• Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2003

    Behavioral monitoring and urine toxicology testing in patients receiving long-term opioid therapy.

    • Nathaniel P Katz, Summer Sherburne, Michael Beach, Robert J Rose, Janet Vielguth, Joyce Bradley, and Gilbert J Fanciullo.
    • Pain Trials Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2003 Oct 1;97(4):1097-102, table of contents.

    UnlabelledNo study has examined the role of urine toxicology in addition to behavioral monitoring in patients receiving opioid therapy for chronic pain. All patients maintained on chronic opioid therapy by the two senior authors at two university pain management centers were monitored for 3 yr with urine toxicology testing and for behaviors suggestive of inappropriate medication use. We retrospectively extracted demographic information, aberrant drug-taking behaviors, and urine toxicology information from the medical record. For 122 patients maintained on chronic opioid therapy, 43% (n = 53) had a "problem" (either positive urine toxicology or one or more aberrant drug-taking behaviors). Of patients with no behavioral issues, 21% (n = 26) had a positive urine screen for either an illicit drug or a nonprescribed controlled medication. Of patients with a negative urine screen, 14% (n = 17) had one or more behavioral issues. Monitoring both urine toxicology and behavioral issues captured more patients with inappropriate drug-taking behavior than either alone. Requiring a report of behavioral issues and urine toxicology screens for patients receiving chronic opioids creates a more comprehensive monitoring system than either alone.ImplicationsMonitoring both urine toxicology and aberrant behavior in chronic-pain patients treated with opioids identified more problem patients than by monitoring either alone. The authors recommend routine urine testing on all patients prescribed opioids for noncancer pain and as a required element in all opioid analgesic studies.

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