Pain Management Center, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Brigham & Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Pain. 2010 Sep;150(3):390-400. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2010.02.033. Epub 2010 Mar 23.
Chronic pain patients who show aberrant drug-related behavior often are discontinued from treatment when they are noncompliant with their use of opioids for pain. The purpose of this study was to conduct a randomized trial in patients who were prescribed opioids for noncancer back pain and who showed risk potential for or demonstration of opioid misuse to see if close monitoring and cognitive behavioral substance misuse counseling could increase overall compliance with opioids. Forty-two patients meeting criteria for high-risk for opioid misuse were randomized to either standard control (High-Risk Control; N=21) or experimental compliance treatment consisting of monthly urine screens, compliance checklists, and individual and group motivational counseling (High-Risk Experimental; N=21). Twenty patients who met criteria indicating low potential for misuse were recruited to a low-risk control group (Low-Risk Control). Patients were followed for 6 months and completed pre- and post-study questionnaires and monthly electronic diaries. Outcomes consisted of the percent with a positive Drug Misuse Index (DMI), which was a composite score of self-reported drug misuse (Prescription Drug Use Questionnaire), physician-reported abuse behavior (Addiction Behavior Checklist), and abnormal urine toxicology results. Significant differences were found between groups with 73.7% of the High-Risk Control patients demonstrating positive scores on the DMI compared with 26.3% from the High-Risk Experimental group and 25.0% from the Low-Risk Controls (p<0.05). The results of this study demonstrate support for the benefits of a brief behavioral intervention in the management of opioid compliance among chronic back pain patient at high-risk for prescription opioid misuse.
慢性疼痛患者如果表现出异常的药物相关行为,且不遵守使用阿片类药物治疗疼痛的规定,往往会被停止治疗。本研究的目的是在因非癌症性背痛而开处阿片类药物且表现出阿片类药物滥用风险或滥用迹象的患者中进行一项随机试验,以观察密切监测和认知行为物质滥用咨询是否能提高阿片类药物的总体遵医率。42 名符合阿片类药物滥用高风险标准的患者被随机分为标准对照组(高风险对照组;n=21)或包括每月尿液筛查、遵医检查表和个人及小组动机咨询的实验性遵医治疗组(高风险实验组;n=21)。20 名符合低滥用风险标准的患者被招募到低风险对照组(低风险对照组)。患者随访 6 个月,完成研究前后的问卷调查和每月电子日记。结果包括药物滥用指数(DMI)阳性的患者比例,这是自我报告的药物滥用(处方药物使用问卷)、医生报告的滥用行为(滥用行为检查表)和异常尿液毒理学结果的综合评分。高风险对照组中有 73.7%的患者 DMI 呈阳性,而高风险实验组和低风险对照组分别有 26.3%和 25.0%的患者呈阳性,这两组之间存在显著差异(p<0.05)。这项研究的结果支持在治疗慢性背痛且有处方阿片类药物滥用高风险的患者的阿片类药物遵医率方面,简短行为干预的有益作用。