Prescription Opioid Abuse, Addiction Less Common | Arthritis Information

Share
 

Prescription Opioid Abuse, Addiction Less Common Than Many Believe

 
The abuse and addiction potentials of opioid analgesics prescribed for patients with chronic pain have been of great concern. However, current research indicates that these problems are not as common or widespread as many seem to believe.

In an evidence-based review for Pain Treatment Topics (
http://www.Pain-Topics.org), editor Stewart B. Leavitt, MA, PhD, summarizes the findings of major research investigations of these problems. "The research is extensive, but requires careful examination," he notes. "Unfortunately, news media, government agencies, and others have portrayed abuse and addiction associated with prescribed opioids as problems of much larger proportions than seems warranted by the evidence." Several comprehensive investigations support this assertion:

-- In an extensive review, combining results from 24 clinical studies, the overall rate of prescribed opioid analgesic abuse or addiction in patients with pain was about 3.3%. However, fewer than 2 out of 1,000 (0.19%) patients without a current or past substance-use disorder experienced problems with opioids prescribed for pain.

-- Similarly, a clinical investigation of patients receiving daily opioid therapy for chronic noncancer pain prescribed by primary-care physicians found that only 3.7% of patients had a confirmed opioid-use disorder. However, whether or not any of these patients also had prior substance-use problems was not examined.

-- A systematic review, encompassing 17 studies of patients with moderate-to-severe chronic noncancer pain who were treated with opioid analgesics for at least 6 months, found opioid abuse in only 0.4% of patients. Signs of opioid addiction were evident in only 1 case out of 2042 subjects evaluated (0.05%). Whether these extremely low rates were in the overall patient population or solely in those patients without prior substance-use problems is unknown.

Estimates of substance-use disorders among the general public range from 5% to as high as 67%, depending on the population examined; although, the exact percentages of those disorders involving solely opioids has been poorly defined. At the least, it seems fairly certain that the rate of opioid-use problems in patients prescribed those drugs for pain would be no greater than in the population at large, according to Leavitt's review. And, according to other experts, the data suggest that news media accusations of increased opioid abuse being associated with greater numbers of patients being prescribed opioids for chronic pain management are unfounded.
 
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/135800.php
Opiates are not a problem and not addictive when a person is truly in pain. It is when the physical pain is gone and the person keeps taking the med that it becomes a problem.

Lynn, that was interesting. I take pain killers for now. Hopefully when the plaquenil starts working I will not have to take them, but for now I am thankful. My concern was addiction, but as Lorster said and the article reads my Doctor said the same things. He said that RA is very painful and something about different brain paths. He said that those who take the pills when there is no pain are those that become addicted.

In Short: I agree with the article and I agree with Lorster. lol

tink, how long have you been on the plaq?About seven weeks. I know it takes awhile to start working. I am very hopeful. yeah, it took a good six months for me to feel the full effects of it. i was on it for 2 years, went off because i felt better and thought i was cured (yeah right) and then tried to go on again and just did not feel that effect of it again. just hanging out waiting to see a rheumy next month to get a different plan. good luck, i hope it works for you.It took me almost three months to get the full effects of Plaquenil.  Hang in there sTinkerBell!Thanks Kweenb! I am hanging, I am hanging on to  the handrail, the wall, my DH, the PC, Hanging onto my humor, lol.
 
Tink

Copyright ArthritisInsight.com