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Identifying Substance Abuse in Pain Treatment

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Maine adolescent 30-day prescription drug abuse: 2003. 7th Grade: 3.7% 8th Grade: 6.1 ... Prescription Drug Monitoring Program *www.maineosa.org/data/pmp ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Identifying Substance Abuse in Pain Treatment


1
Identifying Substance Abuse in Pain Treatment
  • Mark Publicker, MD FASAM
  • Medical Director,
  • Mercy Recovery Center

2
Physician, 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.

5
Maine 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

6
Is there a problem?
7
Maine 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

8
Is 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.

9
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

10
Tolerance
  • 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.

11
Pseudotolerance
  • 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.

12
Physical 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

13
Drug misuse
  • Unintentional consumption of a drug in other than
    the commonly accepted manner.
  • Physician mis-prescription
  • Patient misunderstanding

14
Drug abuse
  • Deliberate misuse of a drug.
  • Self-medication of painful feelings and/or
    reality
  • To get high

15
Pseudoaddiction
  • 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

16
Pseudoaddiction
  • 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.

17
Addiction
  • Compulsive use
  • Loss of control
  • Use despite known harm
  • Non-medical use
  • Aberrant drug behaviors

18
Addiction
  • 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.

19
Addiction
  • 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

20
Medication 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

21
Addictive 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

22
Addictive 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

23
Addictive 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

24
Screening
  • No good research-validated instruments
  • High risk
  • Prescription forgery, theft, alterations
  • Pattern of repeated lost, stolen, damaged
    prescriptions
  • Intoxication
  • Stories

25
Substance 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

27
Urine drug screening/monitoring
  • Know your labs methodologies and screening
    thresholds
  • Drug-negative urines
  • Establish your own limits
  • Cannabis?
  • Cocaine?
  • Benzodiazepines?

28
Dealing with suspected drug abuse
  • Intervention
  • Consultation
  • Addiction medicine
  • Pain specialist
  • Referral

29
Case 1
  • 39 year old woman with new diagnosis of
    rheumatoid arthritis with disabling foot pain
  • How would you evaluate her substance abuse risk?

30
Case 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.

31
Case 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

32
Case 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?

33
Case 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.

34
Case 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.

35
Case 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.

36

Dr. 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.

37
Dr 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.

38
Some suggestions
  • When in doubt, ask for help
  • Dont rely on medication alone
  • Everyone gets one good story
  • Review the pharmacy record each time

39
Conclusions
  • 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.

40
Conclusions
  • 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.

41
Conclusions
  • 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.

42
Conclusions
  • 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.

43
Oxycontin - 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

44
Oxycontin - 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.
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