Articles: opioid-analgesics.
-
Across North America, there is an unprecedented opioid overdose epidemic. Approximately 15% of individuals with severe opioid use disorder (OUD) do not benefit from opioid agonist therapy (OAT) such as buprenorphine/naloxone or methadone and are considered treatment refractory. Of those who inject, injectable OAT (iOAT), with hydromorphone or diacetylmorphine, offered in community settings has demonstrated improved retention to treatment and decreased nonprescription opioid use. This case series seeks to describe iOAT initiation and titration in a hospital setting for treatment refractory individuals with OUD and examine impacts of iOAT on leaving hospital against medical advice (AMA). ⋯ This case series describes a novel approach to the management of treatment refractory individuals with severe OUD during hospitalization. Prescribing iOAT in acute care settings is feasible and may reduce rates of leaving hospital AMA.
-
Drug Alcohol Depend · Apr 2021
"Doctor and pharmacy shopping": A fading signal for prescription opioid use monitoring?
The term "doctor and pharmacy shopping" colloquially describes patients with high multiple provider episodes (MPEs)-a threshold count of distinct prescribers and/or pharmacies involved in prescription fulfillment. Opioid-related MPEs are implicated in the global opioid crisis and heavily monitored by government databases such as U.S. state prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs). We applied a widely-used MPE definition to examine U.S. trends from a large, commercially-insured population from 2010 to 2017. Further, we examined the proportion of enrollees identified as "doctor shoppers" with evidence of a cancer diagnosis to examine the risk of false positives. ⋯ Opioid "shopping" flags are a long-standing but rapidly fading PDMP signal. To avoid unintended consequences, such as identifying legitimate medical encounters requiring high healthcare utilization or opioid treatment, while maintaining vigilance, more nuanced and sophisticated approaches are needed.
-
Although overall outpatient dispensing of opioid analgesic prescriptions has declined, there may still be overprescribing. Understanding how many opioid analgesic units, primarily tablets, are dispensed with the intention of shorter-vs longer-term use can inform public health interventions. We used pharmacy prescription data to estimate the number of opioid analgesic tablets dispensed annually in the U. ⋯ Tablets dispensed within a year to patients with <5 opioid analgesic prescriptions declined by 26% from 2011 to 2017. Patients with ≥5 prescriptions comprised a small and decreasing proportion of all patients newly starting therapy. However, these patients received almost half of all tablets dispensed within a year to patients in our study, despite a larger decline than tablets dispensed to patients with <5 prescriptions within a year.
-
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted medical care, impacting prescribing of opioid analgesics and buprenorphine for opioid use disorder. Understanding these patterns can help address barriers to care. ⋯ In this cross-sectional study, existing patients receiving opioid analgesics and buprenorphine for opioid use disorder generally maintained access to these medications during the COVID-19 pandemic. Opioid prescriptions for opioid-naive patients decreased briefly and then rebounded, while initiation of buprenorphine remained at a low rate through August 2020. Reductions in treatment entry may be associated with increased overdose deaths.