- Adds a patch to pills for faster healing
- Helps people with stubborn elbow pain
- Ready now — doctors can use it today
This combo cuts pain and inflammation better than pills alone.
You’ve had that nagging ache on the outside of your elbow for weeks. Maybe you lifted something heavy. Maybe you play tennis. Or maybe it just started one day and won’t go away. You try rest. Ice. Over-the-counter painkillers. But the pain lingers, making simple tasks — like holding a coffee cup or turning a doorknob — a challenge.
Now, a new real-world study offers fresh hope for faster relief — not with a new drug, but with a smarter way of using two old ones.
Why it hurts so much
Lateral epicondylitis — better known as tennis elbow — isn’t just for athletes. It affects office workers, parents, gardeners, anyone who repeats wrist and arm motions. The condition happens when tendons in the elbow get tiny tears from overuse.
It’s more common than you think. Up to 3% of adults will get it. Most recover in 6 to 12 months, but the pain can be brutal while it lasts. And current treatments? They often fall short.
Pills like ibuprofen or celecoxib help some, but not all. Shots and physical therapy work for others — but not right away. Many people just wait it out, hoping it gets better on its own.
That’s why better pain control — faster — matters.
Old fix, new twist
For years, doctors have prescribed oral anti-inflammatory drugs like celecoxib. It helps reduce swelling and pain inside the body. But it works system-wide, which means more strain on the stomach and liver — and slower results at the actual injury site.
Here’s the twist: what if you could attack the pain right where it hurts — and also from the inside?
That’s exactly what this study tested.
Double-duty pain control
Think of inflammation like a fire. Oral meds are like sending a fire truck from headquarters — it helps, but it takes time to arrive. The flurbiprofen patch is like a firefighter already on the scene, spraying water directly on the flames.
The patch sticks to the skin over the elbow. It slowly releases medicine that sinks deep into the sore tendons. Meanwhile, the pill works from the bloodstream to calm overall inflammation.
Together, they hit the problem from two angles.
Researchers looked back at 64 patients treated for tennis elbow between 2022 and 2024. Half took celecoxib pills only. The other half used the pills plus the flurbiprofen patch.
Everyone was checked at 2 and 4 weeks for pain, function, and blood signs of inflammation.
Big drop in pain — fast
At 2 weeks, the combo group had much lower pain scores. Their average pain dropped to 3.9 (out of 10), compared to 5.0 in the pill-only group.
By 4 weeks, the difference was even clearer: 2.2 vs. 3.6.
That’s not just a number. That’s the difference between wincing when you lift your arm — and being able to carry groceries again.
They also scored better on daily function. Tasks like gripping, lifting, and twisting became easier, much sooner.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
Wait — it already is.
Faster relief, fewer flare-ups
The combo group felt better in just 4 days on average. The pill-only group took 7.
That’s 3 fewer days of pain — a big win when you’re struggling to work or sleep.
The combo also had an 81% success rate, compared to 59% with pills alone.
And while not statistically significant, the recurrence rate at 3 months was less than half: 15.6% vs. 34.4%. That suggests longer-lasting relief — though more research is needed to confirm.
Inflammation drops in blood tests
Here’s something surprising: the patch didn’t just help locally. It showed up in blood tests.
Patients using the combo had much lower levels of TNF-α, IL-6, and CRP — key markers of body-wide inflammation.
At 4 weeks, CRP levels were 5.2 vs. 8.0 — a drop that signals the body is calming down, not just numbing the pain.
This suggests the patch may boost the pill’s power — not just add to it.
But there’s a catch
Safety was similar in both groups. About 1 in 5 in the combo group had side effects — mostly mild skin irritation from the patch. The pill-only group had fewer issues, but the difference wasn’t significant.
No serious stomach or liver problems were reported. That’s good news, since oral NSAIDs can sometimes cause those.
Still, this was a small study. And it looked back at past cases — not a randomized trial.
What experts see
This fits a growing trend: combining treatments for better results, without more risk. Topical NSAIDs are already recommended in some guidelines — but often as a second choice.
This study suggests they should be considered earlier — especially for people who need fast relief or can’t tolerate strong pills.
It’s not a cure. But it’s a smarter way to use tools we already have.
If you have tennis elbow, talk to your doctor about adding a topical patch to your treatment.
The flurbiprofen patch is available in many countries. In the U.S., similar patches (like diclofenac gel) are already used for joint pain.
This combo isn’t experimental. It’s safe, accessible, and now — backed by real-world data.
You don’t need to wait for a new drug. Help may be closer than you think.
Study had limits
Only 64 people were included. The study wasn’t randomized — doctors chose the treatment, which can bias results. And it only followed patients for 3 months.
Larger, longer trials are needed. But for now, this real-world data is strong enough to guide care.
What happens next
No new trials are announced yet. But these results may push doctors to adopt this combo more widely — especially for patients who aren’t improving on pills alone.
Sometimes, progress isn’t about new miracles. It’s about using what we have — better.