Département de Médecine Familiale et de Médecine d'Urgence, Universite de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Emergency Department, Hopital du Sacre-Coeur de Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2022 Oct 28;12(10):e062984. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062984.
Self-reported approaches that assess opioid usage can be subject to social desirability and recall biases that may underestimate actual pill consumption. Our objective was to determine the accuracy of patient self-reported opioid consumption using a 14-day daily paper or electronic diary.
Prospective cohort study.
Multicentre study conducted in four Québec (Canada) emergency departments (ED): three university-affiliated centres, two of them Level I trauma centres and one urban community hospital.
ED patients aged ≥18 years with acute pain (≤2 weeks) who were discharged with an opioid prescription. Patients completed a 14-day daily diary (paper or electronic) assessing the quantity of opioids consumed. On diary completion, a random sample from the main cohort was selected for a follow-up visit to the hospital or a virtual video visit where they had to show and count the remaining pills. Patients were blinded to the main objective of the follow-up visit.
Quantity of opioid pills consumed during the 2-week follow-up period self-reported in the 14-day diary (paper or electronic) and calculated from remaining pills counted during the follow-up visit. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) and Bland-Altman plots were used to assess accuracy.
A total of 166 participants completed the 14-day diary as well as the in-person or virtual visit; 49.4% were women and median age was 47 years (IQR=21). The self-reported consumed quantity of opioid in the 14-day diary and the one calculated from counting remaining opioid pills during the follow-up visit were very similar (ICC=0.992; 95% CI: 0.989 to 0.994). The mean difference between both measures from Bland-Altman analysis was almost zero (0.048 pills; 95% CI: -3.77 to 3.87).
Self-reported prescription opioid use in a 14-day diary is an accurate assessment of the quantity of opioids consumed in ED discharged patients.
NCT03953534.
自我报告的阿片类药物使用评估方法可能受到社会期望和回忆偏差的影响,从而低估实际的药丸消耗量。我们的目的是使用 14 天的纸质或电子日常日记来确定患者自我报告的阿片类药物使用的准确性。
前瞻性队列研究。
在魁北克(加拿大)的四个急诊部(ED)进行的多中心研究:三个大学附属中心,其中两个是一级创伤中心,一个是城市社区医院。
年龄≥18 岁、有急性疼痛(≤2 周)的 ED 患者,他们出院时开有阿片类药物处方。患者完成了为期 14 天的日常日记(纸质或电子),评估了消耗的阿片类药物的数量。完成日记后,从主要队列中随机抽取一部分患者进行医院随访或虚拟视频访问,在那里他们必须展示并清点剩余的药丸。患者对随访访问的主要目的不知情。
在 14 天的日记(纸质或电子)中自我报告的 2 周随访期间消耗的阿片类药物的数量以及在随访访问期间通过清点剩余的药丸计算出的数量非常相似(ICC=0.992;95%CI:0.989 至 0.994)。从 Bland-Altman 分析得出的两种测量方法之间的平均差异几乎为零(0.048 片;95%CI:-3.77 至 3.87)。
14 天日记中自我报告的处方阿片类药物使用是评估 ED 出院患者消耗的阿片类药物数量的准确方法。
NCT03953534。