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Prescription Opioid Dependence

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Title: Prescription Opioid Dependence


1
Prescription Opioid Dependence
  • Presented at the
  • American Association for the Treatment of Opiate
    Dependence Conference
  • October 16, 2004
  • Orlando, Florida
  • By
  • Robert L. Walsh
  • Chief, Regulatory Affairs Branch
  • DPMCDA, NIDA

2
Prescription drug abuse is the intentional misuse
of a medication outside of the normally accepted
standards of its use
3
(No Transcript)
4
Current Use
  • 8.8 million current users of illicit drugs other
    than marijuana
  • 6.3 million currently use psychotherapeutic drugs
    nonmedically
  • This represents about 2.7 of the population aged
    12 years or older

5
Current Nonmedical Users of Psychotherapeutic
Drugs
Number In millions
2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health,
SAMHSA
6
Lifetime Non-Medical Use of Pain Relievers Among
Persons Aged 12 and older
Number In millions
2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health,
SAMHSA
7
Annual Numbers of New Nonmedical Users of Pain
Relievers 1965-2002
2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health
(NSDUH)
8
Narcotic analgesics that changed in frequency
from 1995 to 2002
NOS not otherwise specified
9
Rates of Narcotic Analgesics / Combinations ED
Mentions Per100,000 Population 2002
10
Narcotic Analgesics
  • In 2002, narcotic analgesics were involved in
    108,320 (16) of total drug-abuse related ED
    visits
  • Increase of 20 over 2001
  • Increase of 153 from 1995
  • From 1995 to 2002, the number of ED visits
    increased for all age groups except 12-17 year
    olds
  • 45-54 age group experienced the largest increase
    (298)
  • Dependence was the most frequently mentioned
    motive for drug-abuse related ED visits

11
Drug abuse-related ED visits involving narcotic
analgesics 1995-2002
12
Trends in rates of narcotic analgesic-involved
ED visits, by age 1995-2002
13
Dependence or Abuse of Specific Illicit Drugs
among Persons Aged 12 or Older 2003
Numbers (in Thousands) of Users with Dependence
or Abuse
14
Abuse Rates by Gender
Source The DAWN Report September 2004
Narcotic Analgesics, 2002 Update
15
Factors increasing the odds of problem use of
narcotic analgesics
  • Female
  • Unmarried
  • Age 35 years or older

Simoni-Wastila, et.al., Am J Pub Health, February
2004, Vol 94, No. 2, pp266-268
16
Narcotic Analgesics Identified by NFLIS
Laboratories 2003
Total of 28,176 identified in 2003 Nearly 3 of
all items analyzed NFLIS 41 State Lab Systems
82 Local / Municipal Lab Systems 232 Individual
Labs Analyze nearly 70 of all state and local
drug cases annually
Source National Forensic Laboratory Information
System Year 2003 Annual Report, DEA
17
MOST FREQUENTLY IDENTIFIED NARCOTIC ANALGESICS IN
STRIDE (8 DEA Laboratories) 20012003
Source National Forensic Laboratory Information
System Year 2003 Annual Report, DEA
18
Oxycodone / Hydrocodone
  • Oxycodone mentions in emergency department visits
    in SAMHSA's DAWN increased from 4,000 in 1994 to
    22,000 mentions in 2002, an increase of 450.
  • About 29 of the oxycodone-related visits
    involved only oxycodone, 26 involved another
    drug, 24 involved two other drugs, and 22
    involved three or more other drugs.
  • While DAWN emergency department mentions of
    hydrocodone were more than twice as frequent as
    oxycodone in 1994, the gap has narrowed with
    hydrocodone mentions increasing 170 from 9,300
    to over 25,000 in 2002.
  • The most frequent substances found in combination
    with oxycodone and hydrocodone in drug abuse
    related emergency department visits were alcohol,
    benzodiazepines, other opioid pain relievers, and
    cocaine.

19
Trends in drug abuse-related ED visits involving
hydrocodone and oxycodone, coterminous U.S.,
1994-2002
20
Narcotic Painkillers
  • In SAMHSA's Treatment Episode Data Set (TEDS),
    the substance abuse treatment admission rates for
    narcotic painkillers increased 155 between 1992
    and 2002. The increase was smallest in large
    central metropolitan areas (58) and greatest in
    the most rural areas ,i.e., non-metropolitan
    areas without a city (269).
  • Injecting narcotic painkillers among the
    treatment admissions for narcotic painkillers
    decreased from 25 in 1992 to 11 in 2002 this
    decrease occurred in all rural/urban groups.
  • Taking narcotic painkillers orally increased from
    66 to 77 only the non-metropolitan areas
    without a city showed a decrease (from 76 to
    69).
  • Inhaling narcotic painkillers increased from 3
    to 8 this increased in all rural/urban groups,
    especially in the non-metropolitan areas without
    a city (from 2 to 12).

21
Conclusions
  • The abuse of prescription opioids continues to
    increase
  • The problem is a national concern not just a
    local phenomenon
  • It appears to affect both genders equally

22
THANK YOU!
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