—has reached epidemic levels for physicians in practice and in training. National surveys show that approximately 46% of physicians report ≥1 symptom(s) of burnout, but rates are as high as 80% in some specialties. Physician burnout and fatigue are independently associated with major medical errors. Despite this, there is limited research and resources available for providers who work with patients in chronic pain. Recognizing the signs of burnout and knowing the steps to take to address and reduce the impact on practitioner performance and quality of life is vitally important. This presentation explores the research on burnout, describes signs and symptoms
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that signal emotional exhaustion, and offers strategies to utilize in your clinical practice to improve overall balance and self-care. Covered in this session is the development of a program for physician fellows with the Stanford Pain Management Center that seeks to reduce physician burnout with the introduction of self-care options, such as self-regulation, cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, exercise, and education on restorative sleep, stress management, and communication training.
drug. This lecture will focus on what we know, and what we don’t know, about the efficacy and safety of medical cannabinoids. Specific recommendations regarding the safest and most effective use of medical marijuana as part of a pain management armamentarium will be provided.
CBN-03 The Global Legalization of Marijuana:
A Reasonable Solution to Treat Pain…Or a Pipe Dream? Stephen J. Ziegler phd, jd
CBN-01 Lost in the Weeds:
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 1
The Past, Present, and Future of Hemp in Pain Management
The United States is struggling with how to deal with
two competing problems: the undertreatment of pain and the abuse of opioids. At the same time, millions of people in third-world countries are dying without access to any opioids, even liquid morphine, due in large part to a variety of barriers relating to distance, regulation, and knowledge. Could marijuana be the solution to both problems? Although marijuana continues to remain prohibited by federal law and treaty, several countries and states in America have defied these prohibitions by passing their own laws and regulating marijuana for recreational or medical purposes. This presentation examines the labyrinth of laws relating to marijuana in the United States, the extent of suffering in third-world countries, and how the global legalization of marijuana may become a viable solution—or is it a pipe dream?
Stephen J. Ziegler phd, jd
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 3
7:00a – 7:50a
Marijuana and hemp are genetically distinct cousins of the genus Cannabis sativa L., yet they have been erroneously associated with each other for the past 80 years. That all changed in December 2018 when Congress removed hemp from the federal Controlled Substances Act and legalized the plant and its derivatives such as cannabidiol (CBD), a substance which has received a great deal of attention for its potential to treat a variety of medical conditions. This change is historic and has enormous implications in medicine and the treatment of pain. However, although the oversight of hemp has essentially been transferred from the DEA to the USDA and individual states, the FDA still retains its authority “to regulate products containing cannabis or cannabisderived compounds” such as CBD. Accordingly, in an effort to inform healthcare professionals about this rapidly changing field, this presentation will discuss the history of hemp, its legality, derivatives, and its potential future in pain treatment.
CBN-04 Cannabis and Opioids Together:
Syn or Synergy?
Christopher M. Herndon pharmd, bcps, cpe Bradlee Rea pharmd
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 1
5:40p – 6:30p
Clinical practice varies greatly in terms of chronic opioid therapy in the presence of known or suspected cannabis use. With more states passing legislation for both medical and recreational use of cannabis, previous policies of prohibiting concurrent use of cannabis and opioid pharmacotherapy for chronic pain or medication assisted therapy have become less clear. A chasm has developed between those who choose to define cannabis use as an aberrant drug taking behavior and those who choose to omit cannabis from routine drug screening as part of opioid risk mitigation. This session will review such policies and the data surrounding cannabis efficacy for pain, and present discussion points on the risks associated with concurrent opioid and cannabis use.
CBN-02 Reefer Madness Revisited:
Taking the Insanity Out of Medical Cannabinoids Michael E. Schatman phd, cpe, daspe
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 1
1:40p – 2:30p
9:40a – 10:30a
Medical and recreational marijuana are sources of great confusion to patients and clinicians alike. A culture of “neuromysticism” around medical marijuana has arisen, leaving patients and clinicians muddled regarding what constitutes “medical” marijuana. This is due in part to the poor quality of the available research on safety and efficacy, which is due, in turn, to the restrictive scheduling of the
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MAKING A MOUNTAIN OUT OF A MOLE HILL DAVID COSIO TUES SEPT 3
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facial & orafacial pain
meredith barad
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tuesday september 3
CPS-01 La Femme Migraineur
CPS-04 Neurogenic Thoracic Outlet Syndrome
Meredith Barad md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
Paul J. Christo md, mba
9:40a – 10:30a
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 5
Despite being one of the more frequently noted triggers for migraine, estrogen and its role in the pathology of migraine is still unknown. This talk discusses the current understanding of the role of estrogen in the headache experience. We will start by touching on the clinical experience the field has gathered and then dig into the fledging science on the role of estrogen in the brain, periphery, and blood vessels, and the hypothesis on how these pathways and interactions might trigger the migraine.
Pain represents a foremost feature of neurogenic thoracic outlet syndrome (ntos). Symptoms include ipsilateral upper extremity pain, sensory loss, shoulder and neck discomfort, arm paresis or edema, headache, and even sympathetic nervous system impairment. This presentation will cover an evidence-based review of the classification, etiology, clinical presentation, diagnostic measures, and surgical treatment of ntos with a focus on nonoperative therapies such as physical modalities, pharmacologic, and the more contemporary, and minimally invasive, cervicothoracic intramuscular treatments with botulinum toxin.
CPS-02 Hanging By a Thread: Facial & Orofacial Pain
ENC-01 Pain Pathways Made Simple
Meredith Barad md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
5:40p – 6:30p
11:10a – 12:00p
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 1
Facial pain can be extremely debilitating for the patient,
and the diagnosis can be extremely difficult for the provider. Facial pain often sends patients to many different subspecialties in search of a cure. This talk will review the diagnosis and treatment of the most common facial pain conditions including neuropathic pain syndromes, temporal mandibular dysfunction, and poorly understood disorders such as burning mouth syndrome and persistent idiopathic facial pain.
8:30a – 9:30a
See pef-02 for course description.
ENC-02 Clinical Pearls:
Unraveling the Secrets of Imaging Studies David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 3
CPS-03 Neck and Upper Extremity Pain Syndromes
11:10a – 12:00p
See pef-05 for course description.
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 3
4:40p – 5:30p
INT-01 Injections, Nerve Blocks, Pumps, and Spinal Cord Stimulation
There are many potential underlying causes for neck and
upper extremity pain. All too often, only the most common conditions such as a disk herniation or carpal tunnel syndrome are explored. The purpose of this course is to review other common problems (such as radiculitis), and not so common (such as rib arthropathy pain syndromes) that can affect the neck and upper extremities. Attention will be given to clinical pearls for recognizing when patients present with such problems, as well as treatments that may prove helpful for both differentially diagnosing and treating various neck and upper extremity pain syndromes, especially those that are often missed or overlooked and easily treatable to resolution when they are identified.
Paul J. Christo md, mba
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
7:00a – 7:50a
This presentation will highlight common procedures
used for pain reduction, their evidence base, and a basic description of how each procedure is performed. We will primarily review epidural steroid injections, facet joint blocks and denervation, sacroiliac joint injections and denervation, myofascial pain, spinal cord stimulation, and intrathecal pumps.
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INT-02 Spinal Stenosis:
Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Treatment
INT-04 Neuromodulation for Advanced Practice Providers
Sean Li m d
Mayank Gupta md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 3
11:10a – 12:00p
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
Degenerative lumbar spinal stenosis (lss) is the most common form of acquired spinal stenosis caused by biomechanical narrowing of the spinal canal and the associated neuroforamen that eventually lead to compression of neural fibers resulting in pain and disability. Neurogenic claudication as a result of lumbar spinal stenosis is a common chronic pain condition that is often difficult to treat due to a paucity of effective minimally invasive options. Patients who exhaust conservative means usually have short-term pain relief with epidural steroid injections prior to being offered open lumbar decompression surgery. lss is a progressive, age related degenerative process that causes narrowing of the lumbar spinal canal. More than 1.2 million patients in the US are diagnosed with spinal stenosis each year, and the number is expected to rise as our population matures. This presentation will focus on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and treatment options available for spinal stenosis. There will be discussions relating to the health economics of spinal stenosis as it pertains to disability and cost of treatment. We will specifically focus on some of the recently available minimally invasive options such as indirect interspinous decompression and minimally invasive lumbar decompression.
4:40p – 5:30p
Neuromodulation has become one of the important alternative treatment options in refractory chronic neuropathic pain syndromes. However, neuromodulation is relatively expensive and involves surgical intervention. Clinical studies have shown the effective role of neuromodulation therapy in patients who are suffering from chronic pain and who have failed medication management. In the era where we confront issues with scheduled medications, it is important to recognize the role of neuromodulation therapy in chronic pain syndromes. Advanced practice providers plays an important role in the management of patients with chronic pain. The goal of this presentation is to discuss appropriate patient selection criteria and to develop a plan for a patient work-up, including labs, imaging, and psychology evaluations. Also addressed will be current clinical evidence and key indications, and relative contradictions. Strategies to recognize postprocedure complications like infection, lead migration, and hematoma will be covered as well. INT-05 Interventional Pain Management:
Opioid-Sparing Technologies Sean Li m d
INT-03 Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine for Nonresolving Inflammation
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
The ancient Sumerians first cultivated the poppy plant
Jay Joshi m d
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
5:40p – 6:30p
1:40p – 2:30p
for its opium in 3000 bc. The analgesic properties of opium were formalized into morphine and later commercialized by Merck Pharmaceuticals in 1827. Morphine and its derivatives have been effectively used for treating acute pain. In recent years, however, the overuse of opioids to treat chronic nonmalignant pain has contributed to the prescription opioid epidemic. As society has recognized this problem and our government has stepped into opioid crisis efforts, we turn to technology in treating chronic pain as an alternative to opioid medications. This presentation is targeted for general practitioners and current pain management physicians. We will explore the evolution of pain medicine leading up to the current and future opioid-sparing interventional pain treatment options. Specifically, we will focus on electroceuticals (spinal cord stimulation, peripheral nerve stimulation, vagus nerve stimulation), minimally
Humans have been searching for the Fountain of Youth for millennia, from Herodotus to Ponce de León. Some people feel that regenerative medicine, a field that encompasses stem cells, growth factors, and other cell mediating proteins, is that magical fountain, while others, including some physicians, members of various regulatory committees, and some in the media, believe it is a fad. As with many emerging topics, there is curiosity and confusion. While the regenerative medicine field is relatively new to most people, there is a wide variety of treatments and technologies available. We will discuss the various stem cell and growth factors in regenerative medicine and conditions, such as neurological, degenerative changes, osteoarthritis, and tendinitis, that have been treated with them.
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INTG-03 Manual Therapies for Pain Management
invasive spinal decompression spacers, and percutaneous sacroiliac joint fusion.
Michael J. Kurisu do, abihm
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 1
INTG-01 Acupuncture for Addressing the Intersection of Pain, OUD, and PTSD
This course will provide the principals and practice
of osteopathic medicine, showing anatomical unity, structure, and function, and pathways to innate healing. We will provide exam skills to incorporate kinetic chains of motion with movement restrictions. If time permits, there will be demonstrations of counterstrain techniques for the spine and extremities.
Edward S. Lee md
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 3
7:30a – 8:20a
The principles of Chinese medicine as applied to
opioid use disorder (oud) and the history of the use of acupuncture for oud will be presented. The evidence on the use of acupuncture for the treatment of chronic pain, addiction, and ptsd will be presented as well. The presentation will include a review of the literature on the scope of the opioid crisis, including a discussion of the use of opioid therapy for chronic pain, the diagnosis of oud, the social factors that contribute to the development of oud, and the barriers to treatment that patients encounter. It will also cover the neurological basis for chronic pain, addiction, and ptsd. Finally, case reports will be presented to facilitate learning.
INTG-04 Expanding Options for Chronic Pain Treatment:
The Integrative Pain Management Program Emily Hurstak md, mph, mas
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 5
2:40p – 3:30p
Socioeconomically vulnerable patients experience high
rates of pain, barriers to care, and greater risks from conventional pain treatments. Multimodal, nonpharmacologic approaches are recommended as firstline treatments for pain but are often unavailable in resource-limited settings. In 2016, we created and evaluated a multimodal pain management program, the Integrative Pain Management Program (ipmp) at Tom Waddell Urban Health primary care clinic (twuhc) in the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco, a community experiencing high rates of opioid overdose. twuhc provides health services for diverse, underserved patients with high prevalence of chronic diseases, chronic pain, and opioid use, many of whom are marginally-housed or homeless. We determined feasibility of the program and assessed its effects on patients with chronic pain. This course will describe the ipmp, briefly review research findings, and give recommendations for starting a similar multimodal program. This talk will provide learners with tangible tools to take back to their workplace and use when setting up a multimodal treatment program and/or one of the nonmedication-based treatment modalities included in the ipmp model. The lived experience of the presenters will provide practical information that providers or other clinical or administrative staff can utilize in real life settings.
INTG-02 Nutritional Pain Management Robert A. Bonakdar md, faafp, facn
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 3
11:10a – 12:00p
8:30a – 9:30a
Multiple guidelines have recently emphasized nonpharmacologic interventions for chronic pain, with the role of nutrition strikingly absent. Given pain’s potential coexistence with metabolic dysregulation, including obesity, metabolic syndrome, and nutrient deficiency, nutritionbased interventions hold promise as an approach for improving pain status in multiple patient populations. Unfortunately, nutritional and dietary approaches can be complex and time consuming to implement and daunting for clinicians feeling inadequate to provide guidance. Fortunately, nutrition pain management can often be provided in staged interventions based on patient status. This session will review why nutrition is often overlooked, as well as the foundational science of how it can both promote and relieve pain. The session will discuss how to evaluate nutritional status and initiate foundational anti-inflammatory interventions. Also to be examined is the role of nutritional supplementation in individualized cases including vitamin D, omega-3s, magnesium, and other emerging nutrients. The session will conclude with a discussion of how to combine nutritional interventions as a long-term strategy for improving both pain and metabolic status.
IPPS-01 The Force Is with You:
Mind Tricks for Chronic Pain Patients
Jorge F. Carrillo md
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 1
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7:00a – 7:50a
In applying a biopsychosocial model, patient education is considered a treatment strategy to help reduce pain and associated suffering and disability. Original education models focused on anatomical and pathological processes involved in tissue damage. Such models revealed some positive impact in acute scenarios involving injuries or surgeries but did not impact long-term pain reduction, disability, fear, anxiety, and stress that is usually associated with chronic pain. In the past 15 years, different models have been investigated, with therapeutic neuroscience education, Explain Pain, and pain neuroscience education emerging. These can be used to decrease the focus on specific anatomical structures and reconceptualize the patient’s pain to focus more on recovery rather than causes of pain. They apply the biopsychosocial model of pain, integrating treatment of peripheral and central nociceptive components with other contributors of pain. These formats have been delivered one-on-one, in small group tutorial sessions, and large seminars, among others. Randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews exploring these methods favor their use due to improved pain ratings, pain knowledge, disability, pain catastrophization, fear avoidance, attitudes and behaviors regarding pain, physical movement, and healthcare utilization. During this session we will discuss patientcentered educational models and how they might impact behavioral and clinical outcomes.
worsening of symptoms, and increasing risk for developing new pain syndromes, all of which make COPCs more difficult to treat. This presentation will review: ways of identifying patients at higher risk for developing COPCs; underlying disease mechanisms; how to perform a comprehensive biopsychosocial assessment for COPCs that includes nonpain domains such as sleep, mood, fatigue, and physical function; common pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic therapies; and validated tools that can be used in evaluation and treatment.
IPPS-03 Let’s Get Physical!
Musculoskeletal Pelvic Pain Colleen M. Fitzgerald md, ms
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 1
Pelvic floor muscle dysfunction is associated with pelvic pain, physical disability, and sexual dysfunction. Prevalence estimates of musculoskeletal dysfunction in various pelvic pain conditions, including endometriosis, vulvodynia, and painful bladder syndrome, range from 21% to 80%. In addition to being associated with other painful conditions, pain originating from pelvic floor muscles may refer to other body parts such as the lumbar spine, sacroiliac joints, hips, and abdomen. Adding to this complexity is an interplay between muscles and neurons including maladaptive neuronal plasticity associated with widespread muscle pain that may manifest beyond the pelvis. This presentation will provide an overview of key abdominopelvic musculature and contributions to pelvic pain, screening for musculoskeletal dysfunction, and components of a musculoskeletal pelvic pain examination. A focus will be placed on reviewing the pelvic anatomy and hormonal/life states related to sex specific musculoskeletal pain, such as pregnancy, endometriosis, and sexual pain. Additionally, the presentation will discuss the role of different musculoskeletal specialists such as physiatrists and physical therapists in identifying and treating musculoskeletal pain conditions.
IPPS-02 The BIG BANG:
Chronic Overlapping Pain Conditions in Women Sawsan As-Sanie md, mph
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 1
2:40p – 3:30p
9:40a – 10:30a
Pain conditions that often occur together and either solely or predominantly affect women have been recently termed by the NIH as chronic overlapping pain conditions (COPCs). They include: vulvodynia, temporomandibular disorders, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, interstitial cystitis/ painful bladder syndrome, fibromyalgia, endometriosis, chronic tension-type and migraine headache, and chronic low back pain. (Six of these affect ≥50 million people and cost >$80 billion annually in health related costs.) These patients often demonstrate common abnormalities in neural, immune, and endocrine function, which may explain the overlapping nature, as well as increased risk for developing new COPC. COPCs lead to physical and mental disability, poor sexual function, higher rates of drug addiction, and suicide. Despite the societal and personal costs inflicted by COPCs, provider education is lacking. This may lead to a delay in diagnosis and treatment,
IPPS-04 The Golden Girls Dilemma:
Genitourinary Syndrome of Menopause Georgine M. Lamvu md, mph, facog
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 1
4:40p – 5:30p
Genitourinary syndrome of menopause (gsm) is a term
used to describe what was formerly known as vaginal atrophy, atrophic vaginitis, or urogenital atrophy. The older terminology was replaced by this descriptive term with
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colleen fitzgerald
musculoskeletal pelvic pain
wednesday september 4
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MAS-01 Blinded by the Light:
the goal of more accurately describing the constellation of symptoms experienced by gsm patients, including: vaginal pain and dryness; dyspareunia; urinary incontinence, urgency, frequency; hematuria; and sexual dysfunction. Although gsm-like symptoms occur in 15% of premenopausal women and 40% to 54% of postmenopausal women, the condition is associated with social stigma and often remains ignored or underdiagnosed. This presentation will review the clinical manifestations, pathophysiology, etiology, evaluation, and management of this condition. Specific emphasis will be placed on differentiating gsm from other genital pain conditions such as vulvodynia and vulvar dermatoses. Additionally, the presentation will review the impact of postmenopausal pain on quality of life, mental and physical health, and sexual function. Therapeutic recommendations will focus on multimodal therapies to address what is a complex but treatable syndrome. The importance of early detection and patient education in avoiding long-term risks and complications that compromise quality of life will also be discussed.
The Danger of Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension Gary W. Jay m d, faapm
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 5
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (formerly called pseudotumor cerebri) is a cause of headache, along with optic nerve edema, and can lead to permanent visual loss. This course will address how to diagnose it, how best to treat it, and other topics including subgroups and issues of “outliers.” This is a frequently missed diagnosis, and important to include in a differential diagnosis. MAS-02 Back Pain: It’s All About the Diagnosis David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 3
KEY-01 Keynote: Are the Monsters Coming to Main Street?
1:40p – 3:30p
The prevalence of back pain continues despite the many
treatments available, without any single treatment being a panacea. In routine clinical practice there has been a tendency of clinical examinations to become more cursory, largely influenced by increasing demands of time and arguably an overreliance upon technology. It has been suggested that the failure to adequately differentially diagnose the cause of back pain can account for clinical failures in treatment. The purpose of this discussion is to assist clinicians in the development of a more problem focused examination to enhance the differential diagnosis of specific pain generators, and therefore lead to more patient specific treatment. Attention will be given to considering all aspects of the examination, including physical assessment as well as imaging studies, and the ability to rationalize when pathologies seen on these studies may or may not be clinically significant. The importance of considering how failed treatments influence the differential diagnosis will also be discussed.
Jennifer Bolen jd Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
1:40p – 2:30p
5:45p – 6:45p
Newton’s 3rd law of motion states, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.” This makes sense to us and allows us to frame and predict what will happen in a physical world. When we consider the metaphysical world, we might think that the same rules apply. But they often do not—because thoughts are not objects, and attitudes, fears, and prejudices don’t always follow predictable rational principles. In the face of multiple mindborn, fearful actions, the result can be chaotic or even “monstrous” reactions. We are witnessing this very phenomenon today in every clinical practice involved in the management of pain and the prescribing of opioid analgesics. This is no longer a time where an “opioid pendulum” is swinging in a single physical plane or dimension, one that we can predict accurately. This presentation will focus on how the current opioid climate has fallen on the front doorstep of us all, and how the many different forces—including abuse, addiction, stigmas, fears, and deaths—have created the monster before us, one which can potentially have tragic and unethical consequences for patients with pain who need us to be there for them confidently, intelligently, and, most of all, cohesively.
MDL-01 Inside the Trojan Horse: Addressing Current Legal Actions Against Healthcare Practitioners
Jennifer Bolen jd Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Note: The keynote presentation is certified for credit.
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9:40a – 11:00a
Using case examples, this course will address the insider’s view to illustrate the connection between carrying out licensing board directives on using opioids to treat pain and reasonably prudent medical decisionmaking, and documentation. The content presented is designed to engage participants who will work through several short case examples with faculty, all of whom are experienced as medical and legal experts. Covered will be treatment plans including treatment goals and exit strategy; true informed consent and treatment agreements; follow-up encounters and risk monitoring, including the use of prescription drug monitoring databases, drug testing, and adjustments to the treatment plan; and use of consultations and referrals. Attendees will learn about current trends in medical expert assessment of prescribing decisions and how to improve documentation of medical decision-making and opioid prescribing decisions. This session is a must-attend for Main Street Practitioners!
MDL-03 I’m Not a Doctor, But I Play One in DC Michael C. Barnes jd, miep
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 5
At the 2018 Department of Justice (doj) Opioid
Summit, then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions remarked that opioid prescribing had reached its lowest point in 18 years. Still, the doj is committed to reducing opioid analgesic prescriptions an additional 30% to 33% within the next 3 years. More than ever, prescribers of controlled prescription medications are under intense scrutiny from lawmakers, regulators, and payers. At the same time, some 50 million adults in the US have persistent pain, nearly 20 million of whom experience pain that interferes with daily life or work activities. As noted by the Pain Management Best Practices InterAgency Task Force (pmtf) in its December 2018 draft report, the trend of healthcare professionals opting out of treating pain has exacerbated the shortage of pain management specialists, leaving some patients without access to individualized care. In this session, a partner in a Washington, dc based health law firm will discuss recent legislative and regulatory activity at the federal level and trends in criminal enforcement. He will also discuss noteworthy developments at the state level and analyze the anticipated benefits, drawbacks, and unintended consequences of such actions on people with pain and those who treat them. Topics include: implications of the support for Patients and Communities Act; a draft report of pmtf best practices and pushback against it; and efforts to reform the federal approach to investigating controlled-medication prescribers.
MDL-02 A New Leaf:
A Legal and Medical Perspective on Marijuana Use When Prescribing Controlled Substances Jennifer Bolen jd Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
7:00a – 7:50a
9:40a – 11:00a
The prescribing of chronic opioid therapy to patients
who contemplate or are already using marijuana, whether medical or recreational, sets up the perfect storm for medical decision-making and risk management conundrums, especially in the current environment of opioid related hospital admissions and fatal overdoses, and the additional challenge of multiple prescribers of other drugs, like benzodiazepines and sleep medicine. The likelihood of a perfect storm is more apparent, and the risks to the prescriber of opioids to marijuana users increased, when opioid prescribing standards lack meaningful guidance. Prescribers must fine tune risk evaluation and monitoring skills and ensure proper documentation of patient evaluations and medical decision-making when treatment or patient choice results in the use of opioids in patients using marijuana. Faculty will present scenarios and show attendees how to evaluate risk and plan for risk monitoring in the treatment plan when marijuana is introduced into the equation. They will also help practitioners sort through patient risk factors that may mean saying “No“ to the opioids or the marijuana. Finally, faculty will provide examples of proper documentation and ideas for controlling risk along the way.
MDL-04 Embrace Changes and Prevent Overdose:
A Basic Blueprint for Legal Risk Mitigation and Response Jennifer Bolen jd
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 3
9:40a – 10:30a
Professional licensing board and criminal cases involving overdose events do not usually end well for the unprepared prescriber. Yet, there is much the prescriber can do proactively to signal his/her intent to prescribe for a legitimate medical purpose while acting in the usual course of professional practice and taking “reasonable steps” to mitigate abuse and diversion of controlled medication. Too often, prescribers are caught unprepared to respond to licensing board and legal inquiries surrounding overdose events. Many prescribers lack a structured approach to patient education to mitigate the risks associated with
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Myopain conditions including myofascial pain and fibromyalgia are among the most common disorders causing chronic pain and are a significant cause of suffering, addiction, disability, and healthcare utilization. More than half of the persons seeking care for these pain conditions at 1 month still have pain 5 years later despite treatment. The good news is that successful treatment of these painful conditions is achievable, and this course aims to teach providers the 2 key factors that clinically make the biggest impact. The first is recognition of the contribution of the fascia to myofascial pain and fibromyalgia, and improving diagnostic skills promoting early recognition. Along with better recognition of myofascial pain, effective treatment will incorporate evidence-based manual therapies and myofascial self-care. The second key to success is utilizing a transformative care approach that integrates comprehensive patient self-management training and coaching to empower patients to address the many risk factors that can lead to delayed recovery and chronic pain. This activity will describe the growing body of evidence for fascial dysfunction contributing to pain in fibromyalgia and myofascial pain, along with research supporting the effectiveness of manual therapies either performed by a therapist or as part of a myofascial self-treatment program. Reimbursement for transformative care with telehealth coaching with online technology will also be covered.
the use of controlled substances, errantly relying solely on a piece of paper to capture what should be a process of informed consent. This program includes lessons learned by the speaker through more than a decade of chart audits and legal case work. Through the lens of medical expert testimony and case examples, attendees will learn core areas of risk mitigation with a focus on making electronic medical records and paper charting work for the practitioner. Attendees will have access to templates that can be used to improve daily charting and to demonstrate adherence to risk evaluation, monitoring, and common documentation requirements. While prescribers cannot control what their patients do once they leave the medical office, they are responsible for establishing a safe framework for opioid prescribing, including a proper response when something goes wrong.
MDL-05 Get Your Specimens in Order: The Importance
of Individualized Test Orders and Timely Test Utilization Jennifer Bolen jd
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 3
2:40p – 3:30p
2018 was not a good year to be on the wrong side of
medical necessity when it came to drug testing and ongoing prescribing of controlled medication or substance abuse treatment programs. 2019 is likely to be an expensive year for those who do not proactively take steps to understand medical necessity for drug testing, prescribing controlled medication, and ongoing substance abuse treatment, as payers continue to carefully scrutinize these areas. Using a series of case hypotheticals, attendees will learn how to identify the elements of medical necessity, efficiently and effectively document medical necessity for drug testing and use of drug test results in the ongoing care of the patient, and locate and use payer medical policies and coverage determinations. Attendees will be given tools to reinforce learning objectives: a checklist for medical necessity documentation, sample summaries of payer medical policies, and templates for documenting use of drug test results and tailoring ongoing treatment decisions to the individual patient.
MYO-02 Transformative Care for Myopain:
Enhancing Long-Term Success in Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia (Part 2) James R. Fricton dds, ms Ginevra Liptan md
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 3
See myo-01 for course description. NRO-01 An Elusive Villain:
Pain Associated with Lyme Disease and Other Spirochetal Infections
MYO-01 Transformative Care for Myopain:
Charles E. Argoff m d, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
Enhancing Long-Term Success in Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia (Part 1)
9:40a – 10:30a
Spirochetal infection symptoms include muscle
James R. Fricton dds, ms
pain, nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Lyme disease can cause joint pain and stiffness, fatigue, flu-like symptoms, and sleep problems, among others.
Ginevra Liptan md
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 3
1:40p – 3:30p
10:40a – 12:00p
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NRO-04 Not Glad All Over:
Depending on the species of bacteria involved, symptoms may be quite painful and range from acute to chronic. How are patients infected? What treatments work best? Although an “appropriate” treatment for the various stages of infection is not universally accepted, this course will suggest means for treatment while it reviews causes and types of infection and symptoms.
Chronic Widespread Pain Charles E. Argoff m d, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
Chronic widespread pain affects up to 1 in 10 adults in the US, with twice as many women experiencing it than men. It can lead to fatigue, anxiety, depression, and other symptoms. In a catch-22, sleep problems in general may also lead to chronic widespread pain. Although complete relief is unlikely, quality of life can be improved through psychological and pharmacological intervention. This course will review the medical conditions associated with chronic widespread pain as well as steps to consider when evaluating a person with complaints. Multiple examples of individual patients with chronic widespread pain will be discussed in an attempt to shine a light on the diverse nature of this condition.
NRO-02 When Darkness Falls:
Managing Pain in Fibromyalgia and Restless Leg Syndrome
Gary W. Jay m d, faapm
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
4:40p – 5:30p
11:10a – 12:00p
In previous presentations, Dr. Jay has discussed the pathophysiology, neuroanatomical, and other aspects of fibromyalgia. In this activity, all of that will NOT be discussed, so the focus can be only on the diagnosis and treatment of fibromyalgia and restless leg syndrome. Treatment will be covered in depth, not the phenomenology that is the complex neuroanatomical and neuropathological backgrounds of these diatheses. The goal is to provide clinicians with practical information to be utilized upon seeing patients following the conference.
PAL-01 That’s Debatable!
Does Cannabis Reduce Opioid Death, and Does Gabapentin Increase It?
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 1
NRO-03 The Spider’s Stratagem: Arachnoiditis
The use of opioids to treat chronic pain has become
Charles E. Argoff m d, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
9:40a – 10:30a
2:40p – 3:30p
quite contentious in recent years. Things get even more confusing when we consider adding an adjuvant analgesic in the mix. Does this reduce or heighten risk? The audience can decide where to throw spitballs when 2 practitioners debate 2 separate topics. First, is the use of cannabis plus an opioid likely to provide an enhanced clinical effect (eg, allow for opioid dose reduction and by extension, harm), make no difference, or possibly cause more harm. The second debate will evaluate the use of gabapentin plus an opioid. On one hand, we have data showing the gabapentinoids may be habituating and result in addiction. Combining gabapentin with an opioid may also increase the risk of mortality. On the other hand, rational polypharmacy, using an opioid and gabapentin, has been shown to result in superior clinical outcomes compared to either analgesic alone. So perplexing. What’s a practitioner to do? Listen to the debate and decide for yourself!
Arachnoiditis is a pain disorder caused by the inflam-
mation of the arachnoid, one of the membranes that surround and protect the nerves of the spinal cord. This swelling can lead to the formation of scar tissue causing the spinal nerves to stick together and malfunction. Neurological problems characterize the condition, along with stinging and burning pain. Although it’s officially listed as a rare disease, arachnoiditis—and patients affected by it—still may appear in clinicians’ offices. It remains a difficult condition to treat, with long-term outcomes being unpredictable. Treatment usually focuses on chronic pain relief and the improvement of daily function through management of symptoms. Physiotheraphy, exercise, and psychotheraphy are often recommended. Pain practitioners need to know the inciting causes, symptoms, physical signs, and mri findings of arachnoiditis, and treatment options. This course will cover recognition of the condition and ways to combat it.
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gary jay
managing pain in fibromyalgia and restless leg syndrome friday september 6
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psilocybin, ecstacy & ketamine
jessica geiger-hayes alexandra mcpherson mary lynn mcpherson sat sept 7
You’re using
for pain management?
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The Pain Educators Forum presents this course because
PAL-02 You’re Using WHAT for Pain Management?
there are so many different levels of practitioner experience with pain management. Specifically, inspiration came from someone who, after attending one of our courses, had a burning question for our faculty: “What do sodium channels have to do with pain?” Yikes!!! After attending this humorous, informative course you will definitely know the difference between paresthesia and dysesthesia, allodynia and hyperalgesia, and how sodium channels confer excitability on neurons in nociceptive pathways. In sum, you’d be a fierce and worthy contestant on Jeopardy!
Psilocybin, Ecstasy, and Ketamine
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 3
1:40p – 2:30p
Well that’s just plain crazypants! Psilocybin is a naturally
occurring psychedelic prodrug compound produced by more than 200 species of mushrooms (and yes, they are magical!). Psilocybin mushrooms have been used to treat a variety of conditions such as cluster headaches, obsessive compulsive disorders, anxiety, depression, and addiction. Most recently psilocybin has been used to treat the existential pain and distress associated with serious illness such as cancer. Another mind-blowing idea is that the fda has allowed the medical use of mdma (ecstasy) for ptsd patients, used in settings supervised by trained healthcare professionals, coupled with months or years of psychotherapy. Last, ketamine (a dissociative anesthetic agent) has enjoyed increased use in the management of difficultto-control pain such as opioid-induced hyperalgesia, and in the management of depression. Ride the wave of the cutting edge by learning about these innovative therapies!
PEF-02 Pain Pathways Made Simple David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 1
In order to successfully clinically manage pain, it is essential to begin with an understanding of the underlying mechanisms responsible for its generation. A skillful approach based upon better knowledge concerning the anatomical structures, pathways, and events that result in pain is more likely to lead to effective clinical management of pain. This discussion will include an overview of medication classes typically considered for pain and the pathways they affect.
PAL-03 Doing Business or Risky Business?
Benzodiazepines and Opioids in Palliative Care
PEF-03 Chronic Pain Assessment
Maria C. Foy pharmd, bcps, cpe Tanya J. Uritsky pharmd, bcps
Saturday, September 7 Level 4 Nolita 1
9:40a – 10:30a
2:40p – 3:30p
Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 1
Opioids and benzodiazepines are included on the who
11:10a – 12:00p
list of essential medicines in palliative care. Recent evidence indicating that benzodiazepines increase the risk of slowed or difficult breathing and deaths in patients taking opioids led to a 2017 warning by the US fda. In this session, the risks and benefits of concomitant benzodiazepine and opioid use will be reviewed and applied to those with advanced illness receiving palliative care.
Effective clinical interviewing and pain assessment are critical to the appropriate diagnosis and management of pain. In this presentation, attendees will learn how to apply principles of effective communication and ascertain how to evaluate available assessment tools.
PEF-01 Pain Terminology:
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph
PEF-04 Pain Therapeutics Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 1
Knowing the Difference Makes a Difference! Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe
Treating pain is a challenge and requires special approaches. This course will build on information provided in prior sessions and focus on the prevalence and impact of unrelieved pain, pathogenesis,
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 3
1:40p – 3:30p
7:00a – 7:50a
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and treatments of pain. Participants will learn about approaches and advances in therapy of common acute and chronic pain syndromes, and evidence-based recommendations for pharmacotherapy of pain will be provided. Pain Therapeutics examines current trends in pain relief, which can be implemented into practice as soon as attendees return to work.
life hacks for positive thinking and self-talk, distraction, relaxation, improved sleep, and much more!
PEF-07 Navigating the OTC Analgesic Aisle:
What a Pain in the Aspirin!
Laura Meyer-Junco pharmd, bcps
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 3
PEF-05 Clinical Pearls:
With cutbacks on opioids, patients may resort to the
Unraveling the Secrets of Imaging Studies
pharmacy aisles for pain relief. What’s on those shelves? A whole lot of good, bad, and everything in between. This session will provide an overview of everything from topical products to oral supplements for pain. Efficacy and safety considerations as well as pharmacokinetic information, dosing, and drug and disease interactions will be discussed. In addition, the place of various nonprescription analgesics in the management of common painful conditions will be highlighted. By the end of this presentation, participants will be prepared to navigate the OTC analgesic aisle and provide patients with product selection guidance and counseling. This is your place for OTC pearls and perils!
David M. Glick dc, daipm, cpe, faspe
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 1
4:40p – 5:30p
Diagnostic testing is an integral component for the differential diagnosis. In routine clinical practice there has been a tendency for clinical examinations to become more cursory, largely influenced by increasing demands on a practitioner’s time and the patient’s expectations of technological advances. The end result may arguably lead to an overreliance on technology for basic clinical diagnosis. This session is meant to provide a review or, for some, an introduction to basic structural and functional studies used for the diagnosis of pain related problems. Attention will also be given to the limitations of such studies and the importance of establishing clinical relevance to their findings. Factors that adversely affect clinical management potentially resulting in failed treatment will be discussed, as well as best practices when utilizing such studies to help enhance clinical outcomes for treatment.
PEF-08 The Curbside Consult in Pain Management Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
1:40p – 2:30p
“Hey, can I ask you a quick question?” I don’t know, can
you? Ah…the curbside consult. They can occur anywhere: the hallway, the parking lot, the bathroom! Who asks for and provides curbside consults? We all do! Why do practitioners request a curbside consult of another practitioner? To confirm what they believe they already know, to get a quick answer to a question, to continue their medical education, to determine if a formal consultation is called for, and to negotiate an appropriate course of treatment for a particular patient. This fast-paced presentation will review the who, why, where, when, and what of curbside consults. Participants will also learn about a best practice model for communication called SBAR: Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation. You’ll be such a popular curbside consultant, you’ll be able to set up shop in the parking garage!
PEF-06 Life Hacks to Teach Chronic Pain Patients Laura Meyer-Junco pharmd, bcps
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 5
9:40a – 10:30a
7:00a – 7:50a
With ever increasing scrutiny of opioid practices and
limited availability of new therapies for pain, it can be a difficult time to be a pain clinician and a desperate time to be a patient with pain. Fortunately, all healthcare professionals can provide patients with self-management tools for living with pain. In this session, participants will learn how to help patients recognize the impact that negative thoughts, emotions, and poor sleep can have on their experience of pain. Teaching patients a simplified version of the gate control theory of pain is a critical first step for helping patients understand their pain experience. The dialogue for explaining this mindbody connection will be shared in this session, as well as
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THURSDAY
SEPTEMBER 5
kate schopmeyer
the unbearable lightness of… the unbearable lightness of… the unbearable lightness of… multimodal treatment plans the unbearable lightness of… the unbearable lightness of… 92
A review of topical analgesics and available evidence in clinical trials
everybody's greasing up, but should you
timothy atkinson
fri. sept. 6
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Now more than ever, the opioid crisis and the overwhelming need to treat chronic pain are colliding. It used to just be we worried about opioid use in substance use disorder (sud) patients, but now even some nonopioid pain medications have become drugs of abuse or have been found to potentially increase the risk for opioid overdose. In addition to providing naloxone education and counseling, learn how to balance the PROs and CONs, or risks vs benefits, of using opioids (when appropriate or indicated) as well as nonopioids for patients with active (or historical) sud. This course will include a brief overview of screening tools before launching into the nitty-gritty of medication prescribing in a patient population that often feels voiceless or powerless in their quest for pain relief while also battling addiction.
PEF-09 The Unbearable Lightness of… Multimodal Treatment Plans
Kathryn A. Schopmeyer pt, dpt, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
2:40p – 3:30p
One cannot bake a cake with only flour. Clinicians who treat pain understand that it requires teamwork and multimodal treatment plans. How can we get patients on board with this approach? How can we support each other when we work in isolated practice settings? Our healthcare system it disjointed, causing many clinicians to operate in “silos.” We can support each other and bolster our patients’ confidence in their prognosis by confidently communicating all elements of a care plan to them. By using terminology that de-threatens confusing aspects of a plan, and by consistently using common messages in our clinical lingo, we can start to shift the needle toward wellness. With this approach, we can reduce suffering for our patients and ourselves. This course is taught by a Certified Pain Educator (cpe) and is intended for all clinicians who struggle to engage patients in active self-management strategies.
PHM-02 Kratom or Bait’em?
Understanding the Pharmacology of Kratom Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 1
As clinicians and their patients scramble for opioid anal-
gesic alternatives and ways to blunt opioid withdrawal, kratom (also known as mitragynine) use among desperate patients has surged. Thousands are self-treating, and clinicians are left to carry the bag of benefits vs risks of this natural substance as a single agent and combined as part of a polypharmaceutical regimen. Added to this dilemma is whether or not to include kratom with routine toxicology monitoring. Concerns around health and safety have spurred US regulatory agencies to scrutinize attributes and detrimental effects, variations among products, quality control, and adverse health outcomes. This session will focus on the history of kratom, epidemiology, advocacy among support groups, product inconsistency among manufacturers and related dangers, pharmacology, therapeutic risks vs benefits, and dangerous drug-drug, drugdisease interactions.
PEF-10 Spilled Beans and Hard Stops:
How Legislation, Guidelines, and Reimbursement Policies Impact Patient Care
Jessica Geiger-Hayes pharmd, bcps, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 3
5:40p – 6:30p
Have you found yourself in a situation where you wanted to do what is right by your patient, but came up against so many barriers that it was nearly impossible? Much legislation, many guidelines, and insurance policies have become barriers to appropriately caring for patients for whom opioids are appropriate. Unfortunately, these barriers can ultimately cause the patient to suffer. The goal of this session is to review the barriers to appropriate pain control and promote discussion around what practitioners are doing to overcome them.
PHM-03 Mirror Mirror on the Wall:
Who’s the FDA’s Fairest ADF of All?
PHM-01 Which Came First…
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 1
Pain or Substance Use Disorder?
Abigail T. Brooks pharmd, bcps
2:40p – 3:30p
Challenge accepted. Our country has made numerous strides in advancing patient care, and more particularly conducting efforts to ensure that lives within the
Courtney M. Kominek pharmd, bcps, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 1
11:10a – 12:00p
7:00a – 7:50a
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national opioid crisis are saved and/or improved. One of those positive strides involves the fda approval of abuse deterrent formulation (adf) opioid medications, with the aim of preventing the transition from the misuse and/or abuse of prescription opioid medications to illicit (and possibly laced) diacetylmorphine (aka heroin). How do these formulations work, one might ask? Which adf opioid medications are not only available on the US market, but also specifically approved as an adf opioid medication? Are these adfs really foolproof? Well, the street chemists of our country have already accepted the challenge to be knowledgeable on all of the above. Now it’s our turn as healthcare professionals to get up to speed on these risk reduction entities.
assist providers with tough decisions in this area, the available clinical trials supporting use will be reviewed along with formulations, locations, and doses where their use have been shown to the be most effective. This session will review the role of various topical analgesics as well as explore the rationale for “topical polypharmacy” with compounded drugs.
PHM-04 Putting the FUN in Dysfunctional:
Ah… drug math. Those 2 little words can make a strong
PHM-06 Opioid Math Calculations:
Conversions, Titrations, and Breakthroughs Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 3
healthcare provider want their mommy. But no fear. Armed with an understanding of conversion calculations, some semisolid facts about equivalencies, and a healthy sense of “Does that LOOK right?”—you’ll be just fine! This lively session will review new and emerging data on opioid conversion calculations, and guidance for methadone dosing, both for chronic noncancer pain, and for patients with a serious, advanced illness. If you want to be able to dose opioids safety and effectively, you don’t want to miss this session!
Pain Management Options in Renal and Hepatic Dysfunction Abigail T. Brooks pharmd, bcps Courtney M. Kominek pharmd, bcps, cpe
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
5:40p – 6:30p
It’s your worst clinical nightmare: providing dosing recommendations for opioid and/or nonopioid pain medication treatment for a patient with renal or hepatic impairment. Even scarier, a patient with end-stage renal or hepatic disease! Put your panic aside and learn about the INs and OUTs of managing opioid and/or nonopioid pain medications, and why some medications might need adjustment and others may not. From metabolism and metabolites to creatinine clearance and Child-Pugh score, you will leave this course feeling more confident in your ability to provide pain pharmacotherapy to patients with renal or hepatic impairment.
PHM-07 He SAID, She SAID.
What’s the Deal with NSAIDs? Timothy J. Atkinson pharmd, bcps, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
1:40p – 2:30p
Safety concerns, new warnings, and new formulations
focused on harm reduction have led many providers to question nsaidS place in therapy. nsaidS have been a cornerstone of pain management of inflammatory, connective tissue, and autoimmune disorders for over a hundred years. A historical perspective is key to understanding the role of nsaids in pain management, and a therapeutic update on current evidence will aid providers in practical utilization. The safety of nsaids will be reviewed and compared to risks of other medications including opioids. New fda warnings on cardiovascular risk of nsaids will be placed into context and examples of clinical decision-making provided. In addition, new formulations of nsaids will be discussed including IV nsaids, topical nsaids, and new micronized nsaids.
PHM-05 Everybody’s Greasing Up, But Should You Rub It In? A Review of Topical Analgesics and Available
Evidence in Clinical Trials
Timothy J. Atkinson pharmd, bcps, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 1
9:40a – 10:30a
7:00a – 7:50a
Topical analgesics are often recommended in clinical
practice, but differences between formulations and routes of administration lead to confusion. In addition to commercial preparations, compounded topical analgesics are highly promoted and widely utilized from compounding pharmacies with individualized recipes of multiple combined medications, at substantial cost. To
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PHM-08 Thug Drugs… Revisited
PHM-10 Testing the Waters:
Urine Drug Screening for the Perplexed Among Us
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 3
4:40p – 6:00p
Mark Garofoli pharmd, mba, bcgp, cpe
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 1
Will the “War on Drugs” ever end? Perhaps a better
Paging urine experts, all urine experts please report to PAINWeek 2019! Actually, if you and your team believe that you could benefit from a thorough discussion on the complexities of urine drug screening and testing, then “you’re in” luck! One of the multiple strategies to reduce patient risk, and healthcare provider risk, is to incorporate urine drug screening or, perhaps better yet, urine drug testing, into one’s practice. Everyone gets a cup! Everyone fills a cup! But then what? Shouldn’t a practitioner know which crossreactants could create possible false-positives? Shouldn’t a practitioner know which active metabolites are expected for a respectively prescribed opioid medication? Are there methods to “beat the system” and outsmart urine drug screenings and testings? Join us for a lively discussion on the most useful strategies for incorporating urine drug screenings, or preferably testings, into your own practice. If “you’re in” over your head, then this presentation is for you!
question is, “When did the War on Drugs even begin?” Throughout the course of history, mankind has consistently aimed to experience the amplified effects of substances within nature, and even delved into creating or modifying substances to the same accord. In any given culture, the line between clinical and criminal utilization of substances is often blurred. In our society today, we have a very “objective” classification of substances based on generally accepted medical use and a propensity to become habit forming. However, as one can recall with the substance of ethyl alcohol (beer, wine, and hard liquor), a substance may not actually chemically change, yet can move across legal classifications of substances. How does that happen? Well, join our discussion to learn how numerous illicit substances have similar, if not the same, mechanisms of action as legal prescription medications readily available. One may even walk away with a few dozen pointers from “street chemists” that are not easily available in any professional textbook.
PHM-11 Frankie Says RELAX:
PHM-09 Better with Age?
The INs and OUTs of Skeletal Muscle Relaxants
Pain Management of the Older Adult
Amanda M. Daniels p harmd, bcps
Maria C. Foy pharmd, bcps, cpe
Christopher M. Herndon pharmd, bcps, cpe
Tanya J. Uritsky pharmd, bcps
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 1
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 3
8:30a – 9:30a
7:30a – 8:20a
11:10a – 12:00p
With increased efforts to decrease opioid prescribing for
Pain is common in the aging population. Findings from
chronic pain conditions, nonopioid analgesics and coanalgesics are being more widely utilized. Skeletal muscle relaxants (smrs) are frequently used chronically despite a paucity of data supporting this practice. Without a clear base of evidence, a thorough understanding of the pharmacologic profile of these agents is essential when selecting therapy. This session will present the class of smrs in their entirety, review commonly accepted mechanisms of action, and challenge widely held beliefs regarding the appropriate place in therapy for this drug class when treating chronic pain.
an NIH funded study looking at the impact on pain in the older adult found that over 50% of people surveyed had pain within the last month, often in more than one location. Despite its high prevalence, pain often remains undertreated, resulting in impaired cognition, decreased socialization, sleep disturbances, and a reduced quality of life. Our bodies react differently to medications due to medical comorbidities and metabolic changes due to the aging process itself. Understanding the correct choices of analgesic utilizing a multimodal approach to treatment is important in providing safe and effective pain therapies. Patients with dementia or in the late stages of disease may propose a unique pain control challenge due to difficulty in the ability to verbalize pain. This session will explain the differences in response to analgesic medications due to the aging process and provide recommendations for individualized pain control based on specific patient characteristics.
PMC-01 Pain Management Coaching: Integrative
and Complimentary Strategies for Chronic Pain Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 3
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1:40p – 2:30p
Pain management coaching is a systematized application of techniques, including motivational interviewing, that enable your patients to work through ambivalence and take action to change their lives. One of the primary components is education. Coaches teach skills to enable the patient to regain a sense of control and direction. Working with patients to implement providers’ recommendations, coaches give support and tools to help the patient reframe their perspective hopelessness and safely navigate through the treacherous jungle of complicated pain.
POS-02 Poster/Podium Presentations* Srinivas Nalamachu md Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
Friday, September 6 10:40a – 12:00p Level 4 Exhibit Hall/Belmont Ballroom
This session highlights posters selected for oral presentations.
*Not certified for credit.
PMC-02 How Pain Coaching Impacts Patient Outcomes
SIS-01 Status Traumaticus:
Becky L. Curtis nbc-hwc
A Trauma Informed Approach to Chronic Pain Management
Deborah Morrow lcsw, ladc, icaadc, emt
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 3
2:40p – 3:30p
Brian F. Kaufman do, facp, facoi
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 3
Perhaps the single most failure-producing aspect of
chronic pain is its inherent isolation. Add the medical hopelessness faced by many patients, and a perfect storm is created for chronic pain patients to fall permanently out of the workforce and fail to thrive. Pain management coaching provides the bridge between medical care and the patient’s innate will to survive. Pain management coaching pioneer Becky Curtis will share how the latest research on the brain and pain relate to relearning and pain management. Attendees will gain understanding of the role pain management coaching plays in reshaping the learned phenomenon of chronic pain, and how coached clients acquire knowledge and implement effective pain management strategies with the guidance of a coach. Deborah Morrow, Eastern Oklahoma VA Health Care System Pain Program Coordinator, will share the experiences of a VA system that has been working with the Take Courage Coaching program for several years. Attendees will be able to look at Veteran’s outcomes and utilize this VA’s experiences in the implementation of pain coaching with Veterans in their healthcare system.
This session is designed to familiarize learners with
the principles of the neurobiology of the traumatized patient and illuminate the salient concepts that are germane to the presentation and treatment of patients with chronic pain. At the conclusion of this activity, practitioners should be able to identify several key aspects of behavior and presentation in patients with chronic pain who have a history of trauma, as well as utilize these concepts when interacting and treating these patients to improve outcomes and pain scores.
SIS-02 The World According to Cannabinoids: Clinical and Research Updates
Theresa Mallick-Searle ms, np-bc, anp-bc Ethan B. Russo md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
9:40a – 11:00a
Despite the widespread acceptance of medicinal and recreational cannabis use internationally and domestically, marijuana remains federally illegal in the United States. For this reason, there are significant legal implications to clinical practice. Clinicians are unprepared to answer questions regarding legality or safety of cannabis use, and unprepared to counsel their patients on use or abstinence, particularly for pain management. This session will explore legal implications, discuss current science, and define the scope of the problem related to the need for education about risk and safety of counseling patients about cannabis use. Case examples representing real life will be presented.
POS-01 Scientific Poster Session and Reception* Errol M. Gould phd Srinivas Nalamachu md Co-Chair Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Co-Chair Robert B. Raffa phd Charles E. Wollmuth
Thursday, September 5 Level 2 Condesa Commons
7:00a – 7:50a
6:30p – 8:30p
*Not certified for credit.
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MARIA FOY TANYA URITSKY
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 7
pain management of the older adult
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Gary Jay
Tuesday September 3
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SIS-03 The Gang that Couldn’t Shoot Straight: Reconsidering t he cdc Guideline
Gary W. Jay m d, faapm
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 3
10:40a – 12:00p
After last year’s talk about the cdc Guideline, a lot has
begun to change, begrudgingly. While this is encouraging, there are still both medical and nonmedical people who don’t want to see any changes in the weak to very weak (evidenced-based medicine) cdc Guideline, which has gone far from what it was supposed to be— recommendations for treatment in a primary care providers clinic. They have been “taken over, mandatorily” by a number of significant entities including cms, various states, and more. Still, there appear to be political and nonpolitical but nonmedical mandated issues that continue to keep this “Guideline” in force. This presentation will discuss these issues and some possible reasons, both the positive and the negative, including forced tapering and increased suicides.
SIS-05 Insight into Preclinical Drug Discovery and Translational Medicine Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 3
SIS-04 Salt of the Earth:
The Importance of Sodium Channels in
Pain Management Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
1:40p – 2:30p
Acute pain signaling has a key protective role and is
human Mendelian pain disorders and to common pain disorders such as small fiber neuropathy. Chronic pain affects 1 in 5 of the general population. Given the poor efficacy of current analgesics, the selective expression of particular vgscs in sensory neurons makes these attractive targets for drug discovery. The increasing availability of gene sequencing, combined with structural modeling and electrophysiological analysis of gene variants, also provides the opportunity to better target existing therapies in a personalized manner.
highly evolutionarily conserved. Chronic pain, however, is maladaptive, occurring as a consequence of injury and disease, and is associated with sensitization of the somatosensory nervous system. Primary sensory neurons are involved in both of these processes, and the recent advances in understanding sensory transduction and human genetics are the focus of this review. Voltage-gated sodium channels (vgscs) are important determinants of sensory neuron excitability: they are essential for the initial transduction of sensory stimuli, the electrogenesis of the action potential, and neurotransmitter release from sensory neuron terminals. Nav1.1, Nav1.6, Nav1.7, Nav1.8, and Nav1.9 are all expressed by adult sensory neurons. The biophysical characteristics of these channels, as well as their unique expression patterns within subtypes of sensory neurons, define their functional role in pain signaling. Changes in the expression of vgscs, as well as posttranslational modifications, contribute to the sensitization of sensory neurons in chronic pain states. Furthermore, gene variants in Nav1.7, Nav1.8, and Nav1.9 have been linked to
1:40p – 2:30p
It is becoming increasingly common to hear a new analgesic drug molecule described as a “biased ligand,” being “peripherally restricted,” or as having been “engineered.” What do these terms mean? How are such drugs designed or discovered, and how do you even know that you have one when you have one? For that matter, how are any modern analgesic drugs designed or discovered these days? It’s definitely not your father’s preclinical drug discovery lab any more. Modern drug discovery labs utilize a variety of approaches such as compound libraries, combinatorial chemistry, fragment based lead discovery, high-throughput screening, in silico modeling, in vitro human receptor assays, crispr and artificial intelligence. This session provides a painless introduction to what goes on in modern preclinical drug discovery and translational medicine. Case studies will illustrate the concepts and the resultant clinical analgesic molecules. SIS-06 Chapter None:
Patient-Centered or Paper-Centered Pain Management? Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 1
2:40p – 3:30p
Virtually all healthcare professionals have some degree
of altruism and a strong desire to help patients in need. As healthcare continues to evolve, the burdens on clinicians change as well. While most of us have been taught that providing a “medical home” to patients along with shared decision-making is the most ethical way to provide effective healthcare, many are finding that other stakeholders may potentially derail those worthy
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intentions. While insurers are not often considered to be “regulatory agencies” by most, they indeed have become major players in determining the trajectory of everything from pain assessment to treatment planning and implementation to follow-up and monitoring. Many feel that insurance related paperwork and associated administrative burdens are contributing significantly to clinician burnout and ultimately having a negative impact on patient care. Additionally, navigating these challenges is not part of the standard curriculum of most educational training programs. This session will focus on these topics and the concept of “institutional iatrogenesis” and identify the challenges they present to healthcare providers, as well as strategies to manage them and minimize interference with our primary mission: caring for patients with pain.
SIS-07 Geriatric Pain Management:
position of guilt before proving their innocence through a long and arduous trial. In the end, there are usually no winners. This lengthy process is oftentimes inflamed by attorneys who ultimately profit from the emotionally draining court cases. The practice of medicine by way of our legal system has evolved into “defensive medicine” rather than patient-centric medicine. The words “malpractice” and “lawsuit” are so damaging, most practitioners do not utter them. If a physician decides to practice clinical medicine, it is likely he/she will eventually get sued. Being named in a malpractice case is not only a rite of passage but will forever negatively change the way a physician practices medicine. The feelings of isolation, helplessness, anger, depression, and being cast out are all common emotions that distract from work and family. Having recently experienced a malpractice case, my goal as presenter is to give advice, reassurance, and support to practitioners who have been sued, are going through a lawsuit, or who will get sued.
Minimally Invasive Interventions
SIS-09 Eyes Without a Face:
Mayank Gupta md
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 1
2:40p – 3:30p
Music Therapy and Pain Management in Alzheimer’s Disease
Chronic pain is quite common as well as challenging in geriatric patients. Common pain syndromes reported are back, neck, sciatica, joint, and headaches. Any major surgery for back pain or joint replacement can be high risk secondary to comorbid conditions. Patients are quite sensitive to pain medication side effects such as sedation, drowsiness, constipation, and respiratory depression. As the field of pain management is evolving, many minimally invasive alternatives are available to help the geriatric patient population with chronic pain. During the presentation, various treatment approaches will be discussed including radiofrequency ablation, percutaneous lumbar decompression, endoscopic discectomy, endoscopic foraminotomy, spinal cord and peripheral nerve stimulation.
Joanne V. Loewy da, lcat, mt-bc John F. Mondanaro ma, lcat, mt-bc, ccls Andrew R. Rossetti mmt, lcat, mt-bc
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Nolita 3
The assessment and treatment of pain and agitation for
those living with Alzheimer’s and other dementias has been a topic of growing concern for the past 20 years. Pain in the elderly is poorly controlled and contributes to agitation with numerous potential risks. Underreporting of symptoms by patients due to cognitive decline and difficulty in expressivity contributes to ineffective assessment and undertreatment. At the other end of medical intervention lies the danger of overtreatment, such as unwarranted opioid use. Recent interest in aesthetic and holistic interventions have shed light on quality of life issues that are inextricably linked to pain and other symptoms of discomfort. The Louis Armstrong Center for Music and Medicine’s history of treating pain through medical music psychotherapy intervention by licensed, credentialed music therapists affords holistic treatment options integrative to pharmacologic intervention. Skilled assessment of pain and coping strategies through both verbal and nonverbal means afforded in music therapy can lend insight to treatment planning and serve as an effective nonpharmacologic intervention that may enhance standard practices. Music therapy integrative with standard care
SIS-08 Malpractice for Dummies:
Getting Sued and Surviving to Talk About It Sean Li m d
Tuesday, September 3 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
4:40p – 6:00p
4:40p – 5:30p
The medical legal system in our country is broken. The
legal system should protect both the victim and any alleged criminals, as we should agree that a person is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Unfortunately, in healthcare, many physicians are placed in a
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across cognitive, physiological, and psychoemotional domains can enhance cognition, fluidity in movement, tension release, emotional expression, and positive associative experiences. Such intervention can affirm orientation and identity, while alleviating the distress that can exacerbate pain, discomfort, and resultant agitation in patients facing cognitive decline.
learn to deliver. How can we integrate these health determinants into our routine practice? This presentation will describe a simple, systematic approach called a hope (Healing Oriented Practices and Environments) visit, that helps patients tap into their inherent healing capacity. Drawing on the most rigorous scientific evidence available, this session will show that by adding some simple questions and tools to your office practice, you can quickly move toward more patient-centered, integrative healthcare and enhance healing for any patient with chronic pain.
SIS-10 Causalytics —
You’re in Pain, and It’s All Your Fault Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 3
SIS-12 Tumbling Dice:
11:10a – 12:00p
Preventing a Benzodiazepine Crisis and Understanding Protracted Withdrawal Syndrome
Assessment, diagnosis, treatment plan formulation,
implementation, and follow-up are processes familiar to clinicians and are the main drivers of safe and effective chronic pain treatment. However, many other things influence our clinical decision-making, including the continuing controversies about the role of opioid analgesics in the management of chronic pain, the “opioid epidemic” our nation faces today, and the fear of regulatory scrutiny just to name a few. Additionally, when formulating decisions about pain treatment, the subjective nature of chronic pain and determining the context of how pain is affecting a person’s life may often be challenging. What we might not be aware of is how other more subtle forces can potentially influence us and have a negative impact on the care we provide for patients— the things that we “bring into the examination room.” This session will focus on how things like precognitive thinking, implicit biases, explicit biases, impressions about patient characteristics and even their demographics may potentially alter our judgment and create disparity. Suggestions will be presented to help recognize and reflect about how we can make sure that the pain care we deliver is not compromised by these things we might not consider, even though they are there.
SIS-11 How Healing Works, and What It Means for Chronic Pain Management
Robert B. Raffa phd Steven L. Wright md, faap, fasam
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
1:40p – 2:30p
Physicians are often faced with treating pain and sleep disturbances and/or anxiety at the same time, and perhaps do not recognize the link. Many of these patients may have been prescribed benzodiazepines as sleep aids in combination with opioids as analgesics. After declining for years, benzodiazepine prescribing has increased by more than a third from 1996 to 2013 with scant attention until they were found to be involved in 1 out of 3 opioid-associated overdose deaths. Use among persons on opioids has almost doubled over 10 years to 1 in 6, a rate 3 times higher than that seen in the general population. However, recently the fda released a warning regarding the combined use of opioids and benzodiazepines due to serious risks, including death. There is also increasing severe concern about the development of benzodiazepine dependence and difficulties of prolonged withdrawal. This course will address all these issues. SIS-13 Psych Twister: Using Metaphors, Mindfulness,
and Values to Promote Behavioral Change
Wayne Boice Jonas md
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
11:10a – 12:00p
Heather Poupore-King phd Kristen M. Slater psyd
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Yaletown 1
We now know that most of healing—possibly up to
80%—comes from factors outside of what we usually do in the clinic or hospital. The primary determinants of health involve social, environmental, lifestyle, and complementary medicine factors that few clinicians
2:40p – 3:30p
Chronic pain is much more than a physical sensation. It can be all-encompassing and often impacts an individual in a multitude of ways, spawning discouraging,
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painful, or unwanted psychological experiences such as thoughts, feelings, and memories as well as functional limitations. The natural approach might be to dedicate time and expend energy and resources (emotional, psychological, financial, etc) to controlling or avoiding these uncomfortable experiences. However, increasing evidence suggests that, not only are attempts to control the frequency and form of these types of private experiences often unsuccessful, doing so may result in an increase in their occurrence and an increased sensitivity to their impact, thus, paradoxically exacerbating one’s situation. Additionally, especially with chronic pain, avoidance of discomfort (physical and emotional) often results in isolation and inactivity, thus robbing an individual of participation in valued activities. Acceptance and commitment therapy (act), a 3rd wave spinoff of cognitive behavioral therapy, is now considered an evidence-based therapeutic treatment for chronic pain set apart from other, more commonsense solutions. act poses a useful alternative to control-based treatments and operates on a set of 6 core processes within a unified model called psychological flexibility—“the capacity to be directly, consciously, and fully in contact with the present moment without needless defense and to persist or change one’s behaviors in the service of one’s goals.”
SIS-15 Alcohol as Analgesia:
Does It Really Numb the Pain?
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ravi Prasad phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
Chronic pain and alcohol consumption are both very common in the general population, and alcohol is often used to numb both physical and emotional pain. The epidemiology of co-occurring pain and alcohol use will be discussed in this presentation. In addition, we will review the latest evidence surrounding the interaction between alcohol consumption and pain. Moderate alcohol use has been associated with improved pain related outcomes for certain pain conditions. Excessive binge drinking and alcohol use disorder, however, are associated with worsened pain outcomes including increased pain intensity, and alcohol use is associated with specific pain conditions. Pain may also trigger alcohol consumption, and alcohol consumption represents a negative pain coping strategy. The interaction of alcohol with pharmacologic treatments for pain will be reviewed, and behavioral strategies to treat co-occurring alcohol use disorder, however, and chronic pain—and to reduce problem drinking—will be presented.
SIS-14 Maleficent Morphine Milligram Equivalents & Dosing Dilemma Disasters
SIS-16 Buprenorphine: A Molecule for All Seasons Martin D. Cheatle phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
Wednesday, September 4 Level 4 Nolita 3
4:40p – 5:30p
The treatment of chronic noncancer pain (cncp) with
opioid therapy continues to be a controversial topic. CNCP and long-term opioid prescribing has come under regulatory scrutiny with high stake liability for prescribing clinicians and dispensing pharmacists. The presenter will provide background and pearls necessary to narrow the dichotomy between providing acceptable opioid therapy and mitigating risk of morbidity and mortality. Discussions will include gaps between our ability to treat pain due to barriers that stem from numerous sources, some legislated and others through health professional misperceptions. This session will focus on stratifying risks of opioid abuse and misuse, dangerous miscalculated risks of dosing and converting between opioid equivalents, unexpected drug interactions, and pharmacogenetic factors which influence efficacy, toxicity, and drug interactions. Real case examples of how to predict and mitigate such risks while managing pain will be presented.
9:40a – 10:30a
11:10a – 12:00p
Buprenorphine was developed by United Kingdom based Reckitt & Colman Products and released in the uk in 1978. That same year, a clinical study determined that buprenorphine could be helpful in reducing cravings of pure opioids in patients with an opioid abuse disorder. Then, a separate study published in 1982 demonstrated that buprenorphine offered excellent analgesia with a blunted abuse liability. Buprenorphine is a partial agonist at the mu-opioid receptors and an antagonist at the kappa receptors. Mu-opioid receptor activity produces the analgesic effects of buprenorphine, while a strong affinity for the kappa receptors render them inactive. While initially buprenorphine was used as an anesthetic, currently it’s been prescribed for the induction and maintenance in patients with an opioid use disorder. However, buprenorphine is a unique molecule with multiple applications. This presentation will provide an in-depth discussion of the history of buprenorphine and its application for pain control, opioid use disorders, and antisuicide properties in patients with chronic pain.
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music therapy and pain management in alzheimer’s disease joanne loewy
john mondanaro
andrew rossetti
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tues sept 3
JENNIFER HAH
RAVI PRASAD
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 5
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SIS-17 The Static Pendulum: Pain, Drugs, and Ethics Kevin L. Zacharoff md, facip, facpe, faap
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
1:40p – 2:30p
Pain remains one of the most common reasons that people seek medical attention in the United States. Since 2000, pain was designated as the “fifth vital sign” and people were given the right to have their pain assessed and effectively treated by their healthcare professionals. A number of ethical dilemmas have surfaced since, including the increased prescribing of opioid medications for patients with chronic pain, in the face of increasing rates of abuse, misuse, and addiction related to these medications. The “opioid overdose epidemic/crisis” has led us to the challenge of balancing the safe, compassionate, and effective treatment of chronic pain against serious negative outcomes associated with the increased abuse and misuse of these medications. With overdose death rates increasing, tensions running high, a multitude of political and regulatory involvement, and knee-jerk reactiveness, it seems as if the only thing being forgotten is the needs of chronic pain patients and the core ethical principles intended to help clinicians maintain the highest ethical standards of care. This session will describe these principles and clarify their role in determining reproducible courses of action that maximize safety, efficacy, and compassionate pain care, regardless of the direction the “opioid pendulum” is swinging. SIS-18 Understanding Analgesic Trials Rami Ben-Joseph phd
in an analgesic trial. The practical impact of new healthcare measures and the increased importance of comparative effectiveness trials and health outcomes and pharmacoeconomic will be reviewed. At the conclusion of the program participants shall have a comprehensive understanding of analgesic trials.
SIS-19 Back to the Future: Current and Future Opioid Abuse
Risk Assessment and Mitigation Strategies Martin D. Cheatle phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
2:40p – 3:30p
Both chronic pain and the harms associated with prescription opioid abuse, including serious adverse events and fatalities, are enormous public health problems. Opioid therapy has been a cornerstone of a multimodal approach to the management of chronic pain. However, the increased rate of opioid prescriptions has been paralleled by the abuse of prescription opioids in the US, escalating more than 113% between 2004 and 2013. Recent clinical guidelines and professional society position papers for opioid prescribing recommend that, prior to initiating opioid therapy in selected candidates, providers should screen patients to identify those at risk for developing an opioid use disorder and that patients maintained on opioids long term should be routinely monitored for the development of aberrant drug related behaviors suggestive of abuse. This presentation will provide a review of current opioid misuse/abuse risk assessment strategies and outline future assessment strategies including the development of a new assessment tool.
Errol M. Gould phd Srinivas Nalamachu md
SIS-20 A Modest Proposal: Addressing the Components
Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md Robert B. Raffa phd
and Complexities of Coordinated Care
Charles E. Wollmuth
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 3
1:40p – 3:30p
Steven D. Passik phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 5
There are various types of studies that are necessary to
2:40p – 3:30p
When we practitioners approach complex medical
perform in order to determine their clinical relevance. The process extends from benchtop to bedside side and includes various special populations like pediatrics and geriatrics. This course will address various elements related to the study of analgesics. Novel improved preclinical animal models in analgesic studies will be examined. The unique issues of unusually high placebo and nocebo effects in analgesic, which can lead to confusing results, are to be discussed, along with the role and responsibilities of acting as a Principal Investigator
problems (whether pain, depression, or even gerd) that have psychological and lifestyle components and we do so with minimally monitored drug-only therapies, we may bounce from one “wonder drug” to another and end up bewildered, or worse. These problems need complex approaches that address the component parts and we can’t just rely on finding the next wonder drug. Perhaps it’s part of the American mindset: wanting a pill to fix problems. Part of it is from the perverse incentives
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in a healthcare system that wants to find solutions to complex issues and then implement them on the cheap, running them through primary care on a conveyor belt. In pain we see history repeating itself around the medical cannabis issue. All the same mistakes are being made again and, with poor care coordination, risk management, and assessment, will end up doing harm.
SIS-21 The Elephant in the Room:
Helping Patients to Navigate the “O” Impasse
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ravi Prasad phd
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 5
4:40p – 5:30p
This session will start with a pain physician review-
ing the current literature related to the use of opioids and the medical challenges associated with weaning individuals off of this class of drug. Current research regarding evidence-based approaches to opioid tapering will be reviewed in the context of improvements in pain, function, and mood. The adverse physiologic effects of opioids including tolerance, physical dependence, immunosuppression, opioid-induced endocrinopathy, and opioid-induced hyperalgesia will be briefly reviewed. In addition, risks factors for nonmedical opioid use and addiction will be discussed in the context of long-term prescription opioid use. Current strategies for monitoring the development of opioid misuse will be presented. A pain psychologist will then discuss the role of evidence-based behavioral treatment modalities that are known to result in improvement in physical and emotional functioning, including their use in the context of opioid weaning. The terms dependence, abuse, tolerance, and addiction are often used interchangeably when discussing opioid medication; however, use of the nomenclature in this fashion is erroneous. The differences between these words will be explained and the implications for treatment discussed. Clinical pathways that often lead to medication escalation will be identified. The role of behavioral interventions for pain treatment and the literature supporting their use will be reviewed, including data from an interdisciplinary clinical program which provides patients such education while concurrently reducing opioid medication.
SIS-22 Central Sensitization and Ketamine Infusions Jay Joshi m d
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
4:40p – 5:30p
By now, we should all be aware of the prevalence of chronic pain. Astonishingly though, few people are aware of the central pathophysiology of why people develop chronic pain. Central sensitization is one of the key processes in which chronic pain persists. In this presentation, we will explore central sensitization, what it is, what it means, and what can be done to reduce it. We will also discuss ketamine, which has emerged as one of the most useful compounds currently available to mitigate central sensitization. This staple lecture at PAINWeek is a must for anyone who wants to learn about central pain conditions. Dr. Joshi, the presenter, helped create current protocols and philosophies on outpatient ketamine infusions. Ketamine as a treatment is becoming more popular. This lecture will provide top level information from one of the leading experts in ketamine infusions and central sensitization in the country so you can help your patients and evaluate legitimate ketamine infusion centers. SIS-23 Deuces Wild:
Fudin & Gudin Argue the New Rules of the Game Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp Jeffrey A. Gudin md
Thursday, September 5 Level 4 Nolita 1
4:40p – 6:00p
Over the last several months, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) implemented the Prescriber’s Guide to the New Medicare Part D Opioid Overutilization Policies and the US Health and Human Services posted a draft guidance to the Pain Management Best Practices Inter-Agency Task Force. Both were developed in a backdrop of the 2016 Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain. The initial CDC Guideline barely mentions buprenorphine as an analgesic option, CMS focuses on limiting daily opioid consumption, and the Inter-Agency Taskforce, the only group with interdisciplinary pain clinicians, acknowledged the importance of buprenorphine as a safer therapeutic option. So… should the new rules of the game include buprenorphine as a firstline opioid analgesic? And if so, will CMS and third-party payers acknowledge its safety and efficacy advantages over traditional opioids and, if they do, will they support payment for such therapy to enhance patient safety as touted by all three policy-guidance statements? Fudin and Gudin will deliberate on the unique and intricate pharmacological attributes of buprenorphine and how various dosage forms could influence and impact the new rules of the [opioid] game. Discussions will include existing policy mandates,
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commensurate liability, and how regulatory oversight and policy development could help to promote safer options. Case examples of culpability will be examined. As time permits, the doctors will review and debate controversial aspects of pain-related legal cases. As usual, we expect a lively discussion with audience participation!
refused to treat opioid-requiring pain patients, resulting in the patient’s discharge from the specialist’s practice or a consult refusal—the latter of which, by default, often leaves the most medically complex and challenging patients with only their primary care providers to manage their pain. Some patients have chosen to leave their existing providers because of mistrust, cynicism, disbelief, and abandonment, but they then find it difficult to secure any other provider willing to treat their pain. This presentation will chronicle the events that have delivered an unreasonable burden on patients and providers.
SIS-24 Medical Stasi:
The Standardization Proclamation and Its Consequences Jennifer Bolen jd
SIS-26 The Sirens of Titan:
Paul J. Christo md, mba Michael R. Clark md, mph, mba Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
9:40a– 11:00a
Treatment Options for Managing Opioid Withdrawal and Overdose Frank Breve pharmd, mba Joseph V. Pergolizzi, Jr. md
The opioid crisis in America has resulted in many
Robert B. Raffa phd
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
changes and challenges for clinicians who undertake the difficult field of pain management. Specifically, guidelines have been proposed and effectively adopted by regulators and insurers as quasi standards of care. This has created very real barriers to the effective use of an important class of analgesics: opioid analgesics. In this interactive panel discussion, experts from the psychiatric, medical, and legal realms of medicine will offer insights into the difficult practice of managing risk in the treatment of chronic pain, especially in the more complex patient populations where polypharmacy is often the rule, rather than the exception. Using a representative case, panelists as well as audience members will be able to explore these issues with the goal of optimizing clinical care while practicing rational and defensible medicine.
Opioid withdrawal syndrome (ows) is the #1 reason why opioid-tolerant patients avoid discontinuation of opioid therapy. No universally accepted standardized guidelines exist related to the clinical management of ows. Clinicians and patients need to understand ows and how to properly manage it in order to improve chances of successful mitigation of ows symptoms and transition to post-withdrawal treatment. Opioid related overdose deaths continue to rise. Naloxone is currently the only drug commercially available to manage this emergent medical situation; however, alternative drugs are being developed that might provide not just an alternative to naloxone but a superior overall option.
SIS-25 The Visible Few:
SIS-27 Applying Mechanism-Based Classification to Clinical Reasoning for Complex Persistent Pain
An Imperfect Burden on Patients and Providers Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, daapm, fccp, fashp
Miroslav Backonja md
Lynn R. Webster md, facpm, fasam
Sarah Palyo phd
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Mont-Royal Ballroom
1:40p – 2:30p
11:10a – 12:00p
Forced downward titration has been broadly implemented throughout the country as a direct result of the cdc Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain. Prescribing clinicians feel pressured to follow the cdc’s recommendations of dose limits to avoid regulatory sanctions, and pharmacists feel a corresponding obligation to intervene in accordance with the cdc Guideline and corporate policies. In many instances, prescribers have
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Kathryn A. Schopmeyer pt, dpt, cpe
Friday, September 6 Level 3 Gracia 5
1:40p – 3:30p
Understanding the mechanisms that drive a persistent pain process is critical for effectively treating pain in any patient. While it is common to treat pain from a primary nociceptive perspective, this approach often fails in patients with central sensitization. Pain mechanism based classifications can help clinicians make recommendations that may improve functional outcomes
and enhance patient adherence by identifying primary pain mechanisms. This course will offer practical tips for evaluation of patients with mixed pain mechanism presentations and includes an interactive discussion of multimodal treatment options for each.
analgesic topics such as nmda, trk-a, nos, beta-arrestin, orl-1, kappa, gaba, liposomes, and more!
SIS-30 The Cracked Mirror:
Exploring Opioid Abuse Deterrent Methods from the Laboratory to the Real User
SIS-28 Opioid Moderatism:
Beatrice Setnik phd
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 3
Seeking Middle Ground Michael E. Schatman phd, cpe, daspe
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 3
4:40p – 5:30p
Few would question the severity of the prescription
opioid crisis of the early years of this millennium, the causes of which were myriad. Undoubtedly, society needed to address the crisis in an aggressive manner. Unfortunately, the manner in which the problem was addressed has been a classic example of overkill, resulting in a war on opioid analgesia, the patients who require opioid treatment, and the providers who have continued to prescribe. Although many have cast blame on the 2016 cdc opioid prescribing Guideline, it was not necessarily the Guideline itself that caused so much suffering, but rather its weaponization. Irrespective, patients have been the “collateral damage” in this war on opioids. This presentation will address the imperative of physicians exercising more thorough and consistent opioid risk mitigation in order to avoid opioid analgesia from becoming further “legislated away,” as well as the imperative of those who are “pro-opioid” and “anti-opioid” to agree on a rational middle ground that is more “pro-patient.”
SIS-29 Analgesics of the Future Jeffrey A. Gudin md
Friday, September 6 Level 4 Nolita 1
5:40p – 6:30p
Abuse potential is rapidly changing with evolving regula-
tory requirements for clinical methodology. Prescription drug abuse continues to be a great concern and regulatory agencies (such as the fda) require abuse potential evaluation to inform appropriate drug scheduling for novel cns drugs. In addition, many pharmaceutical companies have been developing abuse deterrent formulations to address the concerns of prescription opioid abuse. The methods to deter abuse have evolved over time and include various approaches including mitigating overdose when multiple tablets are combined with various unpleasant excipients such as gelling, strong dyes, or smells or tastes. While most of the exploration of the effectiveness of these techniques is carried out in test tubes or in a limited number of recreational drug users, this session will discuss the challenges and limitations of in vitro and in vivo studies and will engage in a discussion with actual recreational drug users to determine what their experiences are with existing marketed abuse deterrent formulations and what would most dissuade them from engaging with an abuse deterrent opioid. Both the scientists’ and recreational drug users’ perspectives will be openly discussed in this exciting and novel forum. This dynamic session will provide a unique perspective around the behaviors of recreational drug users, and better inform in vitro and in vivo testing approaches.
4:40p – 5:30p
Medicine and science builds and grows on the founda-
tions of what has come before. Although pain management discoveries have been at a relative snail’s pace, there have been recent advances in existing medications and analgesic devices, as well as exciting new molecules and formulations on the horizon. With progressive changes in technology come advances in medicine. Inasmuch, this lecture will discuss newer formulations of older molecules (nsaids, local anesthetics, opioids, gabapentinoids), touch on progress in the abuse deterrent opioid space, and introduce some exciting animal-based, preclinical, and early phase molecules in development. Come hear a discussion of the future of
SIS-31 Let’s Get on the Same Prescribing Page:
Standardizing Opioid Prescribing Practices Among Sickle Cell Disease Patients Collin V. Montgomery aprn Leigh Ann Wilson lcsw
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 1
7:30a – 8:20a
This presentation will focus on the development of a
clinical decision tool to standardize opioid prescribing for patients with sickle cell disease. Pain is the hallmark symptom of sickle cell disease, which is often managed by hematologists or primary care physicians.
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jennifer bolen
paul christo
michael clark
douglas gourlay
friday
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september 6
frank breve joseph pergolizzi jr. robert raffa friday september 6
treatment options for managing opioid withdrawal and overdose
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Currently, there is no clinical decision tool or any type of standardization regarding opioid prescribing among these patients. The management of sickle cell disease guidelines, published in jama in 2014, states that there is little evidence related specifically to chronic pain in those with sickle cell disease and most of the recommendations were adapted from general pain guidelines. Therefore, opioid prescribing is not consistent regarding management of chronic pain in this patient population, potentially due to a lack of standardized prescribing practices. In order to mitigate this absence, this pilot project aims to create an opioid prescribing protocol for use in patients with sickle cell disease who are prescribed or may be prescribed opioid therapy. The research was funded and began in January 2019 to develop the clinical decision tool. The tool was implemented in April 2019 and evaluated. The goal is to continue implementation and potentially expand to other sites that treat sickle cell or other chronic pain patients.
Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. This activity is jointly provided by Global Education Group and Rockpointe Corporation. Jeffrey Fudin pharmd, fccp, fashp, ffsmb Jefrey Gudin md
Thursday, September 5 Level 3 Gracia 3
7:00a – 8:00a
Pain continues to be a significant public-health problem, affecting more than 100 million adults in the US. The presence of pain causes significant reductions in patient quality of life, along with significant economic issues. The use of narcotic medications for pain management has increased dramatically in the US over the past two decades, resulting in increased concerns of misuse and abuse. Due to these concerns, patients in need of opioid medications for relief of acute and chronic pain are often undertreated. Abuse-deterrent formulations of opioid medications
have been developed to make opioids more difficult to abuse and/or to reduce the level of euphoria a patient feels when the formulation is altered. Abuse-deterrent formulations can play a key role in optimizing the riskbenefit ratio of opioid analgesia.
SIS-32 Improving Safety of Chronic Opioid Prescribing by Incorporating Clinical Pharmacists on Teams Andrew S. Friedman md Amanda Locke pharmd, mba, bcacp
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 5
1:40p – 2:30p
The management of chronic noncancer pain with opioid
medications is controversial. The negative consequences have been described as a public health emergency and the efficacy of chronic opioid therapy remains a subject of significant debate. Despite recommendations that chronic opioid therapy not be utilized until other methods fail, there remains a large population of patients for whom no other therapy has been effective and a large cohort of people who have been treated for years with opioids. Many new patients are still started and maintained on chronic opioid therapy. This course describes one system’s use of clinical pharmacists incorporated into the pain management team to reduce risks. Participants will learn how the pharmacists are utilized in this team-based model. Topics covered will include the nuts and bolts about how to incorporate pharmacists into clinical management, outcomes of the model of care, DEA certification for pharmacists, billing for services, and lessons learned.
“Manage Pain and Minimize Misuse/Abuse: Using Abusedeterrent Opioids to Enhance Patient Quality of Life” will discuss the barriers preventing adequate pain management, describe the effective use of abuse-deterrent formulations of opioid medications in clinical practice, and increase clinician awareness of patient engagement tools to optimize care.
VHA-01 Moving Mountains:
Shifting the Pain Management Paradigm
Jessica D. Johnson pharmd, bcacp Judith A. Miller psyd, hbc, cdac Robert Towle p t, ms, cert mdt, cscs
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 5
7:30a – 8:20a
In 2010, the Captain James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center became the first fully integrated facility caring for active duty, veterans, retirees, and dependents in the US. This presented healthcare professionals with unique challenges including how to address pain management in such a diverse population. In 2017, a core team was tasked with the creation of a comprehensive pain management program to address their facility’s need for a cohesive and interdisciplinary approach to chronic pain management in light of the growing national opioid crisis. The emphasis of this new program is to shift the facility’s focus away from a traditional biomedical curative pain management
SYM-01 Manage Pain and Minimize Misuse/Abuse:
Using Abuse-deterrent Opioids to Enhance Patient Quality of Life This program is supported by an educational grant from
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This course will review the scientific evidence for/ against opioid therapy, risk mitigation, and different methods of opioid tapering. Providers need guidance to determine which patients may or may not benefit from opioids. While most pain patients on opioid therapy manage opioids safely, the risks are detrimental to some patients and society. Clinicians are faced with contradictory professional advice and legal mandates/scrutiny. Many patients are exposed to risk due to inappropriately executed opioid tapering. Suicide rates are rising, and illicit drug use including overdose deaths from synthetic opioids continue to rise. How do we maximize benefit over harm? This session will review the scientific evidence and legal requirements that contribute to optimized opioid therapy when clinically indicated and how to discontinue opioid therapy if appropriate.
approach to one that emphasizes a more comprehensive biopsychosocial approach, which can empower patients to take on more responsibility for their pain management and overall functionality. Attendees will learn how this new comprehensive pain management approach has shifted the focus from “fix me” to “teach and empower me.” This journey of “moving mountains” will be illustrated by examining the pitfalls and specific challenges that were faced, as well as the pathways explored, to overcome and rise above these challenges. The end result will reinforce the main goal of realigning the therapeutic relationship to being patient-centered vs provider-driven with the emphasis on improving overall quality of life and functionality. This focus will also speak on the paradigm shift not only for the patients but also for the providers/ staff in order to create a common language that is shared facility wide in the realm of pain management.
VHA-04 Opioids and Mental Health —
VHA-02 VA’s Stepped Care Model for Pain Management and Whole Health:
Suicide Prevention as Highest Priority
Elizabeth M. Oliva phd
Patient-Centered Biopsychosocial Pain Care
Friedhelm Sandbrink md
Heidi Klingbeil m d
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 1
Friedhelm Sandbrink md
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 5
9:40a – 10:30a
2:40p – 3:30p
There is an increasing awareness that opioid therapy and suffering from pain and mental health comorbidities are important contributors to a rising number of suicides in the United States. The va Behavioral Health Autopsy Program report indicates that pain is the most common identifiable risk factor in veterans with completed suicides. Suicide prevention is of highest priority to the Veterans Health Administration. We will explore strategies to detect suicide risk, assess it, and mitigate it. This session will review suicide risk related to opioid therapy and opioid medication reductions/tapering.
The Pain Management Best Practices Inter-Agency Task Force identified inconsistencies and fragmentation of pain care as gaps in US healthcare that limit best practices and patient outcomes. The report encourages coordinated care and cites the collaborative stepped model of pain care, as adopted by the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense health systems as a best practice. The session will address the challenges and successes of VA’s pain care transformation towards patient-centered biopsychosocial pain care for whole health for veterans. Attendees will learn how to anticipate challenges and minimize risks when implementing a comprehensive pain care transformation away from opioids based on lessons learned from the largest integrated healthcare system in the United States.
WRK-01 Innovations in Pain Medicine Ultrasonography:
Image Guidance, Diagnosis, and Emerging Applications
Jennifer M. Hah md, ms Ming-Chih Kao md, phd Einar Ottestad md
VHA-03 Opioid Therapy and Opioid Tapering:
Scot H. Sarver
Guidance for Clinicians to Improve Outcomes
Tuesday, September 3 Level 3 Gracia 5
Sanjog S. Pangarkar md
The field of pain medicine ultrasonography is continually
A Case-Based Pro/Con Discussion Format
evolving with utility in image guidance, diagnosis or pointof-care assessment, and treatment. Around the world, pain medicine specialists favor the use of ultrasound guidance for its accuracy, portability, direct visualization of
Friedhelm Sandbrink md Robert D. Sproul pharmd
Saturday, September 7 Level 3 Gracia 1
1:40p – 4:30p
1:40p – 2:30p
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Buprenorphine is a partial mu agonist that has been clinically available for many years. It was recently made available for the treatment of opioid dependency in the office-based setting. Even more recently, it is enjoying a renewed popularity as an opioid analgesic for the treatment of chronic pain. In this workshop, attendees will explore problematic and sometimes excessively high opioid prescription levels in the context of a treatable clinical condition; case-based examples will be provided. The basics of buprenorphine pharmacology, clinical utility, and the regulatory status of a variety of currently available preparations will be examined through the prism of current as well as past peer reviewed literature.
vasculature, and decreased radiation exposure. In addition, emerging applications continue to evolve for pain medicine sonography with new developments in peripheral nerve stimulation and regenerative medicine. This session will cover the latest evidence-based rationale for ultrasound image guidance for interventions vs other modalities including fluoroscopy and ct guidance. An introduction to diagnostic ultrasonography will be presented covering common pain conditions. Emerging applications for pain medicine ultrasonography particularly relating to peripheral nerve stimulation, regenerative medicine, cryotherapy, and radiofrequency will be discussed. Note: Requires a separate registration fee of $350.
Note: Requires a separate registration fee of $165.
WRK-02 Hitting the Bullseye in Pain Management: Using All the Arrows in Your Quiver!
Alexandra McPherson pharmd, mph Mary Lynn McPherson pharmd, ma, mde, bcps, cpe
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 5
9:30a – 12:30p
Rarely is one medication or pharmacologic class of drugs the answer to a medical conundrum, including pain management. While opioids are indisputably valuable in treating acute pain and some forms of chronic pain, they are just one therapeutic option. Participants in this fast-paced, case-based session will learn about the appropriate use of different medications in lieu of, or in combination with, opioid therapy. Along the way we will explore contemporary issues in pain management such as the positive and negative implications of gabapentinoid plus opioid therapy, specific evidence that supports the use of cannabinoids in the management of chronic pain (and does it reduce opioid burden), and other controversial issues. Participants will learn how to deal with difficult pain syndromes including wound pain, complicated neuropathic pain, and functional pain syndromes. Last, we will wrestle with cases that illustrate the need to deploy interventional pain management strategies in lieu of, or in addition to, opioid therapy. Bring your seat belt: this is going to be a crazy ride! Note: Requires a separate registration fee of $165.
WRK-03 Rotate the Molecule! Rationalizing Excessive Opioid Prescribing with Buprenorphine
Douglas L. Gourlay md, msc, frcpc, fasam
Wednesday, September 4 Level 3 Gracia 5
1:40p – 4:30p
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115
116
117
xhibitors
119
exhibit hall/schedule wednesday 9.4 6:45p – 9:00p Welcome Reception
thursday 9.5 10:00a – 12:30p 2:30p – 5:00p
friday 9.6 10:00a – 12:30p 2:30p – 4:30p Closing Reception
UMB
T19 CME Desk
IMS
Wolters Klewer
T8
T7
T6
T9
T10
T11 T12
Patient Mind, Inc.
T5
USPF
Belmont Commons/exhibit annex level 4
Please note: There are concurrent educational sessions taking place while the Exhibit Hall is open. Exhibit Hall hours are subject to change. Floorplan and listings are accurate as of printing. Please refer to m.painweek.org or the PAINWeek App for most up-to-date information.
Confirm BioSciences/ Prescient Medicine
Rx DestroyerC2R Global Manufacturer
Regenative Labs 405
403
400
402
Mediknox
V.I.P
401
409 404
Aspen Medical Products
TrueMED
406 CPA
Provation
301
305
203
Currax Pharmaceuticals LLC
TerSera Therapeutics
309
205 204
Summus Medical Laser
National Labs NeuroFlow
103
1st Providers Choice
NextGen Labs
410
Pfizer and Lilly
Salix
102
408
105
104 Theranica
107
208
PCL
PMN
109
Royal Bee
111
RealLab
Dr. Reddy’s Labs Inc
Taylor & Francis
411
413
415
412
414
416
Ethos
PAR
MD HEALTH CARE
PCCBD
417
PR Med
COX Net 421 423
419
420
418
Millennium Health
Regenerative Biologics DRUGSCAN Compulink Healthcare Solutions
BioDelivery Sciences International, Inc. 313
319
Emergent
321
316
211 212
PBIO
Multi Radiance
113
106
Nature’s Wonder
Innovida Pharmaceutique
115
108 Fidia
221
216 Teva Pharmaceuticals
220
Image X Erchonia Innovation
110 ReviveMD
119
112 OUP
114
US Army Healthcare Recruiting
Safe Chain Solutions
NovaDX
325
322 Zyla
Pachamama CBD
217
117
424
Galt 323
Medi Lazer
H-Wave
425
Karuna
320
Salonpas
SCILEX
422
Paradigm
222
224
Infinity Massage Chairs
Horizon Therapeutics
RBI
LeadingResponse
SBA Loan
123
121 116 AHS
118
120
Adit
125
122
Sovereign PCSS and Assertio Properties ORN Therapeutics
DTPM
701
700
702
703
705
Aprima
PathLab Services Inc
Appriss Health
Clarity Lab Solutions
600
Skylar
602 601
PW INFUSION by LIVING HEALTHY CORP
PPM
ReCharge Lounge
704
Expert Opinion Live
604 603
Doctor Las Vegas Multimedia HEALS
ReCharge Lounge
michael schatman
friday september 6
(revisited)
taking the insanity out of medical cannabinoids
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JENNIFER BOLEN
DOUGLAS GOURLAY
THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 5
A LEGAL AND MEDICAL PERSPECTIVE ON MARIJUANA USE WHEN PRESCRIBING CONTROLLED SUBSTANCES
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12 5 Adit
701 Aprima, an eMDs company
Accelerate practice growth with Adit's all-in-one solution. We enhance and automate each touchpoint in the patient journey. From the first impression online to the post-visit follow up, Adit makes it easy for healthcare providers to attract more patients, manage online reputation, modernize the patient experience, and automate the front office. Additionally, Adit offers a patient booking guarantee. If the healthcare provider does not book a specific quota of patients, no charges will be incurred for Adit’s services & product offerings. Give us a call today to learn more!
Aprima, an eMDs company, offers EHR, PM, RCM and credentialing solutions tailored for the unique needs of Pain Management practices. Our back-to-back KLAS®award winning EHR is renowned for ease of use. Reduce clicks with pain management productivity and efficiency features that make scheduling and documenting follow up appointments a breeze. Pain templates, EPCS and PDMP for prescribing, and powerful billing make it a complete solution. Decades of expertise working with practices just like yours has helped us craft proven, transformative, solutions that meet the unique needs of pain management and empower you to maximize the impact of your care.
adit.com
www.aprima.com
116 American Headache Society
404 Aspen Medical Products
americanheadachesociety.org
The American Headache Society® (AHS) is the professional organization for the study and management of headache and face pain. AHS activities include an annual scientific meeting, a comprehensive headache symposium, regional symposia for neurologists and family practice physicians, and publication of the journal Headache. AHS established the American Migraine Foundation to raise awareness about migraine and related disorders and raise funds to establish the American Registry for Migraine Research.
www.aspenmp.com
Aspen Medical Products is a leader in the development of award-winning, innovative spinal orthotics providing optimal pain relief, post-trauma stabilization, pre and post surgical stabilization and long-term patient care. Committed to improving patient care, Aspen offers multiple bracing options that deliver unsurpassed motion restriction, superior comfort and an economic advantage, encouraging better patient compliance.
600 Appriss Health
122 Assertio Therapeutics
Appriss Health is the provider of the nation’s most comprehensive platform for opioid stewardship and the early identification, prevention and management of substance use disorder (SUD). We provide state government agencies with the most advanced repository of controlled substance dispensing information, and deliver real-time clinical decision support, critical insights and interventions to physicians, pharmacists, and care team members through millions of patient encounters each year. Our solutions enable healthcare providers, pharmacists, and care team members to assess and manage clinical risk in order to positively impact patient safety and health outcomes. For more information, please visit www.apprisshealth.com.
Assertio's mission is to advance patient care in our core areas of neurology, orphan and specialty medicines
apprisshealth.com
www.assertiotx.com
31 3 BioDelivery Sciences International Inc. BDSI.com
BioDelivery Sciences (BDSI) is a rapidly growing commercial-stage specialty pharmaceutical company dedicated to patients living with chronic conditions. BDSI is utilizing its novel and proprietary BioErodible MucoAdhesive (BEMA®) technology and other drug delivery technologies to develop and commercialize new applications of proven therapies aimed at addressing important unmet medical needs.
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31 3 BioDelivery Sciences International Inc. Medical Affairs
403 Confirm BioSciences / Prescient Medicine
Visit our booth for more information.
Confirm BioSciences is a leader in high-quality pointof-care testing for both the clinical community and individual consumers. The company’s product portfolio ranges from instant and lab-based diagnostic testing solutions for drugs of abuse, including HairConfirm® (hair-based) and DrugConfirm® (urine-based), to the HealthConfirm® line of tests that measure hormones relating to several aspects of health, essential vitamin levels, key neurotransmitters and more, with all results delivered in user-friendly reports. Prescient Medicine empowers a new standard in healthcare delivery, offering expert-driven and evidence-based insights and medication monitoring to drive better diagnostic decisions.
www.confirmbiosciences.com
602 Clarity Lab Solutions
www.claritylabsolutions.com
Visit our booth for more information.
406 Clinical Pain Advisor
www.clinicalpainadvisor.com
ClinicalPainAdvisor.com offers pain medicine healthcare professionals a comprehensive knowledge base of practical pain and pain management information and resources to assist in making the right decisions for their patients. Our mission is to empower pain medicine healthcare professionals with practice-focused and comprehensive clinical and drug information that is reflective of current and emerging principles of care to help clinicians optimize patient outcomes.
421 CoxHealth
coxhealth.com CoxHealth is a Top 100 Integrated Healthcare Network. We are recruiting for a physician to do medication management as part of our Pain Medication Management Clinic. Outstanding benefit and compensation plan. Be a part of a multi-disciplinary team including pharmacy, behavioral health, and experienced advanced practice providers.
1 03 Collegium
www.collegiumpharma.com
Collegium is a specialty pharmaceutical company committed to being the leader in responsible pain management. For nearly two decades, Collegium has been focused on developing and commercializing new medicines for pain management that reflects its Core Values and commitment to people suffering from pain, providers, and its communities. The result of those efforts is a portfolio of meaningfully differentiated medications to treat moderate to severe pain.
41 0 Currax Pharmaceuticals LLC www.curraxpharma.com
Visit our booth for more information.
301 Daiichi Sankyo, Inc.
www.daiichisankyo.com
31 9 Compulink Healthcare Solutions
Daiichi Sankyo, Inc., headquartered in Basking Ridge, New Jersey, is the U.S. subsidiary of Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. is a member of the Daiichi Sankyo Group and is focused on the development of oncology therapies and specialty medicines. Daiichi Sankyo, Inc. medicines approved in the U.S. include therapies for hypertension, pain management, dyslipidemia, diabetes, thrombosis, stroke risk reduction, acute coronary syndrome, opioid-induced constipation, IV iron therapy and metastatic melanoma.
www.compulinkadvantage.com
A leader in specialty-specific, all-in-one EHR and Practice Management solutions, Compulink’s Advantage SMART Practice® uses artificial intelligence to improve clinical and financial results. Designed to maximize your time while seeing patients, Advantage includes everything you need to optimize workflow including pain management-specific EHR, PM, patient engagement, and RCM.
127
601 Doctor Multimedia
laboratories since 1993 to provide a comprehensive array of instrumentation, method development, custom assays, laboratory consumables and supplies, and ongoing service and support. We provide a complete laboratory solution. National in scope. Local in service.
doctormultimedia.com
We have graphic designers, WordPress developers, social media masters, content creators, SEO wizards, IT problem solvers, marketing gurus, and all-around ninjas ready to help your medical practice thrive and grow. We’re successful for one simple reason: no one can outwork us. At most, they can do the same, but they can’t do more. We’re open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. We do it out of passion, and because that’s when our clients need help. We do it because your website doesn’t stop working and neither do we.
321 Emergent BioSolutions
www.emergentbiosolutions.com Emergent Biosolutions develops, manufactures, and delivers a portfolio of medical countermeasures for biological and chemical threats, existing and emerging infectious diseases as well as opioid overdose.
41 3 Dr. Reddy's Laboratories, Inc.
119 Erchonia Corporation
Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories is an integrated pharmaceutical company, committed to providing affordable and innovative medicines for healthier lives. Through its three businesses—Pharmaceutical Services & Active Ingredients, Global Generics and Proprietary Products— Dr. Reddy’s offers a portfolio of products and services including APIs, custom pharmaceutical services, generics, biosimilars and differentiated formulations. Our major therapeutic areas of focus are gastrointestinal, cardiovascular, diabetology, oncology, pain management and dermatology. Dr. Reddy’s operates in markets across the globe, including USA, India, Russia & CIS countries, and Europe.
Visit our booth for more information.
420 DRUGSCAN
1 08 Fidia Pharma USA Inc.
DRUGSCAN offers timely, accurate, state-of-the-art testing solutions for medication monitoring and addiction treatment, with 24/7 access to the a toxicologist. As a nationally certified SAMHSA and CAP accredited laboratory, our reputation is renowned. In addition, DRUGSCAN CAT.one is a leader in conducting in vitro manipulation and extraction studies for abusedeterrent products which further enhances our understanding of drug use and abuse.
Visit our booth for more information.
www.drreddys.com
www.erchonia.com
www.drugscan.com
412 Ethos Laboratories www.ethos-labs.com
Ethos’s proprietary Functional Biomarkers of Pain panel provides novel, objective information about the biochemical origins of pain. Addressing abnormal biomarker findings with cost-effective, non-opioid therapies provides a valuable adjunct treatment program to maximize the likelihood of successful and prolonged pain management.
www.fidiapharma.us
1 02 1st Providers Choice Pain Medicine EMR Software www.1stproviderschoice.com
IMS for Pain Management is a user-friendly, Fully Certified EMR and Practice Management Solution. Pain Management doctors across the country have helped us to design and customize the software for maximum efficiency and profitability in your practice. Save hours of time on visit notes and documentation with Pain Management specific templates.
700 Drug Testing Program Management www.dtpm.com
DTPM is the leader in providing nationwide laboratory products, services, and solutions. We serve over 750 laboratories in 47 states. We have been partnering with
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323 Galt Pharmaceuticals
22 4 Infinity Massage Chairs
Galt Pharmaceuticals is the first and only pharmaceutical company to implement a unique franchise concept. Galt offers entrepreneurial local ownership opportunities for self-driven individuals. Galt utilizes Independent Pharmacies as the key distributor of our products. We currently have a sleep medication, Doral, on the market, and will launch a non-controlled pain medication, Orphengesic Forte in August 2019. Galt possesses a robust pipeline that will bring products to market that address unmet clinical needs.
When you hear "massage chair" you might not realize the extent to which it can impact your life, but the physical and mental benefits can be truly astounding in unexpected ways. Visit Infinity Massage Chairs, at booth 224 to experience wellness.
www.galtrx.com
220 Horizon Therapeutics
www.horizontherapeutics.com
Horizon is focused on researching, developing and commercializing medicines that address critical needs for people impacted by rare and rheumatic diseases. Our pipeline is purposeful: we apply scientific expertise and courage to bring clinically meaningful therapies to patients. We believe science and compassion must work together to transform lives. For more information on how we go to incredible lengths to impact lives, please visit www.horizontherapeutics.com, follow us @HorizonNews on Twitter, like us on Facebook or explore career opportunities on LinkedIn.
www.infinitymassagechairs.com
115 Innovida Pharmaceutique innovidarx.com
A boutique pharmaceutical company with innovative medical products. We specialize in branded generic products that improve the health of patients and fulfill their medical needs. We have strategic partnerships worldwide to produce innovative products with the patient’s needs as the driving force behind our development. Our products exceed all Current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) regulations enforced by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). We offer a range of branded generic products to bring comfort and pain relief to patients, developed with our pharmaceutical technology and brought to you at a fair price.
T6 International Myopain Society www.myopain.org
21 7 H-Wave
Visit our booth for more information.
H-Wave® is a proven, evidence-based medical device intended to speed musculoskeletal recovery, restore function, and manage chronic and post-operative pain. It’s a non-invasive drug-free treatment prescribed for home use. Patients benefit from personalized instruction and long-lasting, on-demand electronic anesthesia, enhanced regional blood flow and improved lymphatic action. When opioid sparing technique and outcomes drive your treatment focus, H-Wave’s advanced technology and service provide the best opportunity for real results.
www.karunalabs.com
422 Karuna Labs
www.h-wave.com
Karuna Labs is a software company that creates immersive virtual reality experiences designed to address chronic pain. Karuna sells products for both clinical and home use.
603 Las Vegas HEALS lasvegasheals.org
117 Image X Innovation
Visit our booth for more information.
We seek to improve access to the best available therapies which significantly improves patient’s discomfort. We offer wellness and relaxation services for attendees and exhibitors and management.
www.leadingresponse.com
121 LeadingResponse
www.imagexinnovation.com
LeadingResponse has marketed more than 1,000,000 consumer seminars for financial advisors. Our Seminar-
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Success® program is now being successfully utilized by medical practices looking to attract more large fee-based cases. Practices utilizing our program are consistently filling 3-6 events with 30 affluent and pre-screened attendees per event. Our targeted approach is fueled by millions of responder records and prior local event data to give you an edge in your area.
to obtain objective information about patients’ recent use of prescription medications and/or illicit drugs and helps monitor the effectiveness of treatment plans. Our evidence-based, guideline-driven genetic testing services, including pharmacogenetic testing, help clinicians make informed medication choices for their patients. Processing hundreds of thousands of patient specimens each year allows us to provide meaningful insights into emerging drug use trends.
604 Living Healthy Corporation www.elevare.com
A new and vibrant company based in Las Vegas, with the idea of Living Healthy through the use of high quality skin care products and LED light therapy, along with CBD products made from non-GMO hemp. On their own, each of these products is valuable. It's when these products are combined and infused together, that the maximum benefits are achieved. Come by our booth for a free sample and then you too will understand what Living Healthy is all about.
113 Multi Radiance Medical www.multiradiance.com
41 9 MD HEALTH CARE
Multi Radiance manufactures FDA-cleared super pulsed laser devices for non-invasive drug-free pain relief; the new answer for chronic pain without opioids. Multi Radiance lasers are used by multiple healthcare disciplines as well as professional and college sports teams, for managing injuries and maximizing recovery; and are the only therapeutic lasers validated in-vitro, in-vivo, in laboratory trials, and clinical trials. Console models for the clinic, and cordless models for anywhere, including home care patient rentals.
Visit our booth for more information.
1 05 National Labs
mdhealthcaresupplies.uk
www.nationallabs.com
400 Mediknox
mediknox.com
Mediknox works with the most advanced medical devices, and simplifies professional medical technology for home use. This technology is clinically proven and FDA cleared medical devices, and currently carried, used and sold by medical professionals, including those within this field.
320 Medi Lazer
www.medilazer.net
NATIONAL LABS: THE LAST LAB CHANGE YOU’LL WANT TO MAKE. NATIONAL LABS is an industryleading clinical reference laboratory providing advanced high-complexity urine and oral fluid drug testing. Value of services include: Unique Drug and Metabolite Test Panels, Customized Reports, Lowest Cost Point of Care Testing Devices, Web and EMR-Reporting Capabilities, Exceptional Ancillary Services and Patient-friendly Billing Practices. NATIONAL LABS is positioned to meet all your medication monitoring needs and become a committed partner to your Pain Management Practice. We welcome you to stop by Booth #105 to learn more.
1 06 Nature's Wonder
Visit our booth for more information.
41 6 Millennium Health
natureswonderus.com
www.millenniumhealth.com
Visit our booth for more information.
Millennium Health is a highly accredited specialty laboratory with over a decade of experience delivering timely, accurate, clinically-actionable information through our nationwide medication monitoring and drug testing services. Drug testing is used by substance use disorder and pain management providers
1 07 NeuroFlow
www.neuroflowsolution.com NeuroFlow is a healthcare technology and analytics company enabling behavioral health access and
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221 Pachamama CBD
engagement across the continuum of care. Combining validated techniques, data science, and behavioral economics, NeuroFlow helps leading pain clinics, health systems, and providers objectively assess, track, and engage patients to support their mental health.
www.enjoypachamama.com
Based in Denver CO, Pachamama CBD focuses on providing educational insights and crafting holistic products that work to restore balance in the body. Rather than masking the experience of pain, we created integrative formulas that address the underlying sources of discomfort. Feeling comfortable when using CBD is the first step in unearthing all the therapeutic value that the hemp plant has to offer. That’s why we will be at PAINWeek continuing to build our awareness of all forms of pain and answering questions that arise about our mission or products.
408 NextGen Laboratories nextgenlabs.com
NextGen Laboratories offers you high-impact diagnostic results derived from our next generation technologies. Our dedicated staff provides personalized customer service to every patient with technical expertise and patient care that will exceed your expectations for a clinical laboratory. Our capabilities give you access to better technology, faster turnaround times, and excellent quality assurance.
1 09 Pain Medicine News
www.PainMedicineNews.com
32 5 NovaDX
Pain Medicine News, the best-read pain publication in the United States according to Kantar Media, is mailed 10 times per year to 46,450 pain-treating physicians and 3 times per year to 46,760 pain-treating nurse practitioners and physician assistants. It offers extensive coverage of major scientific meetings affecting the specialty, feature articles on topics relevant to practicing provider, in-depth clinical reviews, practice management articles, medical education, as well as a full line of digital media, including the PainMedicineNews.com website, e-Newsletters, and multimedia content.
www.novadx.com NOVADX ENFD TESTING FOR SMALL FIBER NEUROPATHY. NovaDX is a leading histopathology lab designed to assist our physicians in diagnosing small nerve peripheral neuropathy using epidermal nerve fiber density (ENFD) testing. NovaDX offers a national lab to better assist providers in specimen referral and turnaround times. At NovaDX it is our goal to facilitate faster reporting times and better outcomes for patients. Our services can reduce overall healthcare costs, unnecessary surgeries and treatments, and improve patient care.
42 5 Paradigm
www.paradigm.healthcare
1 12 Oxford University Press
Paradigm Labs is an independent laboratory specializing in clinical toxicology. Paradigm has developed a new and unique method for drug testing in response to payor policies requiring presumptive testing (a drug screen), which is typically performed using EIA point of care test cups or a chemistry analyzer. Paradigm’s Benchmark Presumptive LC-MS/MS test allows the provider to evaluate more than 50 specific drugs in a timely and cost-effective fashion; providers can drug screen within medical necessity guidelines and eliminate high patient bills. Paradigm’s Benchmark Presumptive LC-MS/MS test puts the information in the provider’s hands and eliminates guesswork associated with patient care.
global.oup.com/?cc=us
Oxford University Press is the world’s largest university press with the widest global presence and strives for excellence in scholarship, research, and education. Since its creation in the 1600’s OUP has published award winning material such as dictionaries, children’s books, journals, sheet music, and textbooks to a range of audiences. In addition to traditional publishing, OUP offers support to teachers, delivers digital learning and assessment platforms, creates online research tools, and provides free digital language resources. Today, OUP has locations in 50 countries and publishes over 6000 titles a year for audiences ranging in age, experience, and field of study.
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michael barnes friday september 6
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208 Parkway Clinical Laboratories
212 Predictive Biotech
Parkway Clinical Laboratories (PCL) is a College of American Pathologists (CAP) accredited, CLIA certified, specialty toxicology laboratory. PCL has been delivering in-vitro diagnostic services for almost five decades. We are a global provider of addiction screening and opioid prescription monitoring services including designer drugs focused on serving behavioral health, addiction and chronic pain management specialists.
Predictive Biotech, Inc., a Salt Lake City, Utah life sciences company formed in 2015, is a leader in human cell and tissue products for use in regenerative medicine. A growing national network of clinics, health systems, researchers and physicians leverage Predictive's four main placental-derived and Wharton's jelly umbilical cord-derived products.
parkwayclinical.com
www.predictivebiotech.com
41 4 PRISKA (Pain Assessment Resources)
703 PathLab Services Inc.
www.priska.io
Visit our booth for more information.
T9 Patient Mind, Inc.
www.patientmind.org
Patient Mind Inc., a 501 (c)3 non-profit organization, is on a mission to improve clinical dialogue, merging science, healthcare expertise, and patient education. We offer education on multiple conditions for patients, clinicians, and families. We are a portal for patients seeking answers to healthcare topics to improve communication/ confidence during their next clinical visit. Patients with pain or mental health conditions can go to PatientMind. org to learn from real stories, with real solutions and hope. Current science is explained by a specialist in an understandable manner. Participants of the education will find resources available, including specialist finders and smartphone communication guides.
205 Pfizer and Lilly
www.chronicpaindrivers.com
PFIZER AND LILLY: WORKING TOGETHER TO ADVANCE THE UNDERSTANDING OF CHRONIC PAIN. The collaboration between Pfizer and Lilly reflects the commitment of both organizations to scientific innovation in pain. Pfizer and Lilly colleagues around the world are devoting their passion and scientific expertise to advancing the understanding of chronic pain with the goal of improving patient treatment, care, and outcomes.
Priska™ suite of online tools bridges the communication gap between doctors and patients. Our assessments and surveys give doctors the tools they need to make informed decisions and provide patients with insights to better understand their unique pain. Pain care protocols are as unique as each patient. Priska™ tools are designed to help you make fast, informed decisions. Customize your patients’ pain management solutions through our easy-to-use online opioid and psychosocial risk assessment. Cloud-based questionnaires provide immediate insights. Priska™ Online Patient Risk Assessment Tools are designed to make pain care management easier.
423 PR Med Net
www.prmednet.com/about
Our experience spans the complete spectrum of care – from hospitals to CCRCs, SNF/Subacute centers, AL/IL, outpatient, schools, and home health. We believe it’s important to foster environments that support growth and encourage fulfillment – for both our therapists and the patients we serve. PR Met Net is one of the largest independently owned, diversified therapy and related service providers in the country.
305 Provation
www.provationmedical.com Provation is a leading provider of clinical productivity software for healthcare professionals, with solutions for multispecialty procedure documentation (Provation® MD and Provation® Apex), order set and care plan management (Provation® Order Sets and Provation® Care Plans), and nursing documentation (Provation® MultiCaregiver). Our software helps providers increase
704 Practical Pain Management
www.practicalpainmanagement.com
Visit our booth for more information.
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operational efficiency, business profitability and regulatory compliance by improving quality, streamlining workflows and enabling insights. We serve 1,500 hospitals and 1,000 ambulatory surgery centers (ASCs) specializing in gastroenterology, pain management, orthopedics and more. Provation is headquartered in Minneapolis, MN. More information is available at www.provationmedical.com.
120 Providers Clinical Support System and Opioid Response Network
www.opioidresponsenetwork.org & www.pcssnow.org
Providers Clinical Support System (PCSS) and the Opioid Response Network (ORN) are two SAMHSA-funded federal grant initiatives awarded to the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry and a large coalition of national professional organizations to address the opioid crisis. PCSS offers free trainings, resources, and mentoring to primary care clinicians in the evidencebased treatment of opioid use disorder. ORN provides free technical assistance to single state agencies, healthcare systems, clinics, and individuals in evidencebased prevention, treatment, and recovery of opioid use disorder. Together, these initiatives work in tandem to help mitigate this healthcare crisis.
From preventative medicine to complex wound and scar care, we work with physicians to find solutions. We work with dermatologist, diabetic specialist, orthopedists, surgeons, sports medicine physicians, and more to prevent or treat all types of conditions.
41 8 Regenerative Biologics: Stem Cell Therapy www.regenerativecellmedicine.com
Regenerative Biologics is recognized as a leader in regenerative medicine and stem cell research. We work directly with one of the top FDA regenerative IND university research and processing labs in the United States. This guarantees that your patients can trust that the regenerative products they receive from you are the highest in quality, purity, safety and efficacy available today; and it guarantees that you will always be up to date on cutting edge research and new developments in regenerative cell therapy. Our reasonable pricing structure provides an extra bonus for you and your patients. Regenerative medicine changes lives everyday!
222 Regenesis Biomedical www.regenesisbio.com
Regenesis Biomedical is a medical device company dedicated to improving human welfare through the research, design, manufacture, and sale of energybased medical products and services that alleviate pain, restore health, and improve quality of life. We offer the Provant Therapy System, which is electromagnetic energy. Provant is safe, non-drug pain management.
41 1 Real Lab
www.myreallab.com
RealLab is a true diagnostics and risk management partner to our providers, healthcare organizations, the community and above all the patients. RealLab prides itself with experienced and certified medical technologists who are committed to providing superior quality and service through advanced technology and personal attention. Our services include: qualitative and quantitative results, access to medical director, results interpretation, defining and understanding drug interactions, developing drug testing policies or programs, and unusual specimen collection or handling.
405 Regenative Labs
110 ReviveMD
www.revivemdcbd.com
ReviveMD was created to be the healthcare industry’s gold standard cannabidiol (CBD) product. Our mission is to provide the safest and most efficacious form of CBD oil for use only by licensed healthcare professionals directly with their patients.
regenativelabs.com
111 Royal Bee
Regenative Labs strives to process our products in conditions above AATB requirements. PROVIDING OUR PARTNERS THE HIGHEST QUALITY. Using human tissue under AATB and FDA guidance, we work with physicians, hospitals, and surgery centers to improve patient outcomes in virtually all facets of medicine.
We vend raw honey products, candles, skin creams, pillows, and the raw honey itself in jars. We stand on three pillars of usage for the raw honey: Aromatherapeutically: with candles to wind down stress, burlap pillows filled with beads of raw honey for a better night sleep; Topical: using creams to sooth dry skin,
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123 SBA Loan Group
treat wounds and burns, eczema and psoriasis, etc; and finally, Ingestion; to sooth a sore throat and improve gut health. We also offer unique pain relieving led devices that work on target areas of the body to relieve muscle stress, joint pain, as well as migraine.
www.sbaloangroup.com
SBA Loan Group is a private company that helps small business owners obtain financing for Working Capital and Real Estate through the United States SBA government loan program.
409 Rx Destroyer - C2R Global Manufacturer www.rxdestroyer.com
21 1 SCILEX Pharmaceuticals
Rx Destroyer™️ Drug disposal solutions is a safe, ready to use, drug compliance bottle technology. Our patented wet liquid slurry combined with activated carbon deems controlled and non-controlled substances nonretrievable and into a non-medicine form. EPA and DEA compliance is the law. The EPA new no sewer requirement, and the DEA non-retrievable requirements are our business. Rx Destroyer™️ will help determine your drug disposal compliance process, procedure, training, and implementation plans.
www.scilexpharma.com
Scilex Pharmaceuticals, located in Mountain View, California, is focused on becoming the global pharmaceutical leader in pain management. Scilex’s marketed product (launched in the United States in October 2018) is ZTlido® (lidocaine topical system 1.8%), a branded lidocaine topical system formulation for the treatment of relieving the pain of post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN), also referred to as after-shingles pain. We are also focused on the development and commercialization of best in class novel non-opioid pain therapies. Our lead program, SP-102, is a non-opioid novel gel formulation administered epidurally in development for patients with moderate to severe chronic radicular pain/sciatica.
42 4 Safe Chain Solutions www.safechain.com
Safe Chain Solutions is a full-service pharmaceutical wholesaler serving a diverse network of healthcare facilities nationwide. We provide the safest and most secure range of wholesale pharmaceutical and healthcare products to independent retail pharmacies, Surgery Centers, Urgent Cares, compound specialty pharmacies, hospitals, International Research and Government managed facilities as well as Physicians. Headquartered in Cambridge, MD, we have sales offices in Miami and Annapolis, MD, and operate warehouses in Cambridge, MD, and St. George, UT.
702 Skylar Labs
www.skylarlab.com
Dvorah Oral Tablet 325-30-16 MG (APAP-Caf-Dihydrocodeine): Packaged as a 3-day dosage for the management of pain severe enough to require an opioid analgesic for which alternative treatments are inadequate.
118 Sovereign Properties
203 Salix Pharmaceuticals
www.sovereignprop.com
www.salix.com
Sovereign Properties, led by Russ Krivor, is a fullyintegrated real-estate development and asset management firm. Since 2004, Krivor has been engaged in the concept, development, construction, and project management of income generating real estate in the strongest job-growth markets across the United States. As a result of this conservative approach to real estate, Krivor and Sovereign Properties has assembled over $300 million in equity under management, resulting in over 4,000 completed and leased apartments. We are focused on development and acquisition in high-growth sunbelt markets where population growth and job-growth continue to significantly outpace the broader US.
For 30 years, Salix Pharmaceuticals has been committed to the prevention and treatment of gastrointestinal diseases. Salix licenses, develops and markets innovative products to improve patients' lives and arm healthcare providers with life-changing solutions. Salix is headquartered in Bridgewater, New Jersey.
31 6 Salonpas
salonpas.us
Visit our booth for more information.
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204 Summus Medical Laser
41 7 The Physician's Choice CBD
Summus Medical Laser is the pioneer in Class IV laser therapy and a global leader developing the next generation laser technology to relieve pain and aid healing. Our research is guided by physicians, our clinical training ensures our customer's success, and our equipment stands apart for its durability, ease of use and safety. We offer a non-surgical solution for providers while delivering the most effective, powerful therapeutic laser used in medicine.
Visit our booth for more information.
summuslaser.com
41 5 Taylor and Francis Group taylorandfrancis.com
pccbd.com
1 04 Theranica Bioelectronics theranica.com
Theranica Bioelectronics, founded in 2016, is dedicated to combining advanced neuromodulation therapy with modern wireless technology to develop proprietary electroceuticals that address prevalent medical conditions and diseases. Nerivio™, Theranica’s first FDA authorized to market device, is a low-cost, wearable for the acute treatment of migraine. Theranica will continue to use its proprietary technology to develop additional solutions to other pain disorders.
Taylor & Francis partners with researchers, scholarly societies, universities and libraries worldwide to bring knowledge to life. As one of the world’s leading publishers of scholarly journals, books, eBooks and reference works our content spans all areas of the Humanities, Social Sciences, Behavioral Sciences, Science, Technology, and Medicine.
401 TrueMED
www.truemedcbd.com
Visit our booth for more information.
T8 University of Maryland Baltimore
309 TerSera Therapeutics
www.graduate.umaryland.edu/palliative
www.tersera.com
TerSera Therapeutics is a specialty pharmaceutical company headquartered in suburban Chicago with a focus on select therapeutic areas, including oncology and pain & inflammatory disorders. Our mission is to develop products which truly make a difference for patients. Our focus is to bring intelligent solutions to our customers that go beyond the therapy itself in order to provide improved patient outcomes. We look forward to meeting you!
21 6 Teva Pharmaceuticals
The Online Master of Science and Graduate Certificates in Palliative Care program is designed to meet the educational needs of individuals currently working in hospice and palliative care who want to gain a deeper understanding of the physical, psychological, spiritual, and social needs of patients and families affected by serious illness, and those professionals who wish to learn more about this field. This interprofessional program is entirely online, and designed for the busy working adult! There are multiple elective opportunities, allowing you to customize your learning experience! Application deadlines December 15 for Spring; July 15th for Fall.
114 US Army Healthcare Recruiting
www.tevausa.com
recruiting.army.mil/mrb
Teva Pharmaceuticals is a global leader in generic medicines and biopharmaceuticals. Building on more than a century-old legacy, Teva delivers high-quality products to patients in nearly every therapeutic area, has an established presence in generics, specialty, OTC and API, a fully integrated R&D function, strong operational base and global infrastructure and scale.
Las Vegas MRS/U.S. Army.
T11 U.S. Pain Foundation uspainfoundation.org
An independent 501(c)(3) organization, U.S. Pain is the leading organization for people with pain. Our mission:
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to empower, educate, connect, and advocate for those living with chronic illness that causes pain, as well as their caregivers and clinicians. U.S. Pain not only helps improve the lives of people with pain through its multiple programs and services, but is also dedicated to improving patient outcomes, addressing access and affordability issues, and increasing awareness about chronic pain.
402 Veterans In Pain, V.I.P. - A 501c3 Nonprofit www.veteransinpain.org
Veterans In Pain, Inc. is a 501c3 nonprofit providing pro bono medical solutions to Veterans suffering from chronic pain. This is only possible due to our national network of dedicated physicians specializing in the field of Pain Management, embracing an opportunity to give back to those who have sacrificed their health for our freedoms.
T5 Wolters Kluwer shop.lww.com
Visit our booth for more information.
322 Zyla Life Sciences
zyla.com
Visit our booth for more information.
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genitourinary syndrome of menopause
georgine lamvu
wednesday september 4
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see you in 2020.
The early bird is in the nest for only 5 days.
ReGiSTeR NOW! * ONLY $399 September 8–12
2020 *This offer will expire at 11:59 pm on 9/7/19