Maybe chronic pain sufferers actually NEED their meds
Mayo Clinic
Despite increased
attention to opioid abuse, prescriptions have remained relatively unchanged for
many U.S. patients, research led by Mayo Clinic finds.
The research, published in The BMJ, shows that opioid prescription rates have remained flat for commercially insured patients over the past decade. Rates for some Medicare patients are leveling but remain above where they were 10 years ago.
The research, published in The BMJ, shows that opioid prescription rates have remained flat for commercially insured patients over the past decade. Rates for some Medicare patients are leveling but remain above where they were 10 years ago.
"Our data suggest
not much has changed in prescription opioid use since about five years
ago," says Molly Jeffery, Ph.D., lead author, who is the scientific
director of the Mayo Clinic Division of Emergency Medicine Research.
A cross-specialty team of physicians and researchers from Mayo Clinic, Yale University, The University of Alabama at Birmingham and Dartmouth College collaborated to study 48 million U.S. patients who had insurance coverage between 2007 and 2016.
Using deidentified
insurance claims from the OptumLabs Data Warehouse, the team compared opioid
prescriptions among commercially insured patients; Medicare Advantage
recipients 65 and older; and Medicare Advantage beneficiaries younger than 65,
who generally qualify because of long-term disability.
They found that over
the course of one year, 14 percent of commercially insured patients, 26 percent
of Medicare Advantage patients 65 and older, and 52 percent of disabled
Medicare Advantage patients received an opioid prescription.
Over the 10-year
period, disabled Medicare Advantage recipients had the highest rates of use and
proportion of long-term use, and the largest average daily dose.
For that group,
quarterly opioid use was lowest in 2007 at 26 percent, peaked in 2013 at 41
percent, and was 39 percent in 2016.
The average daily dose
increased from the equivalent of seven pills of 5-milligram oxycodone to a high
of about nine pills in 2012. In 2016, it went back to roughly eight pills.
Among Medicare
Advantage recipients 65 and older, quarterly opioid use was lowest at the start
of the study period in 2007 (11 percent), increased to 15 percent in 2010, and
decreased to 14 percent by the end of the 10-year period.
The average daily dose, roughly three pills of 5-milligram oxycodone, remained relatively unchanged for this group.
The average daily dose, roughly three pills of 5-milligram oxycodone, remained relatively unchanged for this group.
For commercial
patients, quarterly opioid use remained relatively flat at 6-7 percent for the
study period, and the average daily dose, which is the equivalent of about two
pills of 5-milligram oxycodone, remained the same for that group, as well.
"Based on these
historical trends, there remains an unmet patient need to better target the use
of prescription opioids," says W. Michael Hooten, M.D., co-author, who is
a Mayo Clinic anesthesiologist and pain specialist.
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has previously reported that opioid
prescriptions in the U.S. increased dramatically from 1999 to 2010. The CDC
says those numbers decreased from 2011 to 2015, but the 2015 total was still
three times higher than the 1999 total and four times higher than amount
prescribed per capita in Europe.
However, Mayo research
finds that while prescriptions are leveling off, they're not decreasing in most
groups.
"Our research of
patient-level data doesn't show the decline that was found in previous
research," Dr. Jeffery says.
"Those declines were seen in the total amount of opioids prescribed across the whole market. We wanted to know how the declines were experienced by individual people. Did fewer people have opioid prescriptions? Did people taking opioids take less over time? When we looked at it that way, we found a different picture."
"Those declines were seen in the total amount of opioids prescribed across the whole market. We wanted to know how the declines were experienced by individual people. Did fewer people have opioid prescriptions? Did people taking opioids take less over time? When we looked at it that way, we found a different picture."
Adding to the urgency
of addressing this issue is the steadily increasing number of deaths in the
U.S. attributed to opioid overdoses. From 1999 to 2014, overdose deaths
increased by 200 percent, and by 28 percent from 2015 to 2016 alone, according
to the CDC.
The new Mayo research
also shows:
- Over the 10-year period, disabled Medicare Advantage recipients had an average daily opioid dose equaling about nine pills of 5-milligram oxycodone, compared to about three pills for Medicare Advantage recipients 65 and older, and about two pills for commercially insured patients.
- Long-term opioid use made up 3 percent of commercial patients, 7 percent of Medicare Advantage recipients 65 and older, and 14 percent of the disabled Medicare Advantage recipients. However, this small group of patients made up the majority of total opioid pills dispensed: 62 percent for commercial; 70 percent for Medicare Advantage 65 and older; and 89 percent for disabled Medicare Advantage.
Commercially insured
patients made up about 89 percent of those studied, while about 10 percent were
Medicare Advantage recipients 65 and older, and less than 2 percent were
disabled Medicare Advantage recipients. The study did not include people with
Medicaid insurance, those covered by the Veterans Affairs or Tricare (military
insurance), or the uninsured.
Mayo Clinic is broadly
researching opioid prescribing practices to find ideal doses for individual
patient needs. The researchers say the goal is to achieve the best possible
patient outcomes and experience with minimal exposure to opioids.
This research has been translated into opioid prescribing guidelines and tools for medical practices at Mayo and beyond, identifying patients who may not need opioids and, in some cases, cutting prescriptions in half.
This research has been translated into opioid prescribing guidelines and tools for medical practices at Mayo and beyond, identifying patients who may not need opioids and, in some cases, cutting prescriptions in half.
Dr. Jeffery is a
health care practice and policy researcher in the Mayo Clinic Robert D. and
Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery. The study's
senior author is Nilay Shah, Ph.D., the center's deputy director for research.
This research was made
possible by the Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the
Science of Health Care Delivery. The researchers used the OptumLabs Data
Warehouse, which contains deidentified administrative claims data, including
medical claims and eligibility information from a large national U.S. health
insurance plan, as well as electronic health record data from a nationwide
network of provider groups.