Although opioids are unsurpassed in the treatment of acute and cancer pain,
their use in chronic noncancer pain is clearly limited. This review discus
ses some open and controversial issues such as the balance between pain rel
ief and side effects, whether all types of pain can be treated with opioids
, and current efforts to develop opioids with an improved efficacy-side eff
ect ratio. Whereas respiratory depression or tolerance are usually not majo
r issues in long-term opioid use, it seems questionable whether opioids can
produce an analgesic response in certain types of pain when there is a maj
or affective component to the pain or when learned pain behavior is the mai
n problem. Efforts to improve opioids have traditionally aimed at enhancing
the selectivity of opioid receptor ligands towards mu-, delta-, and kappa-
receptors. Another major strategy has been the search for opioid analgesics
acting at opioid receptors outside the central nervous system, with the pr
ospect to avoid centrally mediated side effects.