Carratalá Claudia, Agulló Laura, Carracedo Patricia, Serrano-Gadea Noelia, Escorial Mónica, López-Mañogil Elena, Miró Pau, Bernardes Sónia F, Peiró Ana M
Clinical Pharmacology, Toxicology and Chemical Safety Unit, Institute of Bioengineering, Miguel Hernández University, Elche, Spain.
Neuropharmacology Applied to Pain (NED), Clinical Pharmacology Unit, Dr. Balmis General University Hospital, Alicante Institute for Health and Biomedical Research (ISABIAL), Alicante, Spain.
PLoS One. 2025 Mar 18;20(3):e0319574. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319574. eCollection 2025.
Existing evidence indicates sex-related differences in Prescription Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) in Chronic Non-Cancer Pain (CNCP). However to date, there is scant evidence for other socioeconomic factors in these differences. Our aim was to enquire about the influence of gender and drug copayment of OUD narratives by the text mining analysis. A prospective mixed-methods study was designed and performed at Pain Unit (PU) including 238 real world patients with CNCP divided in controls (n = 206) and OUD cases (n = 32) due to DSM-5 diagnosis Variables related to pain, sleep, mental and health status were collected in together with sex and gender interaction, in pain status, along 30-45 min face-to-face interviews. Sex differences were observed due to women's significantly older ages, with a stronger impact on mental health, and an even stronger one for the OUD women. Globally, OUD cases were more unemployed vs the CNCP controls, and on a significantly higher median opioid daily dose of 90 [100] mg/day. Although OUD participants did more social activities, they tended to use less vocabulary to express themselves regardless of their sex, gender role or economic status. In contrast, the CNCP participants presented more differences driven by their incomes, with "limited" being the most discriminating word for those on low income, followed by "less" and "help". Here, the most significant word of CNCP women was "husband", followed by "tasks". In contrast, gender reproductive roles shared similarities in both sexes, being one of the most discriminatory words "help". The data show that OUD patients seem to have a marked influence of OUD on poorer lexicon and simpler narrative, together with a significant impact of socioeconomic factors on the CNCP narratives. The conclusion suggests to extend the research to better understand the effect of sex, gender and socioeconomic status in CNCP especially on OUD women's health.
现有证据表明,慢性非癌性疼痛(CNCP)患者在处方阿片类药物使用障碍(OUD)方面存在性别差异。然而,迄今为止,几乎没有证据表明其他社会经济因素与这些差异有关。我们的目的是通过文本挖掘分析探究性别和药物自付费用对OUD叙述的影响。在疼痛科(PU)设计并开展了一项前瞻性混合方法研究,纳入238例患有CNCP的真实世界患者,根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第5版(DSM-5)诊断分为对照组(n = 206)和OUD病例组(n = 32)。在30 - 45分钟的面对面访谈中,收集了与疼痛、睡眠、心理和健康状况相关的变量,以及性别和性别交互、疼痛状态等信息。观察到性别差异,女性年龄显著更大,对心理健康的影响更强,对患有OUD的女性影响更强。总体而言,与CNCP对照组相比,OUD病例组失业者更多,阿片类药物日剂量中位数显著更高,为90[100]毫克/天。尽管OUD参与者的社交活动更多,但无论性别、性别角色或经济状况如何,他们表达自己的词汇量往往较少。相比之下,CNCP参与者受收入影响的差异更大,“有限”是低收入者最具区分性的词汇,其次是“较少”和“帮助”。在此,CNCP女性最显著的词汇是“丈夫”,其次是“任务”。相比之下,性别生殖角色在两性中具有相似性,“帮助”是最具区分性的词汇之一。数据表明,OUD患者的词汇量较差和叙述较简单似乎受到OUD的显著影响,同时社会经济因素对CNCP叙述也有重大影响。结论建议扩大研究范围,以更好地了解性别、性别和社会经济地位在CNCP中的作用,特别是对患有OUD的女性健康的影响。