Abstract

BackgroundA high proportion of opioid drug deaths involve concurrent benzodiazepine use. To reduce the risk of drug overdose, various prescription drug monitoring programs have been implemented. This study examined the impact of concurrent benzodiazepine use on opioid-related deaths, and the utility of the Michigan Automated Prescription System (MAPS) in predicting risk of opioid death. MethodsWayne County Medical Examiner’s Office cases from 2018 were examined in terms of MAPS data and MAPS-derived drug risk scores, as well as postmortem toxicology. Opioid death cases with concurrent benzodiazepine use were compared to non-drug deaths. ResultsFor cases with a MAPS history for 6 months preceding death, the incidence of opioid prescriptions filled did not differ between groups. In contrast, significantly more opioid death cases had filled a benzodiazepine prescription; alprazolam prescription was the single best predictor of opioid drug death. Groups differed in MAPS-calculated drug risk scores, though these were less predictive of opioid death than some individual measures of prescription drug use. In terms of postmortem toxicology, fentanyl was the best discriminator between cohorts, with significant associations seen for morphine, benzodiazepine, or cocaine use. Similar results were obtained in the subset of subjects filling a prescription within a month of death, except that MAPS risk scores no longer predicted drug deaths. ConclusionMAPS scores did not adequately predict risk of opioid-related death. Contrary to expectations, prescription opioid use was not correlated with opioid-related death, whereas concurrent use of opioids and benzodiazepines represented a highly significant risk factor.

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