• Pain physician · Jan 2013

    Doctor shopping reveals geographical variations in opioid abuse.

    • Sandra Nordmann, Vincent Pradel, Maryse Lapeyre-Mestre, Elisabeth Frauger, Vanessa Pauly, Xavier Thirion, Michel Mallaret, Emilie Jouanjus, and Joëlle Micallef.
    • Centre d'Evaluation et d'Information de la Pharmacodependance-Addictovigilance PACA-Corse, hôpital Timone, Pharmacologie clinique, Institut des Neurosciences de la Timone, Faculté de médecine, Aix Marseille Université UMR 7289 CNRS, Marseille, France.
    • Pain Physician. 2013 Jan 1;16(1):89-100.

    BackgroundPrescription opioid abuse is not homogeneous due to varying patterns of use and different geographic preferences. Because doctor shopping is one of the main sources of diversion, it has previously been used to estimate drug abuse.ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to describe and compare opioid abuse in 2008 using doctor shopping to estimate abuse in 3 French regions.SettingData for this study came from the General Health Insurance (GHI) reimbursement database, which covers 77% of the French population. All individuals living in Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur-Corse (PACA), Rhone-Alpes (RA), or Midi-Pyrenees (MP) that received at least one reimbursement for oral opioids from the GHI in 2008 were included.MethodsOral opioids under study were opioids for mild to moderate pain (dextropropoxyphene, codeine, tramadol, dihydrocodeine), opoids for moderately severe to severe pain (oral morphine, oxycodone, buprenorphine painkiller, hydromorphone), and opioid maintenance treatments (buprenorphine maintenance, methadone). For a given opioid, the Doctor Shopping Quantity (DSQ) is the quantity obtained by overlapping prescriptions from several prescribers. It is used to estimate the magnitude of abuse. The Doctor Shopping Indicator (DSI) is the DSQ divided by the total dispensed quantity. It is used to estimate the abuse corrected for use.ResultsThe total DSQ for opioids in PACA (213.3 DDD/1,000 inhabitants) was twofold superior to that in RA (115.1 DDD/1,000) and in MP (106.2 DDD/1,000). The DSQ of opioids for mild to moderate pain was 75.5DDD/1000 (DSI=1.1%), 19.7DDD/1,000 (DSI=5.0%) for opioids for moderately severe to severe pain, and 55.3DDD/1,000 (DSI=6.2%) for opioid maintenance treatments. Emergent signals of abuse have been observed at a regional level for oxycodone in MP and dihydrocodeine in RA and MP.LimitationsThe main limitation of this study is that the GHI reimbursement database provides information about dispensed and reimbursed prescription drugs, and not necessarily the actual quantity used.ConclusionThese results confirm important variations in the 3 French regions despite them being geographically close. Besides, they highlight different rates of opioid abuse between opioids for mild to moderate pain, opioids for moderately severe to severe pain, and opioid maintenance treatments, as well as differences within these groups.

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