Where Pain Research Is Headed and Why I’m Hopeful

medical research

 

This article, in a slightly edited form, first appeared on Pain News Network on October 18, 2025.

If you live with pain, you’ve probably heard promises that “something better is coming.” At this month’s Pain Therapeutics Summit in San Diego, you could see that promise taking shape. For two days, clinicians, scientists, companies and advocates compared notes on what’s working, what’s not, and what’s next.

Threaded through much of it was the National Institutes of Health’s Helping to End Addiction Long-Term (HEAL) Initiative — an NIH-wide push launched in 2018 to accelerate better pain care and reduce opioid-related harms.

HEAL exists because of the opioid crisis; Congress gave NIH an initial $500 million in fiscal year 2018 to jump-start a coordinated research plan, and the NIH has since invested several billion dollars to keep the effort moving. In other words, HEAL is a rare silver lining: a tragedy spurring a sustained, practical response.

(The HEAL Initiative was not directly hit by any funding cuts in 2025. However, the Trump administration has proposed cutting the NIH budget by 40% next year, which could potentially impact HEAL funding.)

Since its launch, HEAL has grown into a national engine for discovery. NIH reports a cumulative investment approaching $4 billion, supporting more than 2,000 projects across all 50 states, and helping advance 40-plus new drugs and devices to FDA investigational status.

This is a sign that the pipeline is broader and closer to patients than it has been in years. Think of HEAL as scaffolding: trial networks, shared data standards, and coordinated teams that help good ideas climb faster from lab to bedside.

A decade ago, analgesic research often looked like isolated bets. Today, it feels more like a coordinated campaign. That doesn’t guarantee success, but it raises the odds that something useful will reach doctors and patients.

Just as important, what’s coming isn’t a single “miracle drug” but a wider toolkit. You’ll see more non-opioid medicines designed around the biology of different pain types; safer use of existing tools that can lower the need for higher doses when opioids are used; devices and neuromodulation approaches that calm overactive nerves or brain circuits; smarter drug delivery systems that make treatments last longer or act locally at lower doses; and digital health that captures how people actually live — including their sleep, activity, and pain flares — so that care decisions track real life, not just clinic visits.

The studies themselves are changing, too. Many people don’t have just one pain condition; they have overlapping problems. Newer trials are beginning to mirror that reality and to focus on outcomes you can actually experience — walking farther, sleeping better, and participating more in life — rather than only chasing a number on a pain scale.

Researchers are also building better signposts, such as biomarkers and other objective measures, to predict who will benefit from which therapy and who may be at risk of long-term pain after injury or surgery.

Signposts aren’t a substitute for what people tell us about their pain. In research and development, objective measures help compare treatments and identify who is most likely to benefit. Once a therapy reaches the clinic, those measures become guides, not verdicts, and should be read alongside the patient’s narrative so that care reflects how the person actually lives and feels.

HEAL has made these shifts a priority by funding large, practical datasets and endpoints that regulators and payers can use.

Here’s the clear-eyed part: many of the drugs and devices discussed at meetings like this will not make it past the investigational stage. That’s how science works. But when trials are well designed and data are shared, today’s misses can more quickly lead to tomorrow’s wins — and the lessons won’t vanish into a file drawer.

Some analgesic candidates will cross the finish line, and even modest gains — better sleep, fewer flares, less brain fog, or an extra hour of activity — can change a life. Across millions of people, small wins add up to something transformative.

What does this mean if you’re living with pain right now? Expect more choices and more personalization. Conversations with your clinician may start to include options that didn’t exist a few years ago, and you may hear about clinical studies built around everyday life rather than rigid clinic schedules. If a trial is a good fit, participating in one will help move the field forward.

Most of all, there’s a reason for hope that is grounded in real progress, not hype.

None of this happened by accident. The NIH HEAL Initiative has been the engine behind much of it — steady funding, coordination, and a focus on solutions that reach the bedside. Keeping that engine running is how promising ideas become practical relief.

3 Comments

  1. Brenda Levin on October 26, 2025 at 10:11 am

    Thank you Dr. Webster for ALL your work on this and for being a voice for those of us that are suffering with chronic pain; I greatly appreciate it and you!

  2. Kitty Kennedy on October 26, 2025 at 11:58 pm

    Great news But what about the failed senate bill, S2922, Advanced Research for Chronic Pain Act of 2023? Will that be reintroduced and if so, how will that affect us? I think it is great that NIH is trying, but with the current secretary of HHS, I have little faith that these studies will be funded for long. I hope I’m not being a pessimist, but feel we need to throw everything we can at research to help us !

  3. William Sanford on November 25, 2025 at 11:38 am

    Blake Moore is a CIA plant. He won’t help us, Lynn.

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