HumanEra (Fan, Trbovich), Office of Research and Innovation, North York General Hospital; Institute for Safe Medication Practices Canada (Tscheng, Hamilton); Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (Trbovich), University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont.
CMAJ Open. 2020 Feb 24;8(1):E113-E119. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20190112. Print 2020 Jan-Mar.
Canadian health care facilities must report losses or thefts of opioids to Health Canada. To broaden the understanding of opioid loss in Canada, we analyzed data describing these losses to estimate the amount of opioid lost, estimate the wholesale and street value, compare the distribution of loss types between facility types and compare loss trends.
We analyzed Health Canada records of losses of codeine, fentanyl, hydromorphone, morphine and oxycodone reported by Canadian facilities from January 2012 to September 2017. We conducted descriptive analyses of the opioid losses by calculating milligrams of drug lost, oral morphine equivalents, daily defined doses, approximate wholesale value and approximate street value, and compared loss trends when counted by incidents, dosage units or milligrams.
There were 64 963 reports of loss of codeine, fentanyl, hydromorphone, morphine or oxycodone over the study period. Over 112 kg of opioids were lost, an estimated $8.7 million in wholesale cost and $136 million in street value. The dominant loss categories varied by facility type: armed robbery (30.9 kg [31.1%]) for community pharmacies, unexplained losses (6.4 kg [55.8%]) for companies and pilferage (0.8 kg [57.4%]) for hospitals. Loss trends over the study period varied by reporting metric and facility type: community pharmacy losses increased when measured by dosage units and incidents of loss, and remained stable when measured by milligrams; hospital losses increased when measured by milligrams and showed no clear trend when measured by dosage units and incidents of loss. Companies showed no clear loss trend with any reporting metric.
Large quantities of opioids were lost or stolen from community pharmacies, companies and hospitals over the study period, and these losses are valued in millions of dollars. Publishing milligrams of opioids lost annually alongside metrics such as dosage units and incidents of loss would help characterize the economic cost and the magnitude of drug losses.
加拿大的医疗保健机构必须向加拿大卫生部报告阿片类药物的损失或被盗情况。为了更全面地了解加拿大阿片类药物的损失情况,我们分析了描述这些损失的数据,以估算损失的阿片类药物数量、估算批发价和街头价值、比较不同类型设施的损失类型分布,并比较损失趋势。
我们分析了加拿大卫生部从 2012 年 1 月至 2017 年 9 月期间记录的加拿大各医疗机构报告的可待因、芬太尼、氢吗啡酮、吗啡和羟考酮损失情况。我们通过计算损失的药物毫克数、口服吗啡当量、每日规定剂量、近似批发价值和近似街头价值,对阿片类药物损失进行描述性分析,并比较按事件、剂量单位或毫克计数时的损失趋势。
在研究期间,共报告了 64963 例可待因、芬太尼、氢吗啡酮、吗啡或羟考酮损失情况。损失的阿片类药物超过 112 公斤,估计批发成本为 870 万美元,街头价值为 1.36 亿美元。不同类型的设施的主要损失类别有所不同:社区药店为武装抢劫(30.9 公斤[31.1%]),公司为不明原因损失(6.4 公斤[55.8%]),医院为盗窃(0.8 公斤[57.4%])。在研究期间,损失趋势因报告指标和设施类型而异:按剂量单位和损失事件计数时,社区药店的损失增加,而按毫克计数时则保持稳定;医院的损失按毫克计算时增加,而按剂量单位和损失事件计数时则没有明显的趋势。各公司在任何报告指标下都没有明显的损失趋势。
在研究期间,大量的阿片类药物从社区药店、公司和医院丢失或被盗,这些损失的价值以百万美元计。每年公布损失的阿片类药物毫克数,以及剂量单位和损失事件等指标,将有助于描述经济成本和药物损失的规模。