Title: Illicit Drugs, Medication Misuse, Pain Management, and Pharmacotherapy
1Illicit Drugs, Medication Misuse, Pain
Management, and Pharmacotherapy
- David W. Oslin, MD
- University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine
- And
- Philadelphia, VAMC
Hazelden Research Co-Chair on Late Life
Addictions
2Disclosures
- NIMH
- K08 Award
- ACSIR
- NIDA
- Center for Studies on Addiction
- NIAAA
- R01
- VA
- Merit Early Entry
- MIRECC
- HSRD Merit Award
- Industry Support
- DuPont Pharma
- Forest Labs
- Hazelden Foundation
- Pfizer
3The Problems
- Alcohol Use
- Medication Misuse
- Cigarette use
- Illicit substances
- Gambling
4What is the Extent of the Issues?In the Community
5Illicit Drug Use
6Relevance to an aging population
- Cohort changes in exposure we will see more
elderly patients using illicit substances
(current and past abuse) - Consequences may be greater in older adults
- Direct toxicity / withdrawal
- Indirect interactions with medications or other
illnesses - We dont know much about treatment
- Comorbidity is a significant issue perhaps
uniquely so for the elderly - Cognition
- Minor depression
- Suicide
- Anxiety and personality problems
7The difficulty
- Extremely limited research
- Most epidemiological samples few elderly, ECA
is gt20 years old - Drug and alcohol dependence are exclusions to
most geriatric trials - Age gt65 is almost always an exclusion for drug
and alcohol trials
8Veterans (Age 60 and Over) in Addiction Treatment
- Alcohol Only 51.8
- Street Drugs Only 9.1
- Prescription Medications only 3.6
- Alcohol and Street Drugs 26.4
- Alcohol and Prescription Medications 5.5
- Street Drugs and Prescription Medications
0.9 - All three categories of substances 1.8
- Missing data 0.9
Sample of 110 subjects in a special
geri-addiction program
Schonfeld et al. 1990
9Drug Consequences
- Alcohol
- Directly neurotoxic
- Associated with dementia and depression
- Opioids
- Secondary effects via infection
- Acute cognitive effects ?long term effects
- Stimulants
- Acute and chronic depletion of dopamine
- Effects frontal striatum
- Nicotine
- Associated with dementia and depression
10Treatment Issues
- No clinical trial research
- Very limited observational research
- Some clinical experience by select clinicians
- Many opinions
11Past History is a Concept We Must Embrace
- Many older adults especially those of the
Woodstock generation will enter late life with
a past history of alcohol or drug abuse - 5 fold increase in late life mental disorders
(depression and dementia) - Treatment of late life depression (3-5 yr
outcomes) - 88 of those without an alcohol history
significantly improved - 57 of those with an alcohol history
significantly improved
Saunders et al. 1991, Cook et al. 1991
12Behavioral Health Laboratory (BHL) Links To
Primary Care
13Research to PracticeBehavioral Health Laboratory
- The BHL is an automated telephone assessment and
triage service for patients identified by primary
care providers as having depressive symptoms or
at-risk drinking. - The depression and alcohol clinical reminder
system generates a consultation request to the
BHL. - The BHL conducts a brief telephone (20-30
minutes) assessment generating a report for the
PCP including diagnosis, severity, and general
treatment recommendations.
14Drug Use Among Primary Care Patients with Minor
or Major Depression
15Types of Substance Use Among Older Adults (50)
16Drug Use Among Older Patients with Minor or Major
Depression
17Drug Use Among Older Patients with Minor or Major
Depression
18(No Transcript)
19Medication Misuse So Many Terms Little
agreement
- Abuse
- Inappropriate
- Problematic
- Misuse
- Addiction
- Non-medical use
- Dependence
- Iatrogenic
- Unintended use
20Prescription Medication Use by Seniors - 1996
- Taking 3 or more medications 58
- Taking an antidepressant 8.9
- Taking a benzodiazepine 10.4
- Taking a narcotic analgesic 14.5
- Taking a non-steroidal agent - 17.5
Moxley, E. et.al. 2003
21Benzodiazepine across the age spectrum
Dunbar et al. 1980
22Analgesic Drug Use
Use in the last 2 weeks
23Risks of Non-Specific Use of Medications
- Costs patient, insurance, and employer
- Increased exposure to drug specific adverse
effects - General adverse effects such as falls and memory
impairment - Increased drug drug interactions
- Increased drug disease interactions
24Sedative/Hypnotic UseA Disappearing Problem?
MW p 0.0393, Positive Negative p0.002
25Relationship Between Benzodiazepine Use and
Depression Treatment
Percent Reduction in HAMD p0.091
26Benzodiazepine Discontinuation
4
2
0
-
2
P
l
a
c
e
b
o
B
e
n
z
o
d
i
a
z
e
p
i
n
e
-
4
(n36)
-
6
6 Months
12 Months
(Habraken et. Al., 1997)
27Medication Misuse
- Think twice before using a medication when the
target is not well defined or there are
non-pharmacological alternatives - Set out with well defined goals for the
medication - Dont be afraid to stop medication when there is
no evidence it is effective - Educate patients about the limitations of
medications
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29Treating Pain and the Risks of Analgesic Abuse
30Chronic Pain and the Elderly
- Chronic Pain Problems 20 50
- Chronic Pain in NH residents 34 67
- Use Analgesics
- (several times/wk) 18
- Use Analgesics for gt 6 months 11
31Clinician attitudes toward pain management
- Duration of pain or patient demographics are not
related to opioid prescribing - Nonverbal expressions of pain were the greatest
predictors of opioid prescriptions - Many physicians have negative views about
patients with chronic pain - 35 of primary care physicians are unwilling to
prescribe sustained release opioids for chronic
pain
Turk et al 1997, Weinstein et al 2000, Potter et
al 2001
32Outcome of Pain for Older Adults
- Depression
- Decreased socialization
- Sleep problems
- Decreased functional capacity
- Increased health care utilization
- 8 of chronic pain patients have seen 3 or more
physicians in the last 5 years
33Depression and Pain Complaints
Parmelee et al 1991
34What are the Concerns/Issues?
- Fear of inducing a new addiction by using opioid
analgesics or benzodiazepines - Fear of inducing a relapse in those in remission
from an addiction problem - Dealing with drug-seeking behavior
- Concern about drug interactions
- Regulatory fears physician mis-prescribing and
legal consequences - Rising use of opioid analgesics for medical and
non-medical use
35New users of Opioid Analgesics for Non-medical
purposes
1600
1400
1200
1000
Thousands
800
600
400
200
1980
1985
1990
1995
36Medical Use of Opioid Analgesics
Kgs of use
Joranson et al 2000
37What about the myths?
- Myth
- Using Opioid analgesics will lead to a new
pattern of addiction - Reality
- Very limited evidence that this occurs
Chabal et al, 1997, Joranson et al 2000
38What about the myths?
- Myth
- Using Opioid analgesics will lead to a relapse in
patients already in treatment - Reality
- No evidence for this
- Consider the converse pain will limit
improvements in addiction treatment
39What about the myths?
- Myth
- Using Opioid analgesics will promote drug seeking
behavior - Reality
- The behavior is predictable
- Current history of polysubstance dependence
- Low social support
- Not currently in addiction treatment
Dunbar and Katz, 1996
40What about the myths?
- Myth
- Tolerance and physiologic dependence addiction
- Reality
- Many patients will develop tolerance to opioid
analgesics - Many patients will experience withdrawal symptoms
after long term use. - The majority of these patients will not exhibit
other symptoms of addiction such as drug seeking,
using more than prescribed, etc.
41What about the myths?
- Myth
- I will loose my license if I prescribe opioids to
an addicted individual - Reality
- Using opioid analgesics in substance dependent
patients is not illegal - Rationale for treatment should be well documented
- Treatment outcomes should be well documented.
42Clinical Trial Data on Pain Management
- 1993
- 83 randomized clinical trials using an NSAID
- 10000 subjects
- 230 subjects gt 65
- 0 subjects gt85
43Pharmacologic Guidelines for older adults
- Acetaminophen
- mild to mod pain
- not to exceed 4000mg/day
- NSAIDs
- use with caution in those with renal failure,
PUD, bleeding problems. - High dose long-term should be avoided
- Opioids
- Sustained release preps for chronic pain
- Fixed dose combinations (e.g. T3) for short term
or break through pain - For long term use remember a prophylactic bowel
regimen - Cognitive impairment, nausea and puritus are all
common
JAGS 461998
44Choices other than Opioids
- Medications
- Antidepressants
- Mood stabilizers/ anticonvulsants
- NSAIDS
- Cox inhibitors
- Acetametaphin
- tramadol
- Devices and procedures
- Nerve blocks/ablation
- Electrical/magnetic stimulation
- Acupuncture
- Exercise/PT
- Psychotherapy
- Chiropractic treatment
- hypnosis
45Summary
- We all must die. But if I can save someone
from days of torture, that is what I feel is my
great and ever new privilege. Pain is a more
terrible lord of mankind than even death itself. - Albert Schwietzer, MD
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47Pharmacotherapy for Addictive Disorders
48Pharmacological Treatments of Addiction
- FDA Approved
- Antabuse (alcohol)
- Naltrexone (alcohol)
- Methadone (opioids)
- Buprenorphine (opioids)
- Nicotine replacement (nicotine)
- Buproprion (nicotine)
49Naltrexone
- FDA approved for the treatment of alcohol
dependence - Functions as an opioid receptor antagonist (mu gtgt
delta or kappa) - Development was an example of bench to bedside
translational science (opioid effects on reward
pathways)
50Opioid Neurotransmission and Alcohol
- Alcohol consumption affects the production,
release, and activity of opioid peptides (Herz,
1997) - Opioid peptides mediate some of alcohols
rewarding effects by enhancing midbrain dopamine
release - Opioid antagonists suppress alcohol-induced
reward (Swift,1999)
51Naltrexone in the Treatment of Alcohol Dependence
Cumulative Relapse Rate
1.0
0.9
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
Naltrexone HCL (N35) Placebo (N35)
0.2
0.1
0.0
1
0
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
No. of Weeks Receiving Medication
Volpicelli et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry, 1992 49
876-880
52Randomized Placebo Controlled Naltrexone/Nalmafene
Trials
53Younger versus Older Adults
54Translating Positive findings in Aging to Younger
Adults
55For Whom?
- Under what conditions and for which patients will
naltrexone have the greatest impact?
56Effects of Family History on Naltrexone Response
Days of Heavy Drinking
Monterosso et al 2001
57A118G (Asn40Asp)
- Asp40 allele frequency of 13-20 (24.3 36 of
European Americans have at least one copy) - The 118 AgtG exon 1 SNP increases OPRM1 affinity
for beta-endorphin. The functional significance
of other variants remains unknown. - Asp40 variant binds beta-endorphin and activates
G- protein coupled protein potassium ion channels
with 3 times greater potency - Naloxone challenge alters CRF secretion in those
with the Asp40 variant
58Proportions of Clinical Response in Naltrexone
Treated Subjects
59Proportions of Clinical Response in Placebo
Treated Subjects
60Genetic Polymorphisms and Alcohol Treatment
Naltrexone / Asp40 Allele (A/G, G/G)
Naltrexone Asn40 Allele (A/A)
Cumulative Survival (time to relapse)
Placebo / Asp40 Allele (A/G, G/G)
Placebo / Asn40 Allele (A/A)
Days
61Buprenorphine in Office-Based Opiate Treatment
- Buprenorphine and buprenorphine/naloxone are the
only opioid agonist medications approved for the
treatment of opioid dependence in the office
setting. - DATA 2000 allow for qualified physicians to treat
up to 30 patients at any given time with
buprenorphine by prescription, with appropriate
ancillary services either in the office or by
referral.
62Buprenorphine, Methadone, LAAM Treatment
Retention
100
73 Hi Meth
80
60
58 Bup
Percent Retained
40
20
20 Lo Meth
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
Study Week
Adapted from Johnson, et al., 2000
63Buprenorphine, Methadone, LAAMOpioid Urine
Results
100
All Subjects
80
60
Bup
40
Hi Meth
Mean Negative
40
39
Lo Meth
20
19
0
1
3
5
7
9
11
13
15
17
Study Week
Adapted from Johnson, et al., 2000
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66Summary
- Buprenorphine and buprenorphine/naloxone are
effective for the treatment of opiate dependence
in the office setting. - Physicians can easily become qualified to
prescribe buprenorphine. - Managing patients within the office setting can
be done with existing resources and minimal
difficulty.