Title: Identifying Substance Abuse in Pain Treatment
1Identifying Substance Abuse in Pain Treatment
- Mark Publicker, MD FASAM
- Medical Director,
- Mercy Recovery Center
2Physician, 1894
- We have an army of women I America dying from
the opiate habit _ larger than our standing army.
The profession (medicine) is wholly responsible
for the loose and indiscriminate use of the
drug.
3 Physician, 1871
- With their characteristic anxiety for dosing
themselves, Americans would overuse all new
remedies.
4 North Carolina Physician, 1880
- On one patient I have use the hypodermic
syringe between 2500 and 3000 times in a period
of eighteen months, and so far see no signs of
the opium habit.
5Maine adolescent 30-day prescription drug abuse
2003
- 7th Grade 3.7
- 8th Grade 6.1
- 9th Grade 8.9
- 10th Grade 11.0
- 11th Grade 11.6
- 12th Grade 10.3
6Is there a problem?
7Maine admissions non-heroin, non methadone
opiates
- 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
- 85 100 131 231 429 777 1001 1229
- Maine admissions heroin
- 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002
- 258 306 313 364 386 525 655 1025
- TDS data by primary problem
8Is there a problem?
- Current NIDA estimate
- 4.4 million Americans addicted to prescription
opioids - 2.1 million Americans addicted to benzodiazepines
- Maine 2001 out of 90 drug deaths, 70 (78) were
caused by a pharmaceutical. - Maine 2002 out of 166 drug deaths, 148 (89)
were caused by a pharmaceutical.
9Distinguish between an addict and a patient with
pain?
- Patients with active addictions with painful
conditions - Recovering patients with painful conditions
- Patients who misuse
- Patients who abuse to get high
- Patients who abuse to self-medicate
10Tolerance
- The need for an increased dosage of a drug to
produce the same level of analgesia that
previously existed. Tolerance also occurs when a
reduced effect is observed with constant dose.
Analgesic tolerance is not always evident during
opioid treatment and is not addiction.
11Pseudotolerance
- The need to increase dosage due to other factors
such as - Disease progression, new disease, increased
physical activity, lack of compliance, change in
medication, drug interaction, addiction, and
deviant behavior.
12Physical dependence
- Indicated by the occurrence of withdrawal
symptoms after opioid use is stopped or quickly
decreased without titration, or if an antagonist
is administered - Can be avoided by warning patients not to
abruptly stop the medication and by using a
tapering regimen - Physical dependence is not addiction
13Drug misuse
- Unintentional consumption of a drug in other than
the commonly accepted manner. - Physician mis-prescription
- Patient misunderstanding
14Drug abuse
- Deliberate misuse of a drug.
- Self-medication of painful feelings and/or
reality - To get high
15Pseudoaddiction
- Drug-seeking behavior that seems similar to
addiction, but is due to unrelieved pain. This
behavior stops once that pain is relieved, often
through an increase in the opioid dose. - Leads to inappropriately stigmatizing the patient
with the label 'addict'. - Prn dosing, short-acting opioids
16Pseudoaddiction
- In the setting of unrelieved pain, the request
for increases in drug dose requires careful
assessment, renewed efforts to manage pain and
avoidance of stigmatizing labels.
17Addiction
- Compulsive use
- Loss of control
- Use despite known harm
- Non-medical use
- Aberrant drug behaviors
18Addiction
- Psychological dependence on the use of substances
for their psychic effects and is characterized by
compulsive use. - Addiction should be considered if patients no
longer have control over drug use and continue to
use drugs despite harm.
19Addiction
- Addiction is a cycle of spiraling dysregulation
of brain reward systems that progressively
increases, resulting in compulsive drug use and a
loss of control over drug taking George Koob
20Medication overuse vs addiction
- Co-occurring personality disorders and poor
coping skills can make these distinctions
difficult - The percentage of headache rebound patients with
addictive disorders is actually low - The patients willingness to collaborate with the
physician is a good indicator
21Addictive behavior vs Medical dependence Stimmel
- Relief of pain
- Constant dose and frequency with slow increases
for tolerance - Usually able to abruptly stop or if wd develops
can be successfully managed
- Primary purpose euphoria
- Rapid dose escalation as tolerance develops
- Abstinence unlikely to be maintained despite
frequent attempts
22Addictive behavior vs Medical dependence
- Function frequent intoxication
- Behavior focus on drug-seeking to exclusion of
socially productive activities
- Able to function productively in acute pain
states slight sedation may occur - Able to engage in productive activity due to
relief of pain
23Addictive behavior vs Medical dependence
- Side effects common due to dose and routes of
administration continued use despite
complications - Polydrug use frequent
- Mild, manageable side effects
- Polydrug use rare unless prescribed by physician
24Screening
- No good research-validated instruments
- High risk
- Prescription forgery, theft, alterations
- Pattern of repeated lost, stolen, damaged
prescriptions - Intoxication
- Stories
25Substance abuse screening
- CAGE
- T-ACE
- Collateral sources (family, concerned others)
- Review of past medical care
- Pharmacy
- Prescription Drug Monitoring Program
www.maineosa.org/data/pmp
26 Distinguish between an addict and a
patient with pain?
- Patients with active addictions with painful
conditions - Recovering patients with painful conditions
- Patients who misuse
- Patients who abuse to get high
- Patients who abuse to self-medicate
27Urine drug screening/monitoring
- Know your labs methodologies and screening
thresholds - Drug-negative urines
- Establish your own limits
- Cannabis?
- Cocaine?
- Benzodiazepines?
28Dealing with suspected drug abuse
- Intervention
- Consultation
- Addiction medicine
- Pain specialist
- Referral
29Case 1
- 39 year old woman with new diagnosis of
rheumatoid arthritis with disabling foot pain - How would you evaluate her substance abuse risk?
30Case 2
- 43 year old male, new patient to your practice.
- Presenting complaint intractable back pain from
bulging disks, treated by his last doctor with
methadone 120 mg three times a day plus rescue
Roxicodone.
31Case 3
- 27 year old female patient with chronic
headaches, prescribed Fioricet 4-6 per day, Xanax
2 mg tid and oxycodone 30 mg prn - Someone broke into my car and stole all of my
prescriptions
32Case 4
- Chronically disabled 32 year old paraplegic male
prescribed Oxycontin 80 mg tid for neuropathic
pain. Screening UDS positive for cannabis. - What if his UDS is positive for cocaine?
- What if his UDS is negative for opioids?
33Case 5
- 61 year old woman with diffuse osteoarthritis and
fibromyalgia. - You realize that you are prescribing her over 900
mg of oxycodone daily along with over 6 mg of
Xanax.
34Case 6
- 44 year old recovering alcoholic with chronic
pain from a torn rotator cuff. Pain is described
as severe and not relieved by Tylenol or NSAIDs.
35Case 7
- You receive a call from the local pharmacy
informing you that one of your patients is also
receiving pain and sedative medications from
other physicians.
36Dr. Paul Doctor, Alcoholic, Addict. AA Big
Book
- I never in my life took a tranquilizer, sedative
or pep pill because I was a pill head. I always
took it because I had the symptom that only that
pill would relieve. Therefore, every pill was
medically indicated at the time it was taken.
37Dr Paul, continued
- For me, pills dont produce the desire to
swallow a pill they produce the symptoms that
require that the pill be taken for relief. I had
a pill for every ill, and I was sick a lot.
38Some suggestions
- When in doubt, ask for help
- Dont rely on medication alone
- Everyone gets one good story
- Review the pharmacy record each time
39Conclusions
- There is a role for opiates in the management of
some patients with chronic non-malignant pain - These patients need to be carefully selected, and
the risks, benefits and alternatives to long-term
opiate use explained.
40Conclusions
- For some pain syndromes, such as migraines, there
is a clear consensus that chronic or frequent
acute opiate use is contraindicated and can
worsen the pain disorder, rendering it
intractable to acute and prophylactic treatment.
41Conclusions
- When long-term opiates (LTOs) are found to be
necessary for the management of CNMP,
short-acting opiates should be avoided. - Patients should be carefully screened for
histories of alcoholism and other drug
dependencies.
42Conclusions
- Patients should be referred for treatment of
primary or secondary depression or other
psychiatric disorders. - Utilize empathetic confrontation and intervention
when addressing suspected substance abuse
problems.
43Oxycontin - Art van Zee, MDAnnals of Internal
Medicine April 6, 2004
- It might have been easier
- if OxyContin swallowed the mountains, and took
- the promises of tens of thousands of young lives,
- Slowly, like ever-encroaching kudzu.
- Instead,it engulfed us,
- gently as napalm would a school-yard
44Oxycontin - Art van Zee, MD
- Mama said
- As hard as it was to bury Papa
- after the top fell
- in the mine up Caney Creek,
- it was harder yet
- to find Sis that morning
- cold and blue,
- with a needle stuck up her arm.