Liebschutz Jane M, Xuan Ziming, Shanahan Christopher W, LaRochelle Marc, Keosaian Julia, Beers Donna, Guara George, O'Connor Kristen, Alford Daniel P, Parker Victoria, Weiss Roger D, Samet Jeffrey H, Crosson Julie, Cushman Phoebe A, Lasser Karen E
Section of General Internal Medicine, Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts.
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Sep 1;177(9):1265-1272. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.2468.
Prescription opioid misuse is a national crisis. Few interventions have improved adherence to opioid-prescribing guidelines.
To determine whether a multicomponent intervention, Transforming Opioid Prescribing in Primary Care (TOPCARE; http://mytopcare.org/), improves guideline adherence while decreasing opioid misuse risk.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Cluster-randomized clinical trial among 53 primary care clinicians (PCCs) and their 985 patients receiving long-term opioid therapy for pain. The study was conducted from January 2014 to March 2016 in 4 safety-net primary care practices.
Intervention PCCs received nurse care management, an electronic registry, 1-on-1 academic detailing, and electronic decision tools for safe opioid prescribing. Control PCCs received electronic decision tools only.
Primary outcomes included documentation of guideline-concordant care (both a patient-PCC agreement in the electronic health record and at least 1 urine drug test [UDT]) over 12 months and 2 or more early opioid refills. Secondary outcomes included opioid dose reduction (ie, 10% decrease in morphine-equivalent daily dose [MEDD] at trial end) and opioid treatment discontinuation. Adjusted outcomes controlled for differing baseline patient characteristics: substance use diagnosis, mental health diagnoses, and language.
Of the 985 participating patients, 519 were men, and 466 were women (mean [SD] patient age, 54.7 [11.5] years). Patients received a mean (SD) MEDD of 57.8 (78.5) mg. At 1 year, intervention patients were more likely than controls to receive guideline-concordant care (65.9% vs 37.8%; P < .001; adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 6.0; 95% CI, 3.6-10.2), to have a patient-PCC agreement (of the 376 without an agreement at baseline, 53.8% vs 6.0%; P < .001; AOR, 11.9; 95% CI, 4.4-32.2), and to undergo at least 1 UDT (74.6% vs 57.9%; P < .001; AOR, 3.0; 95% CI, 1.8-5.0). There was no difference in odds of early refill receipt between groups (20.7% vs 20.1%; AOR, 1.1; 95% CI, 0.7-1.8). Intervention patients were more likely than controls to have either a 10% dose reduction or opioid treatment discontinuation (AOR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.3-2.1; P < .001). In adjusted analyses, intervention patients had a mean (SE) MEDD 6.8 (1.6) mg lower than controls (P < .001).
A multicomponent intervention improved guideline-concordant care but did not decrease early opioid refills.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01909076.
处方阿片类药物滥用是一场全国性危机。几乎没有干预措施能提高对阿片类药物处方指南的依从性。
确定多组分干预措施“初级保健中阿片类药物处方转变(TOPCARE;http://mytopcare.org/)”在降低阿片类药物滥用风险的同时是否能提高指南依从性。
设计、设置和参与者:对53名初级保健临床医生(PCC)及其985名接受长期阿片类药物治疗疼痛的患者进行整群随机临床试验。该研究于2014年1月至2016年3月在4家安全网初级保健机构进行。
干预组的PCC接受护士护理管理、电子登记册、一对一学术详述以及用于安全阿片类药物处方的电子决策工具。对照组的PCC仅接受电子决策工具。
主要结局包括12个月内符合指南的护理记录(电子健康记录中的患者 - PCC协议以及至少1次尿液药物检测[UDT])和2次或更多次早期阿片类药物续方。次要结局包括阿片类药物剂量减少(即试验结束时吗啡当量日剂量[MEDD]降低10%)和阿片类药物治疗中断。调整后的结局对不同的基线患者特征进行了控制:物质使用诊断、心理健康诊断和语言。
985名参与患者中,519名男性,466名女性(患者平均[标准差]年龄,54.7[11.5]岁)。患者的平均(标准差)MEDD为57.8(78.5)mg。1年后,干预组患者比对照组更有可能接受符合指南的护理(65.9%对37.8%;P < .001;调整后优势比[AOR],6.0;95%置信区间,3.6 - 10.2),达成患者 - PCC协议(在基线时无协议的376名患者中,53.8%对6.0%;P < .001;AOR,11.9;95%置信区间,4.4 - 32.2),以及接受至少1次UDT(74.6%对57.9%;P < .001;AOR,3.0;95%置信区间,1.8 - 5.0)。两组之间早期续方接受几率无差异(20.7%对20.1%;AOR,1.1;95%置信区间,0.7 - 1.8)。干预组患者比对照组更有可能出现10%的剂量减少或阿片类药物治疗中断(AOR,1.6;95%置信区间,1.3 - 2.1;P < .001)。在调整分析中,干预组患者的平均(标准误)MEDD比对照组低6.8(1.6)mg(P < .001)。
多组分干预改善了符合指南的护理,但未减少早期阿片类药物续方。
clinicaltrials.gov标识符:NCT01909076。