TY - JOUR
T1 - Relationship between therapeutic use and abuse of opioid analgesics in rural, suburban, and urban locations in the United States
AU - Cicero, Theodore J.
AU - Surratt, Hilary
AU - Inciardi, James A.
AU - Munoz, Alvaro
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by National High Technology R&D Program of China (Grant Nos. 2015AA015403, 2014AA015102), NSFCNatural Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 61202233, 61272344, 61370055) and the joint project with IBM Research. Any correspondence please refer to Yansong Feng.
PY - 2007/8
Y1 - 2007/8
N2 - Purpose: The goal of these studies was to determine the relationship between prescribed use of opioid analgesics and their non-medically related use (abuse) at a regional level across the country. Methods: To gather information about prescription drug abuse, we asked 233 drug abuse treatment specialists to provide us Quarterly reports on the number of cases of prescription opioid analgesic abusers who used opioid analgesics to get high in the past 30 days. Results and conclusions: We found that there was a very strong correlation between therapeutic exposure to opioid analgesics, as measured by prescriptions filled, and their abuse. There were, however, geographical loci that represented outliers in which abuse was disproportionately high relative to therapeutic use (>95th percentile), most of which were in very small urban, suburban, and rural areas. The rank order of abuse shows that buprenorphine products, extended release (ER) oxycodone and methadone are the most intensely abused prescription opioid analgesics, with hydrocodone the least abused, when the data are corrected for degree of exposure, i.e., cases/ 1000 persons filling a prescription. If, on the other hand, one uses the number of cases/100 000 population, hydrocodone ranked as high as ER oxycodone and all other drugs grouped together at very low levels of abuse. Since the latter conclusion ignores therapeutic exposure, we conclude that the rate of abuse of highly efficacious opioid analgesics is best expressed as cases of abuse/1000 persons filling a prescription, which yields the best possible estimate of the risk-benefit ratio of these drugs.
AB - Purpose: The goal of these studies was to determine the relationship between prescribed use of opioid analgesics and their non-medically related use (abuse) at a regional level across the country. Methods: To gather information about prescription drug abuse, we asked 233 drug abuse treatment specialists to provide us Quarterly reports on the number of cases of prescription opioid analgesic abusers who used opioid analgesics to get high in the past 30 days. Results and conclusions: We found that there was a very strong correlation between therapeutic exposure to opioid analgesics, as measured by prescriptions filled, and their abuse. There were, however, geographical loci that represented outliers in which abuse was disproportionately high relative to therapeutic use (>95th percentile), most of which were in very small urban, suburban, and rural areas. The rank order of abuse shows that buprenorphine products, extended release (ER) oxycodone and methadone are the most intensely abused prescription opioid analgesics, with hydrocodone the least abused, when the data are corrected for degree of exposure, i.e., cases/ 1000 persons filling a prescription. If, on the other hand, one uses the number of cases/100 000 population, hydrocodone ranked as high as ER oxycodone and all other drugs grouped together at very low levels of abuse. Since the latter conclusion ignores therapeutic exposure, we conclude that the rate of abuse of highly efficacious opioid analgesics is best expressed as cases of abuse/1000 persons filling a prescription, which yields the best possible estimate of the risk-benefit ratio of these drugs.
KW - Drug abuse
KW - Drug diversion
KW - Opioid analgesics
KW - Post-marketing surveillance
KW - Risk management
KW - Risk-benefit
KW - Therapeutic use and abuse of opioid analgesics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=34548283471&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/pds.1452
DO - 10.1002/pds.1452
M3 - Article
C2 - 17636553
AN - SCOPUS:34548283471
SN - 1053-8569
VL - 16
SP - 827
EP - 840
JO - Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety
JF - Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety
IS - 8
ER -