Title: Dependence, Addiction and Withdrawal
1Dependence, Addiction and Withdrawal
- Kevin Kunz, M.D., M.P.H., FASAM
2 Overview1. Changing Opioid Opinions2.
Dependence or Addiction ?3. Tolerance,
Behavior, Hyperalgesia4. Acute and Protracted
Withdrawal5. Withdrawal or Detoxification ?6.
Pain and Addiction
3Case Management Example - 1
- 43 year-old woman with fibromyalgia, breast
cancer in remission, she copes better with
current meds. Works full time. No tobacco, no
alcohol, married with 3 school-age children.
NKDA. Meds Tamoxifen OTC NSAIDs
SSRIKlonipin 2mg 1/2qhs and Vicodin 10/500 6 q
day x 3 years.
4Case Management Example - 2
- 57 year-old man with chronic post-laminectory
pain. Disabled, lives with sister, watches her
children, and fishes. Tobacco , marijuana for
pain alcohol 14 drinks/week, used to be
heavy drinker NKDA intolerant to NSAID
long-acting morphine 120mg/day, Ultram 400mg/day
for breakthrough pain, Soma qid, Valium 10mg
qhs for sleep. Your practice partner retired
early and he is now your patient.
5Changing Opioid Opinions
- The use of narcotics in terminal cases is to be
condemnedmorphine use is an unpleasant
experience to the majority of human subjects
because of undesirable side effects. Dominant on
the list of these unfortunate effects is
addiction. - American Medical Association Consensus Paper,
1940 - Reiderberg MM, Lancet 3471276, 1996. Barriers
to controlling - pain in patients with cancer.
6Changing Opioid Opinions
- In an apparent first for the nation, an Oregon
Medical Board acts against a doctor primarily for
under-treatment of pain. - The Oregonian. September 2, 1999
7Changing Opioid Opinions
- Jury Awards 1.5 Million to San Francisco Mans
Family - ( June, 2001)
- Judgment against physician for failing to
provide adequate pain medication to terminal
cancer patient.
8Changing Opioid Opinions
- JACHO Guidelines 2000
- Mandate pain assessment and treatment
- Nurse and physician education required
- Pain as the fifth vital sign
9Changing Opioid Opinions
- Physicians told not to fear discipline for pain
treatment - amednews.com The Newspaper for Americas
Physicians, June 16, 2003
10Reasons for Inadequate Prescription of Analgesics
- Inhibitory influences of regulations and boards
- Lack of suitable knowledge base
- Cultural and societal barriers
- Adherence to customary prescribing behaviors
- Unconscious bias toward different groups
- Fear of producing dependency and addiction
11Physical Dependence or Addiction?
- Physical dependence is a normal physiologic
response to the medical use of opioids - Addiction involves the non-medical use of opioids
- Erroneous fear of addiction tragically promotes
the under-treatment of pain
12Addiction-phobia
- The public a strong negative attitude
- 87 fearful of becoming over reliant on pain
medication - 82 concerned about addiction, 41 believe that
physicians over prescribe - 50 dont believe acute or chronic pain can be
significantly relieved - (The Mayday Fund, 1993)
- The Patients
- Reluctant to report pain and use analgesics,
concerned with addiction, adverse effects,
injections, tolerance, Good patients dont
complain, pain is inevitable (Pain Clinical
Manual, Second Edition McCaffery M, Pasero C, p
9, 1999. Mosby - RNs estimate of addiction off by 500
- 76 believed 5of patients would become
addicted after 3 months of continuous opioids - (McCaffery M, Ferrell BR Nurses knowledge
of pain assessment and management. J. Pain
Symptom Manage 14 175-188, 1997) - Physicians
- Fear of regulatory scrutiny, reputation as drug
doctor - Adverse effects difficult to manage
- Scant education and thin pain network
13Addiction in Pain Patients The Facts
- 7 of 24,000 pain patients became addicted
- Friedman DP Perspectives on the medical sue of
drugs of abuse. J. Pain Symptom Manage (Suppl
1) S2-5, 1990 - 4 of 11,882 pain patients became addicted
- Porter J, Jick H Addiction rare in patients
treated with narcotics, N Engl J Med 302123,
1980 - 0 of 500 patients receiving heroin for pain
became addicted - Twycross RG Clinical experience with
diamorphine in advanced malignant disease. Int J
Clinical Pharmacol 9184-198, 1974 - 0 of 10,000 burn patients became addicted
- Perry, Heidrich, Pain 1982
- Iatrogenic addiction for persons with no history
of addiction is less than 1 - Principles of Addiction Medicine, Second Edition.
Grahm WG, Schultz TK, Editors. 1998 p914
14Physical Dependence
- A state of neuroadaption manifested by a drug
class-specific withdrawal syndrome - Produced by abrupt cessation, rapid dose
reduction, decreasing bioavailability, or use of
antagonist. - An expected occurrence in all individuals in the
presence of continuous use of opioids for days
or weeks.
15Physical Dependence Therapeutic Dependence
- Therapeutic Dependence
- Patients taking opioid drugs for the relief of
pain are using them therapeutically they do not
seek psychic effects as do individuals who are
addicted. - Portenoy RK Opioid therapy for chronic
non-malignant pain current status. In Fields
HC. Liebeskind JC Progress in Pain Research and
Management, Vol 1, pp247-287, Seattle, 1994, IASP
Press - In no way implies or indicates addiction
- Problems arise when opioids are not tapered as
pain resolves, or are inappropriately withheld
16Tolerance
- Higher or more frequent dosing to achieve the
initial effects of the drug - Neuroadaption to continuously administered
opioids - Occurrence variable, not always linked with
dependence - Tolerance to non-analgesic effects beneficial
- Analgesic tolerance rarely the cause for dose
escalation - Dose escalation usually indicates disease change
- Tolerance does not imply addiction
17Pseudo-addiction
- Iatrogenic pattern of drug seeking behavior in
patients receiving inadequate pain relief, or in
withdrawal, that can be mistaken for addiction - Clock-watching, hoarding, seeking extra
pre-scriptions, demanding, whining, MD
shopping,drug seeking manipulation is without
criminal or ill-intent - Resolves with adequate pain/withdrawal management
-
18Addiction
- Addiction is a primary, chronic, neurobiologic
disease, with genetic, psychosocial, and
environmental factors influencing its development
and manifestations. - It is characterized by behaviors that include one
or more of the following impaired control over
drug use, compulsive use, continued use despite
harm, and craving. - Consensus Document, 2001. American Academy of
Pain Medicine, A. PainSociety, American Society
of Addiction Medicine.
19Substance Addiction Rating
- How easy to get hooked, how hard to stop ?
- Highest Addiction Potential
- nicotine, ice, cocaine (smoked or IV)
- Mid-range Addiction Potential
- alcohol, Valium, Seconal, heroin
- Addictive
- Caffeine, marijuana, Ectasy, psychedelics
- Health, Nov-Dec, 1990
20What Does Addiction Look Like?
- Non-medical use of drugs
- 6-15 of U.S. population (excluding nicotine)
- Patients often unable to discern negative impact
on quality of life - Denial, minimalization, rationalization, other
defense mechanisms prominent - Affective Component
- Set, Setting, Substance
21Screening for Addiction
- DSM criteria inadequate for pain patients
- Simple Screening Tools
- Do you use____? How much? How often?
- CAGE (Cut down, Angry, Guilty, Eye-opener)
- CAGE AID
- Comprehensive Addictions Psychological
Evaluation (Axis I, II) www.evinceassessment.com - Referral to Substance Abuse Professional
- 5 Cs Control (loss of), Continued use despite
Consequences, Compulsive use, Craving
22Addiction A Spiritual Problem?
- Relationship to self
- Relationship to others
- Relationship to, and Acceptance of life
23Opioid Withdrawal
- Acute
- Autonomic
- Rebound increased NE activity from locus
coeruleus - Increase BP, HR, peristalsis, diaphoresis, CNS
irritability, etc. - Affective
- Suppressed in the dopaminergic reward pathways
- Depression, anxiety, anhedonia, craving, anergia
- Protracted
- 3-6 months or longer
- Anxiety, insomnia, craving, cyclic changes in
wgt, pupil size
24Medical Withdrawal vs. Medical Detoxification
- Withdrawal the process of safely and
comfortably discontinuing opioids from a patient
who is physically dependent - Detoxification the process of safely and
comfortably discontinuing opioids from a person
who is opioid addicted
25When is Withdrawal Needed?
- Pain is subsiding or pain generator removed
- Contributing factors reduced
- Insurance issues, cost issues
- Adverse effects physical, social etc.
- Not following Rx plan, change in Rx plan
- Accelerating tolerance, loss of control
- Cultural, personal issues
- Trial off opioids may improve pain !, (and life)
26Opioids can increase pain!
- 30 of pain patients on chronic opioid therapy
feel better after withdrawal - Opioids can cause hyperalgesia, decrease of
tolerance to painful stimuli - Basbaum AL Insights into the development of
opioid tolerance, Pain 61 347-352, 1995 Mao j,
Price DD, Mayer DJ Mechanisms of hyperalgesia
and morphine tolerance. Pain 62259-274, 1995
27Medical Withdrawal Options
- Taper by 50 every several days (weaning),
without signs/symptoms of withdrawal - Goodman Gilmans The Pharmacologic Basis of
Therapeutics, Ninth Edition. McGraw-Hill 1996.
P. 533 - As pain lightens, transition to longer acting
analgesic (propoxyphene, methadone if
experienced) and taper - Symptomatic Rx clonidine, NSAID,
anti-anxiety/sleeper, muscle relaxant, etc. - Suboxone safe, easy, effective
- Always educate patient on withdrawal and WD Rx
28Opioids in Co-Morbid Pain Addiction
- Highly structured environment/interactions
- Prohibit monitor alcohol, other drugs
- Marijuana must have use certificate
- Frequent visits (q week, then q 2 weeks)
- Referral for substance abuse Rx, 12-step
- Multidisciplinary support
- Spouse/Family involvement
- Addiction Medicine, Pain Medicine, or Pain
Management consult periodically - Collect medical records, document all encounters
29Prescribing Opioids to Addicts
- 20 patients with chronic non-malignant pain and
history of substance abuse - 11 that did not abuse Rx, had active 12-step
recovery, supportive family - 9 that did abuse Rx abused early in trial
no12-step Rx lost or stolen frequent, rapid
dose increase calls/visits-no appt. - Dunbar, Katz Pain and Symptom Manage. Vol. 11,
No 2, pp 163-171, March 1996
30Unacceptable Addictive Behaviors Detox Warranted
- Repeated unsanctioned dose escalation
- Borrowing, trading, buying street drugs
- Use of illicit drugs, at-risk EtOh use
- Recurrent Rx losses, thefts
- Prescription forgery, multiple prescribers
- Intoxication
- Non-compliance with treatment plan
31Detoxification Options
-
- Detoxification the treatment that is not a
treatment provides a drug free person with an
addictive disease, not a disease free person! - Ultra-Rapid Detox (with general anesthesia)
- Naltrexone induced, hospital setting
- Licensed methadone clinic (detox or maintenance)
- Symptomatic medications
- Clonidine, NSAID, Vistaril, Robaxin etc. high
fail rate - Subutex/Suboxone (detox or maintenance)
- Still need Rx for primary disease of addiction
32Buprenorphine
- Opioid agonist/antagonist. Low diversion risk.
- Replacing methadone in France, ? US
- Excellent safety profile, decades of experience
as IM-IV-SL analgesic. MDs now Rx for pain. - FDA approved for opioid detox or maintenance
- Formulated as Subutex, and Suboxone -naloxone
added to deter IV use, diversion - Being used in addiction and dependence
- MDs can acquire DEA Detox OK CME required
-
33Guidelines for the Use of Controlled Substances
for the Treatment of PainAdopted by Hawaii
Medical Association, May 2003
- Patient Evaluation, indication for opioids use
- Written Treatment Plan
- Informed Consent , Agreement for Treatment
- Periodic Review
- Consultation
- Medical Records
- Compliance with Laws and Regulations
-
34Case Management Example - 1
- 43 year-old woman with fibromyalgia, breast
cancer in remission, she copes better with
current meds. Works full time. No tobacco, no
alcohol, married with 3 school-age children.
NKDA. Meds Tamoxifen OTC NSAIDs
SSRIKlonipin 2mg 1/2qhs and Vicodin 10/500 6 q
day x 3 years.
35Case Management Example - 2
- 57 year-old man with chronic post-laminectory
pain. Disabled, lives with sister, watches her
children, and fishes. Tobacco , marijuana for
pain alcohol 14 drinks/week, used to be
heavy drinker NKDA intolerant to NSAID
long-acting morphine 120mg/day, Ultram 400mg/day
for breakthrough pain, Soma qid, Valium 10mg
qhs for sleep. Your practice partner retired
early and he is now your patient.
36Best References
- Pain Clinical Manual 2nd Edition
- Margo McCaffery, Chris Pasero
- 1999, Mosby
- Principles of Addiction Medicine 3rd Ed
- American Society of Addiction Medicine, 2001
- www.asam.org
- American Academy of Pain Management
- www.aapainmanage.org
- American Pain Society www.ampainsoc.org
37The patient cannot be seen simply as his/her
disease
- ..Neither can the health professional limit
his/her care to medical technology. The full
healing potential of their relationship often
depends on their interaction as whole human
beings, and far exceeds the treatment of disease.
38Every person achieves a unique interdependent
relationship of body, mind, emotions and spirit
- inseparable from other indiivuals and
society. Illness can best be understood as a
disturbance within the dynamic balance of these
relationships. Health may be defined as the
harmony of the whole, and the work of the health
professional as aiding in the reestablishment of
a more fully conscious equilibrium within the
whole.
39The patient and the health professional are
colleagues
- their collaboration activates the latent
human and biological resources within the patient
for healing. The patient is encouraged to be
aware of his/her choices and to become
increasingly repsonsible for his/her own health,
growth and fulfillment.
40Illness may provide an opportunity for personal
growth..
- the experience of disease may be used
creatively to re-evaluate life goals and values,
provide clarity in setting priorities and to
mobilize previously untapped strengths. The
health professional enables the patient to evolve
a positive value from the experience of disease,
to maintain identity, and to reaffirm his/her
dignity as a person. -
41Illness must be seen in the context of the life
span of the individual..
- Indeed, it may have a unique meaning when seen in
reference to the total life of the patient.
Physical disease and emotional suffering have an
individual message for each patient, yielding
information about such personal issues as
lifestyle, self-worth and value of time. The
knowledge gained through the understanding of
this individual meaning may enable the patient to
enrich the quality of his/her life.
42Principles for the Care of the Person
- The patient cannot be seen as simply his/her
disease - Every person achieves a unique interdependent
relationship of body, mind, emotions and spirit - The patient and the health professional are
colleagues - Illness may provide an opportunity for personal
growth - Illness must be seen in the context of the life
span of the individual - See last 5 slides for expansion