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Cancer Pain Assessment (BPI)

For informational purposes only. This tool is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.

Detailed Guide Coming Soon

We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the Cancer Pain Assessment (BPI). Check back soon for step-by-step explanations, formulas, real-world examples, and expert tips.

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Pro Tip

When a cancer patient reports pain ≥4/10, ask the quality, location, radiation, and temporal pattern before escalating on the WHO ladder. Identifying neuropathic features (burning, electric, shooting quality, allodynia) early allows adjuvant analgesics (gabapentinoids, amitriptyline) to be added alongside opioids, often achieving better pain control than opioid dose escalation alone.

Difficulty:Beginner

Did you know?

The World Health Organization analgesic ladder was introduced in 1986 in a WHO publication titled 'Cancer Pain Relief,' with the radical aim of ensuring that all cancer patients worldwide could access adequate pain treatment. At the time, it was estimated that fewer than 50% of cancer patients in developed countries and fewer than 20% in developing countries had adequate pain control. The three-step ladder became one of the most influential healthcare documents in modern medicine, eventually influencing global opioid policy and palliative care advocacy worldwide.

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Reviewed May 2026
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