Wilner A N, Sharma B K, Thompson A R, Krueger A
Angels Neurological Centers, Abington, MA, United States.
Accordant Health Services, a CVS Health Company, 4900 Koger Blvd., Greensboro, NC, United States.
Epilepsy Behav. 2016 Apr;57(Pt A):126-132. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2016.01.033. Epub 2016 Mar 3.
Analgesic opioid use has increased dramatically in the general population. Although opioid analgesics are not indicated for the treatment of epilepsy, frequent opioid use has been reported in the epilepsy population. It is not clear whether comorbid disorders and/or epilepsy-associated injuries due to seizures foster opioid use. Our primary objective was to compare the prevalence of analgesic opioid use in an insured patient population with epilepsy to a matched control population without epilepsy. After observing increased frequency of opioid use in people with epilepsy compared with matched controls, we assessed the contribution of age, gender, pain diagnosis, and psychiatric illness as possible drivers regarding the use of opioids.
Health insurance claims and membership data from nine United States (U.S.) health plans for the year 2012 were analyzed. Individuals with epilepsy (n=10,271) were match-paired at a 1:2 ratio to individuals without epilepsy (n=20,542) within each health plan using propensity scores derived from age group, gender, and insurance type. Matched comparison groups had 53% females and 47% males with an average age of 34 years for the group with epilepsy and 33 years for controls. Each matched comparison group included 66% of individuals with commercial insurance, 30% with Medicaid insurance, and 4% with Medicare coverage. Based on prescriptions filled at least once during 2012, prevalence of analgesic opioid use was determined. The percentages of individuals with diagnosis for specific pain conditions and those with psychiatric diagnoses were also determined for the two comparison groups.
Analgesic opioids were used by 26% of individuals in the group with epilepsy vs. 18% of matched controls (p<0.001). Compared with matched controls, the group with epilepsy had a significantly higher percentage of individuals with all 16 pain conditions examined: joint pain or stiffness (16% vs. 11%), abdominal pain (14% vs. 9%), headache (14% vs. 5%), pain in limb (12% vs. 7%), chest pain (11% vs. 6%), sprain of different parts (9% vs. 7%), sinusitis (9% vs. 7%), migraine (8% vs. 2%), lumbago (8% vs. 6%), backache (6% vs. 4%), cervicalgia (6% vs. 3%), fracture (5% vs. 3%), fibromyalgia (4% vs. 3%), chronic pain (3% vs. 1%), sciatica (1.4% vs. 1%), and jaw pain (0.4% vs. 0.1%) (all p<0.001). The prevalence of pain diagnosis was 51% in the group with epilepsy and 39% in the matched control group (p<0.0001). The prevalence of 'psychiatric diagnoses' was 27% in the group with epilepsy and 12% in the matched control group (p<0.0001).
The prevalences of analgesic opioid use, psychiatric diagnoses, and 16 pain conditions were significantly higher in the patient population with epilepsy than in the control population without epilepsy. Our study also showed how opioid use rate varied by gender, age category, and depression. The reasons for the greater prevalence of opioid use in people with epilepsy are unclear. It seems that increased pain prevalence is an important driver for the higher frequency of opioid use in people with epilepsy. Psychiatric illness and other factors also appear to contribute. Further analysis including more detailed clinical information that cannot be obtained through claims data alone will be required to provide more insight into opioid use in people with epilepsy. If opioid use is higher in people with epilepsy as our results suggest, physicians managing patients with epilepsy need to pay special attention to safe opioid prescribing habits in order to prevent adverse outcomes such as abuse, addiction, diversion, misuse, and overdose.
普通人群中止痛类阿片药物的使用急剧增加。尽管阿片类镇痛药并非用于治疗癫痫,但据报道癫痫患者中频繁使用阿片类药物的情况很常见。目前尚不清楚共病疾病和/或癫痫发作导致的与癫痫相关的损伤是否促使了阿片类药物的使用。我们的主要目标是比较有癫痫的参保患者群体与无癫痫的匹配对照群体中止痛类阿片药物的使用 prevalence。在观察到癫痫患者与匹配对照相比阿片类药物使用频率增加后,我们评估了年龄、性别、疼痛诊断和精神疾病作为阿片类药物使用可能驱动因素的作用。
分析了来自美国九个健康计划2012年的健康保险理赔和参保数据。在每个健康计划中,使用根据年龄组、性别和保险类型得出的倾向得分,将癫痫患者(n = 10,271)与无癫痫患者以1:2的比例进行匹配配对。匹配的比较组中女性占53%,男性占47%,癫痫组的平均年龄为34岁,对照组为33岁。每个匹配的比较组中,66%的个体有商业保险,30%有医疗补助保险,4%有医疗保险。根据2012年至少开具过一次的处方,确定止痛类阿片药物的使用 prevalence。还确定了两个比较组中诊断出特定疼痛状况的个体百分比以及有精神疾病诊断的个体百分比。
癫痫组中26%的个体使用了止痛类阿片药物,而匹配对照组为18%(p < 0.001)。与匹配对照组相比,癫痫组中所有16种被检查的疼痛状况的个体百分比显著更高:关节疼痛或僵硬(16%对11%)、腹痛(14%对9%)、头痛(14%对5%)、肢体疼痛(12%对7%)、胸痛(11%对6%)、不同部位扭伤(9%对7%)、鼻窦炎(9%对7%)、偏头痛(8%对2%)、腰痛(8%对6%)、背痛(6%对4%)、颈痛(6%对3%)、骨折(5%对3%)、纤维肌痛(4%对3%)、慢性疼痛(3%对1%)、坐骨神经痛(1.4%对1%)和颌痛(0.4%对0.1%)(所有p < 0.001)。癫痫组中疼痛诊断的 prevalence为51%,匹配对照组为39%(p < 0.ooo1)。“精神疾病诊断”的 prevalence在癫痫组中为27%,在匹配对照组中为12%(p < 0.0001)。
癫痫患者群体中止痛类阿片药物的使用 prevalence、精神疾病诊断和16种疼痛状况显著高于无癫痫的对照群体。我们的研究还表明阿片类药物使用率如何因性别、年龄类别和抑郁症而有所不同。癫痫患者中阿片类药物使用 prevalence较高的原因尚不清楚。似乎疼痛 prevalence增加是癫痫患者中阿片类药物使用频率较高的一个重要驱动因素。精神疾病和其他因素似乎也有作用。需要进一步分析,包括仅通过理赔数据无法获得的更详细临床信息,以便更深入了解癫痫患者的阿片类药物使用情况。如果如我们的结果所示癫痫患者中阿片类药物使用较高,治疗癫痫患者的医生需要特别关注安全的阿片类药物处方习惯,以防止诸如滥用、成瘾、转移用途、误用和过量等不良后果。