학술논문

Reasons for Opioid Discontinuation and Unintended Consequences Following Opioid Discontinuation Within the TOPCARE Trial.
Document Type
Article
Source
Pain Medicine. Jul2019, Vol. 20 Issue 7, p1330-1337. 8p. 1 Color Photograph, 5 Charts.
Subject
*SUBSTANCE abuse prevention
*THERAPEUTIC use of narcotics
*SUBSTANCE abuse treatment
*ANALGESICS
*SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors
*REPORTING of diseases
*DRUG use testing
*DRUGS
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*MEDICAL appointments
*MEDICAL protocols
*MEDICAL records
*MEDICAL referrals
*NURSING
*GENERAL practitioners
*PRIMARY health care
*RISK assessment
*URINALYSIS
*PAIN management
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
*TERMINATION of treatment
*ACQUISITION of data methodology
Language
ISSN
1526-2375
Abstract
Objective To identify reasons for opioid discontinuation and post-discontinuation outcomes among patients in the Transforming Opioid Prescribing in Primary Care (TOPCARE) study. Design In TOPCARE, an intervention to improve adherence to opioid prescribing guidelines, randomized intervention primary care providers (PCPs) received nurse care manager support, an electronic registry, academic detailing, and electronic tools, and control PCPs received electronic tools only. Setting Four Boston safety net primary care practices. Subjects Patients in both TOPCARE study arms who discontinued opioid therapy during the trial. Methods Through chart review, we examined the reason for discontinuation and post-discontinuation outcomes: one or more PCP visits, one or more pain-related emergency department (ED) visits, evidence of opioid use disorder (OUD), and referral for OUD treatment. Results Opioid discontinuations occurred in 83/586 (14.2%) intervention and 42/399 (10.5%) control patients (P  = 0.09). Among patients who discontinued opioids, 81 (65%) discontinued for misuse, with no difference by group (P  = 0.38). Aberrancy in monitoring (e.g. discordant urine drug test results) was the most common type of misuse prompting discontinuation (occurring in (51/83 [61%] of intervention patients vs 19/42 [45%, P  = 0.08] of control patients). Intervention patients who discontinued opioids had less PCP follow-up (65% vs 88%, P  < 0.01) compared with control patients. We found no differences between groups for pain-related ED visits, evidence of OUD, or OUD treatment referral following discontinuation. Conclusions The decreased follow-up among TOPCARE intervention patients who discontinued opioids highlights the need to understand unintended consequences of involuntary opioid discontinuations resulting from interventions to reduce opioid risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]