Changes in opioid prescribing behaviour in Denmark, Sweden and Norway - 2006-2014

2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-121
Author(s):  
L. Jarlbaek ◽  
P. Joergensen

Abstract Aims A country’s use of opioids is frequently debated in the public, usually based on rough figures from prescription databases made for consumption registration purposes. However, these databases hold much more detailed information that can be processed to increase knowledge and insight into nationally opioid prescribing-behaviour. This study aims to provide a more detailed picture of opioid prescribing and its changes in Denmark, Sweden and Norway during 2006-2014. Methods Data on opioid-use (ATC; N02A) were downloaded from each country’s publically assessable prescription-databases. Consumption-data were converted from defined daily doses (DDDs) to mg oral morphine equivalents (omeqs). Changes in choice of opioid-types, use and number of users were presented using descriptive statistics and compared. Results Opioid users: During the whole period, Norway had the highest, and Denmark the lowest, number of opioid users/1000 inhabitants. In 2006, Norway, Sweden and Denmark had 98, 79, 66 users/1000 inhabitants. In 2014 the numbers were 105, 78, 75 users/1000 inhabitants, respectively. Opioid use/user: During the whole period, Norway had the lowest, and Denmark the highest use/user. In 2006, the mean use/user was 1979, 3615, 6025 mg omeq/user in Norway, Sweden and Denmark respectively. In 2014 the corresponding use was 2426,3473,6361 mg omeq/user. The preferred choices of opioid-types changed during the period for all three countries. The balance between use of weak or strong opioids showed more prominent changes for Norway and Sweden compared to Denmark. Conclusions Three nations, closely related in culture and geo graphically, showed significant differences and changes in opioid prescribing behaviour. This knowledge can easily be overlooked using the traditional way of presenting opioid consumption statistics. More detailed and clinically relevant presentation can increase the knowledge of doctors’ opioid prescribing behaviour, that can be related to changes in the society or health care system, like demography, legislation and guidelines from authorities.

Author(s):  
Aakriti R. Carrubba ◽  
Amy E. Glasgow ◽  
Elizabeth B. Habermann ◽  
Amanda P. Stanton ◽  
Megan N. Wasson ◽  
...  

<b><i>Objectives:</i></b> This study aimed to determine the oral morphine equivalents (OMEs) prescribed and refill rates following hysterectomy and hysteroscopy in the setting of opioid prescribing practice changes in 2 states. <b><i>Design:</i></b> This is a retrospective cohort analysis consisting of 2,916 patients undergoing hysterectomy or hysteroscopy between July 2016 and September 2019 at 2 affiliated academic hospitals in states that underwent legislative changes in opioid prescribing in 2018. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> Participants were identified using the Current Procedural Terminology procedure codes in Arizona and Florida. Hysterectomy was chosen as the most invasive gynecologic procedure, while hysteroscopy was chosen as the least invasive. Medical records were abstracted to find opioid prescriptions from 90 days before surgery to 30 days after discharge. Patients with opioid use between 90 and 7 days before surgery were excluded. Prescriptions were converted to OMEs and were calculated per quarter year. Statistical analysis included Wilcoxon rank sum <i>t</i> tests for OMEs and χ<sup>2</sup> <i>t</i> tests for refill rates. Interrupted time-series analysis was used to determine significant change in OMEs before and after legislative change. Statistical analysis was performed using SAS version 9.4 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA). <b><i>Results:</i></b> In Arizona, 1,067 hysterectomies were performed; 459 (43%) vaginal, 561 (52.6%) laparoscopic/robotic, and 47 (4.4%) abdominal. There were 530 hysteroscopies. Overall median OMEs decreased from 225 prior to July 2018 to 75 after July 2018 (<i>p</i> &#x3c; 0.0001). The opioid refill rate remained unchanged at 7.4% (<i>p</i> = 0.966). In Florida, there were 769 hysterectomies; 241 (31.3%) vaginal, 476 (61.9%) laparoscopic/robotic, and 52 (6.8%) abdominal. There were 549 hysteroscopies. Overall median OMEs decreased from 150 prior to July 2018 to 0 after July 2018 (<i>p</i> &#x3c; 0.0001). The opioid refill rate was similar (7.8% before July 2018 and 7.3% after July 2018; <i>p</i> = 0.739). <b><i>Limitations:</i></b> Limitations include involvement of a single hospital institution with a total of 10 fellowship-trained surgeons and biases inherent to retrospective study design. <b><i>Conclusions:</i></b> Legislative and provider-led changes coincided with decreases in opioid prescribing after 2018 in both states without increasing rates of refills and showed actual data reflected in the medical record. Gynecologists must actively participate in safe prescribing practices to decrease opioid dependence and misuse.


2016 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Heine Joergensen ◽  
Lene Jarlbaek

AbstractAimsTo relate changes in the number of opioid users in Denmark, Norway and Sweden during 2006-2014 to changes in national regulatory and economic incentive factors.MethodsThe material consists of data drawn from the national prescription databases in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. Data on the number of opioid users per 1000 inhabitants were collected for all ages, both sexes and for the period 2006-2014. Concomitant changes in regulatory or economic incentives were identified and related to the drug statistics.ResultsFor all opioids in the period 2006-2014 Denmark had the lowest number ofusers but the largest increase in users. Norway had the highest number of users but a lower increase. The number of users in Sweden was very stable showing no change in number of users.The number of morphine users in Denmark increased from 2009 to 2014. The number of users of oxycodone decreased from 2010 to 2014. The Danish health authorities recommended using morphine as first drug of choice in 2010 and warned about potential drug dependency of oxycodone in 2011.In Sweden the number of users of oxycodone increased over the period with the largest increase from 2012 to 2013. The number af tramadol users decreased from 2011. Prior to these changes tramadol was declared to be classified as an addictive drug 2011.ConclusionsChanges in the countries’ opioid use appeared in the public prescription-databases in a timely manner after introduction of national recommendations not to use oxycodone and prefer morphine as first choice, or classify tramadol as an addictive drug. National drug statistics show the end-result of the doctors’ prescribing behavior and the population’s use of opioids. Thorough investigation of prescription-data can help to detect and explain the interplay between culture, society and medical reasons for prescribing opioids.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajda Bedene ◽  
Anita Strmljan ◽  
Eveline L. A. van Dorp ◽  
Mitja Udovič ◽  
Willem M. Lijfering ◽  
...  

Background: Prescribing practice of pain medication is changing in the Netherlands; opioids are used more often instead of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), therefore we aimed to compare the use of pain medication with Slovenia which has stringent prescribing rules for strong opioids.Methods: We conducted a cohort study into national prescription databases of the Netherlands and Slovenia covering pharmacy claims between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2019. In the analysis about 17 million Dutch and 2 million Slovenian residents were included.Findings: The use of opioids and NSAIDs was higher in Slovenia than in the Netherlands. More frequent use of opioids in Slovenia could be almost entirely explained by weak opioids (about 6% of the population), whereas they were prescribed 50% less frequently in the Netherlands. The opioid use has increased by about 20% in the Netherlands (4.85 and 6.00% of the population in 2013 and 2018, respectively), and the majority of this increase could be explained by strong opioids (4.05% in 2018), specifically, by oxycodone whose use increased by more than 2-fold between 2013 and 2019. In comparison, oxycodone was seldomly used in Slovenia (about 0.3% of the population received a prescription in a year).Interpretation: When medication use is controlled by stringent prescribing rules, like for strong opioids in Slovenia, the use is lower as compared to when such rules do not exist.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (9) ◽  
pp. 1411-1416
Author(s):  
Megan Elizabeth Ross ◽  
Lindsay J Wheeler ◽  
Dina M Flink ◽  
Carolyn Lefkowits

ObjectivesPre-operative opioid use is common and should be considered a comorbidity among surgical candidates. Our objective was to describe the rate of pre-operative opioid use and patterns of post-operative outpatient opioid prescribing in a cohort of gynecologic oncology patients.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted with 448 gynecologic oncology surgical patients undergoing surgery for a suspected or known cancer diagnosis from January 2016 to December 2016. Pre-operative opioid users (n=97) were identified. Patient and surgical characteristics were abstracted, as was post-operative opioid prescription (type of opioid, oral morphine equivalents amount) and length of stay. For pre-operative opioid users, the type of opioid prescribed post-operatively was compared with the type of pre-operative opioid. Pre-operative opioid users were compared with non-users, stratified by surgery type. Descriptive statistics were analyzed using χ2 statistic, and medians were compared using a Mann-Whitney U statistic.ResultsPre-operative opioid prescriptions were noted in 21% of patients, and 24% of these had two or more opioid prescriptions before surgery. The majority of pre-operative opioid users (51%) were maintained on the same agent post-operatively at the time of discharge, but 36% were switched to a different opioid and 7% were prescribed an additional opioid. Overall and in laparotomies, pre-operative opioid users received higher volume post-operative prescriptions than non-users. There was no difference in post-operative prescription volume for minimally invasive surgeries or in length of stay between pre-operative users and non-users.ConclusionsPre-operative opioid use is common in gynecologic oncology patients and should be considered during pre-operative planning. Pre-operative opioid use was associated with a higher volume and wider range of post-operative prescription. Over 40% of opioid users were discharged with either an additional opioid or a new opioid, highlighting a potential missed opportunity to optimize opioid safety. Further research is needed to characterize the relationship between pre-operative opioid use and peri-operative outcomes and to develop strategies to manage pain effectively in this population without compromising opioid safety.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Ping Zhao ◽  
Christelle Berthod ◽  
Odile Sheehy ◽  
Behrouz Kassaï ◽  
Jessica Gorgui ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Recent studies show a rapid growth among pregnant women using high potency opioids for common pain management during their pregnancy. No study has examined the duration of treatment among strong opioid users and weak opioid users during pregnancy. We aimed to investigate the prevalence of prescribed opioid use during pregnancy, in Quebec; and to compare the duration of opioid treatment between strong opioid users and weak opioid users. Methods Using the Quebec Pregnancy Cohort (1998–2015), we included all pregnancies covered by the Quebec Public Prescription Drug Insurance Program. Opioid exposure was defined as filled at least one prescription for any opioid during pregnancy or before pregnancy but with a duration that overlapped the beginning of pregnancy. Prevalence of opioids use was calculated for all pregnancies, according to pregnancy outcome, trimester of exposure, and individual opioids. The duration of opioid use during pregnancy was analyzed according to 8 categories based on cumulative duration (< 90 days vs. ≥90 days), duration of action (short-acting vs. long-acting) and strength of the opioid (weak vs. strong). Results Of 442,079 eligible pregnancies, 20,921 (4.7%) were exposed to opioids. Among pregnancies ending with deliveries (n = 249,234), 5.4% were exposed to opioids; the prevalence increased by 40.3% from 3.9% in 1998 to 5.5% in 2015, more specifically a significant increase in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy. Weak opioid, codeine was the most commonly dispensed opioid (70% of all dispensed opioids), followed by strong opioid, hydromorphone (11%), morphine (10%), and oxycodone (5%). The prevalence of codeine use decreased by 47% from 4.3% in 2005 to 2.3% in 2015, accompanied by an increased use of strong opioid, morphine (0.029 to 1.41%), hydromorphone (0.115 to 1.08%) and oxycodone (0.022 to 0.44%), from 1998 to 2015. The average durations of opioid exposure were significantly longer among pregnancies exposed to strong opioid as compared to weak opioid regardless of the cumulative duration or duration of action (P < 0.05). Conclusions Given the differences in the safety profile between strong opioids and the major weak opioid codeine, the increased use of strong opioids during pregnancy with longer treatment duration raises public health concerns.


2020 ◽  
pp. rapm-2020-102060
Author(s):  
Lauren Wilson ◽  
Megan Fiasconaro ◽  
Jiabin Liu ◽  
Jashvant Poeran ◽  
Lazaros Poultsides ◽  
...  

BackgroundSeveral studies have identified excess risk associated with undergoing simultaneous (compared with unilateral or staged) bilateral total knee arthroplasty (BTKA). However, few have addressed subsequent chronic opioid use. Given the substantial morbidity and mortality associated with prolonged opioid use, we evaluated the incidence of postoperative chronic opioid use following simultaneous versus staged BTKA, based on the different timing strategies of staged procedures.MethodsIn this retrospective cohort study, patients who underwent BTKA procedures (2012–2016; Truven Health MarketScan; n=14 407) were classified as having undergone simultaneous or staged BTKA (<3 months, 3–6 months or 6–12 months apart). Outcomes were postoperative chronic opioid use and oral morphine equivalents prescribed on discharge. Multivariable regression models measured associations between type/timing of BTKA and outcomes. ORs and 95% CIs were reported.ResultsUnadjusted frequency of chronic opioid use did not differ between groups, (Simultaneous: 11.3%, staged <3 months: 10.7%, staged 3–6 months: 11.7%, staged >6 months: 10.2%; p=0.247). In an adjusted model, there was no significant difference in the odds of becoming chronic opioid users between staged and simultaneous BTKA (staged <3 months OR 1.03, 95% CI 0.88 to 1.21/staged 3–6 months OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.79 to 1.12/staged >6 months OR 0.96, 95% CI 0.82 to 1.13; p=0.755). Patients undergoing staged BTKAs <6 months apart (compared with simultaneous) were prescribed slightly greater oral morphine equivalents on hospital discharge (staged <3 months 6% increase, 95% CI 3% to 10%; staged 3–6 months 4%, 95% CI 1% to 8%; p=0.002).ConclusionAlthough patients undergoing staged BTKA <6 months apart were prescribed greater quantities of opioids on discharge, there was no significant difference in the odds of postoperative chronic opioid use compared with simultaneous BTKA. The timing of BTKA procedures does not appear to influence the likelihood of postoperative chronic opioid dependence.


Author(s):  
Alexis Oliva ◽  
Néstor Armas ◽  
Sandra Dévora ◽  
Susana Abdala

Abstract This study is an evaluation of prescription opioid use on the island of La Gomera, a mainly rural area, during the period 2016–2019 at various levels. Data were extracted from the wholesalers who supply the community pharmacies at the population level. Prescription opioid use was measured as defined daily doses per 1,000 inhabitants/day (DID) and by the number of units sold per 1,000 inhabitants and year (units sold). This provided an island total of La Gomera’s overall prescription of opioids and its rate of change, as well as differences in prescribing at the municipal and health area level. Tramadol with acetaminophen and tramadol in monotherapy were the most consumed by “units sold” parameter, which accounted for 69.48% and 18.59% of the total. The situation was similar for DID, although with lower percentages, but a significant increase was observed in the use of fentanyl and buprenorphine, around 15% in each case. The balance between the uses of weak or strong opioids was different in La Gomera compared to that of Spain as a whole. In Spain, almost 70% of the prescriptions were for weak opioids compared to 58.67% in La Gomera. Fentanyl was the most used strong opioid (16.10%) followed by tapentadol and buprenorphine, around 5% each, whereas in La Gomera, buprenorphine was the most consumed (15.75%) followed by fentanyl (14.87%) and tapentadol (5.82%). These differences in prescription opioid use are most likely explained by prescriber characteristics, whereas the population age, socioeconomic status, or living in rural/urban area are not decisive determinants.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aaron Jason Bilek ◽  
Stephanie Cullen ◽  
Carolyn Michelle Tan ◽  
Qixuan Li ◽  
Ella Huszti ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: While there is much evidence about pain management for orthopedic patients in the immediate perioperative setting, little is known about how opioids are used during inpatient rehabilitation in the days and weeks that follow, particularly in older adults. A safe upper limit of 50 oral morphine equivalents (OME) is frequently cited in guidelines. This study’s objective is to characterize the use of opioids in an older adult population undergoing orthopedic rehabilitation. Methods: This is a retrospective observational study of adults aged ≥50 years old admitted for orthopedic rehabilitation between November 2019 and June 2021 at an academic rehabilitation hospital in Toronto, Canada. Acute care admissions preceding rehabilitation were for either a surgical or non-surgical orthopedic indication. Participants were divided into opioid-naïve individuals who received opioids, opioid-naïve individuals who did not receive opioids, and pre-existing chronic users of opioids. Demographic, clinical, and medication administration data were collected through the electronic health record and manual chart review. Average daily opioid dose for the first seven days of each stay was characterized using OME. Linear regression was used to assess for variables independently associated with opioid dose. Results: A total of 643 patients undergoing orthopedic rehabilitation were included: 125 (19.4%) involved chronic opioid users, 416 (64.7%) were opioid-naïve patients who received opioids, and 102 (15.9%) were opioid-naïve patients who did not receive opioids, with median age respectively of 72, 79, and 83. Median daily OME over the first week for chronic users was 30.3 and for opioid-naïve users was 6.9. Opioid dose was significantly positively associated with reported pain as defined by day 3 pain score and knee replacement; it was inversely associated with admission for a non-surgical indication and age. Conclusions: Opioids are frequently but heterogeneously used in older adults undergoing orthopedic rehabilitation. Median OME use in this cohort of older adults was substantially lower than the 50 OME threshold suggested in guidelines. Dedicated guidance for opioid use is warranted for this unique patient population.


Author(s):  
Meghna Jani ◽  
Belay Birlie Yimer ◽  
Therese Sheppard ◽  
Mark Lunt ◽  
William G Dixon

ABSTRACTBackgroundThe U.S. opioid epidemic has led to similar concerns about prescribed opioids in the U.K. In new users, escalation to more potent and high-dose opioids may contribute to long-term use as well as opioid-related morbidity/mortality. The scale of such escalation is unclear for non-cancer pain. Additionally, physician prescribing behaviour has been described as a key driver of rising opioid prescriptions and long-term opioid use. No studies have investigated the extent to which regions, practices, prescribers, vary in opioid prescribing, whilst accounting for case-mix.MethodsUsing a retrospective cohort study we used U.K. primary-care electronic health records from Clinical Practice Research Datalink to: (i)describe prescribing trends between 2006-17 (ii)evaluate the transition of opioid dose and potency in the first 2-years from initial prescription (iii)quantify and identify risk factors for long- term opioid use (iv)quantify the variation of long-term use attributed to region, practice and prescriber, accounting for case-mix and chance variation. Adult patients with a new prescription of an opioid without cancer were included.Findings1,968,742 new-users of opioids were identified. Rates of codeine use were highest, increasing five-fold from 2006-2017, reaching up to 2,456 prescriptions/10,000 people/year. Morphine, buprenorphine and oxycodone prescribing rates continued to rise steadily throughout the study period. Of those who started on high (100-200 Morphine Milligram Equivalents [MME]/day) or very high dose opioids (>200 MME/day), 4.9% and 10.3% remained in the same or higher MME/day category throughout 2-years, respectively. Following opioid initiation, 15% became long-term opioid users. In the fully adjusted model, MME at initiation, older- age, social deprivation, fibromyalgia, rheumatological conditions, substance abuse, suicide/self-harm and gabapentinoid use were associated with the highest odds of long-term use. After adjustment for case-mix, the North-West, Yorkshire, South- West; 103 practices (25.6%) and 540 prescribers (3.5%) were associated with a significantly higher risk of long-term use.InterpretationPatients commenced on high MMEs were more likely to stay in the same state for a subsequent 2-years and were at increased risk of long-term use. In the first UK study evaluating long-term opioid prescribing with adjustment for patient-level characteristics, variation in regions and especially practices and prescribers were observed. Our findings support greater calls for action for reduction in practice and prescriber variation by promoting safe practice in opioid prescribing.FundingVersus Arthritis and National Institute for Health ResearchResearch in ContextEvidence before this studyDrug dependence and deaths due to opioids have led to an opioid-overdose crisis in several countries globally including the US and Canada, and subsequent concerns about overprescribing in the UK. Physician prescribing behaviour has implicated as a key driver of rising opioid prescriptions and long-term opioid use however this needs to be assessed in the context of region, GP practice and individual patients. We searched Pubmed and Google Scholar between January 2005 and November 2019, with the terms “opioid” AND/OR “opiate”, “chronic pain” AND/OR “non-cancer pain”, and UK AND/OR England AND/OR “Great Britain” AND/OR “NHS”. We also reviewed relevant reports from Public Health England and other national bodies. The more recent trends for opioid prescribing have included all prescriptions including those for cancer pain, and those that include primary care UK prescription data for non-cancer indications are several years out of date. No studies evaluated how opioid dose and potency changes over time in individual patients after starting an opioid for the first time to assess escalation or tapering. National variation in opioid prescribing reported thus far has not accounted for patient case-mix. No studies have assessed the effect of the prescriber on opioid prescribing adjusting for regional, practice level variation and for individual characteristics.Added value of this studyThere has been a substantial overall increase in opioid-prescribing for non-cancer pain with clear drug-specific trends between 2006-17. To our knowledge, this is the first UK study that has evaluated the sequential transition on how dose/potency vary when a patient is first prescribed an opioid in primary care. Furthermore we report for the first time the effect of individual risk factors, UK regions, GP practice and prescriber (whilst considering these elements together) on long-term opioid use.Implications of all the available evidenceOur study highlights the key subpopulations in a UK primary care setting at risk of developing long-term opioid use and the need for closer monitoring of at risk patients. Marked variation between region, practice and prescribers still exists after adjusting for case-mix warranting evidence-based harmonised opioid prescribing guidelines with clearer MME/day thresholds. On a practice level, guidance on regular review and dose reduction, as well as using prescriber and practice variations as a proxy for quality of care through audit and feedback, to highlight unwarranted variation to prescribers, could help drive safer prescribing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cerina Lee ◽  
Mu Lin ◽  
Karen J. B. Martins ◽  
Jason R. B. Dyck ◽  
Scott Klarenbach ◽  
...  

Abstract Background The opioid overdose epidemic in Canada and the United States has become a public health crisis - with exponential increases in opioid-related morbidity and mortality. Recently, there has been an increasing body of evidence focusing on the opioid-sparing effects of medical cannabis use (reduction of opioid use and reliance), and medical cannabis as a potential alternative treatment for chronic pain. The objective of this study is to assess the effect of medical cannabis authorization on opioid use (oral morphine equivalent; OME) between 2013 and 2018 in Alberta, Canada. Methods All adult patients defined as chronic opioid users who were authorized medical cannabis by their health care provider in Alberta, Canada from 2013 to 2018 were propensity score matched to non-authorized chronic opioid using controls. A total of 5373 medical cannabis patients were matched to controls, who were all chronic opioid users. The change in the weekly average OME of opioid drugs for medical cannabis patients relative to controls was measured. Interrupted time series (ITS) analyses was used to assess the trend change in OME during the 26 weeks (6 months) before and 52 weeks (1 year) after the authorization of medical cannabis among adult chronic opioid users. Results Average age was 52 years and 54% were female. Patients on low dose opioids (< 50 OME) had an increase in their weekly OME per week (absolute increase of 112.1 OME, 95% CI: 104.1 to 120.3); whereas higher dose users (OME > 100), showed a significant decrease over 6 months (− 435.5, 95% CI: − 596.8 to − 274.2) compared to controls. Conclusions This short-term study found that medical cannabis authorization showed intermediate effects on opioid use, which was dependent on initial opioid use. Greater observations of changes in OME appear to be in those patients who were on a high dosage of opioids (OME > 100); however, continued surveillance of patients utilizing both opioids and medical cannabis is warranted by clinicians to understand the long-term potential benefits and any harms of ongoing use.


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