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. 2011 Nov-Dec;24(6):717-27.
doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2011.06.100232.

Opioids for back pain patients: primary care prescribing patterns and use of services

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Opioids for back pain patients: primary care prescribing patterns and use of services

Richard A Deyo et al. J Am Board Fam Med. 2011 Nov-Dec.

Abstract

Background: Opioid prescribing for noncancer pain has increased dramatically. We examined whether the prevalence of unhealthy lifestyles, psychologic distress, health care utilization, and co-prescribing of sedative-hypnotics increased with increasing duration of prescription opioid use.

Methods: We analyzed electronic data for 6 months before and after an index visit for back pain in a managed care plan. Use of opioids was characterized as "none," "acute" (≤90 days), "episodic," or "long term." Associations with lifestyle factors, psychologic distress, and utilization were adjusted for demographics and comorbidity.

Results: There were 26,014 eligible patients. Of these, 61% received a course of opioids, and 19% were long-term users. Psychologic distress, unhealthy lifestyles, and utilization were associated incrementally with duration of opioid prescription, not just with chronic use. Among long-term opioid users, 59% received only short-acting drugs; 39% received both long- and short-acting drugs; and 44% received a sedative-hypnotic. Of those with any opioid use, 36% had an emergency visit.

Conclusions: Prescription of opioids was common among patients with back pain. The prevalence of psychologic distress, unhealthy lifestyles, and health care utilization increased incrementally with duration of use. Coprescribing sedative-hypnotics was common. These data may help in predicting long-term opioid use and improving the safety of opioid prescribing.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors report no relevant commercial conflicts of interest

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Graphic presentation of proportions of patients with diagnoses of depression, any of 4 mental health diagnoses, or sedative hypnotic use, as a function of duration of opioid use

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