Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, Washington; Department of Psychosocial and Community Health, School of Nursing, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, Seattle, Washington.
J Pain. 2018 Jan;19(1):111-120. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.09.006. Epub 2017 Oct 13.
Dose reduction and risk mitigation initiatives have been recommended to reduce opioid-related risks among patients receiving chronic opioid therapy (COT), but questions remain over whether these initiatives worsen pain control and quality of life. In 2014 to 2015, we interviewed 1,588 adult COT patients within a health care system in Washington State and compared those who received dose reduction and risk mitigation initiatives in primary care clinics (intervention) with patients in comparable health care settings without initiatives (control). The primary outcomes were pain assessed using the pain, enjoyment, and general activity (PEG) scale, a 3-item scale to assess global pain intensity and interference, with secondary measures including depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-8 scale). Generalized estimating equations for linear regression models were used to estimate differences in mean scores between intervention and control sites. Estimated differences, adjusted for patient characteristics and weighted for nonresponse, between patients at intervention and control clinics were not clinically significant for the PEG (-.03, 95% confidence interval = -.25 to .19) or Patient Health Questionnaire-8 (-.64, 95% confidence interval = -1.19 to -.08). We found no evidence that COT patients in clinics with dose reduction and risk mitigation initiatives had clinically meaningful differences in pain intensity, interference with activities and enjoyment of life, or depressive symptoms compared with control health care settings.
This article evaluates the effect of dose reduction and risk mitigation initiatives, such as those recently recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, to reduce risks associated with COT on global pain and interference, depressive symptoms, and perceived pain relief and bothersomeness of side effects.
降低剂量和减少风险的措施已被推荐用于减少接受慢性阿片类药物治疗(COT)患者的阿片类药物相关风险,但这些措施是否会导致疼痛控制和生活质量恶化仍存在疑问。方法:2014 年至 2015 年,我们在华盛顿州的一个医疗系统中对 1588 名成年 COT 患者进行了访谈,并将在初级保健诊所接受剂量减少和风险缓解措施的患者(干预组)与没有这些措施的类似医疗保健环境中的患者(对照组)进行了比较。主要结局是使用疼痛、享受和一般活动(PEG)量表评估疼痛,该量表是评估整体疼痛强度和干扰的 3 项量表,次要措施包括抑郁(患者健康问卷-8 量表)。使用广义估计方程进行线性回归模型估计,以估计干预组和对照组之间平均得分的差异。调整患者特征并对无反应进行加权后,干预组和对照组患者之间的 PEG(-.03,95%置信区间=-.25 至.19)或患者健康问卷-8(-.64,95%置信区间=-.19 至.08)的差异无临床意义。结果:我们发现,与对照组医疗环境相比,接受剂量减少和风险缓解措施的 COT 患者在疼痛强度、活动干扰和生活享受、抑郁症状以及对疼痛缓解和副作用困扰的感知方面,并没有临床意义上的差异。结论:这项研究评估了降低剂量和减少风险的措施(如疾病预防控制中心最近推荐的措施)对全球疼痛和干扰、抑郁症状以及对疼痛缓解和副作用困扰的感知的影响,这些措施旨在降低与 COT 相关的风险。