OPIOID ANALGESICS ARE AMONG THE MOST EFFECtive medications for pain management (including noncancer pain), but they are also associated with serious and increasing public health problems, such as abuse (ie, use for nonmedical purposes), addiction, and deaths from opioid overdose (excluding heroin). Both immediate and extended opioid release formulations, including methadone, are abused and contribute to overdose. For example, since 2002, the US prevalence of high school seniors reporting past-year nonmedical use of opioids has been 8% to 10% for hydrocodone and 4% to 5% for oxycodone. After excluding alcohol and tobacco, the prevalence of hydrocodone abuse is second only to marijuana abuse. Concurrently, there has been a 5-fold increase in drug treatment admissions for pharmaceutical opioids between 1998 and 2008, from 19 941 to 121 091. In addition, emergency department visits related to pharmaceutical opioids have increased from 144 644 to 305 885, between 2004 and 2008, and unintentional opioidrelated overdose deaths have increased from about 3000 to 12 000 between 1999 and 2007. Opioid overdose is now the second leading cause of unintentional death in the United States, second only to motor vehicle crashes, which prompted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to label pharmaceutical opioid overdose as a national epidemic. Some of the increased abuse of opioid analgesics likely reflects the misguided belief that, because these medications are prescribed by physicians, they are safer than illicit drugs. However, it is also likely that part of this increased abuse is due to much greater access to and availability of opioid analgesics. This is likely to reflect more aggressive management of noncancer pain, facilitated in part by the “regulatory” mandate from the Joint Commission to screen and manage pain, but also by the lingering concerns regarding the safety of nonopioid analgesics, particularly those classified as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Given the escalation in the prescription of opioid medications; the recognition that some patients misrepresent genuine pain to obtain, misuse, and divert these medications; and the corresponding prevalence of serious or even lethal public health problems, suggestions should be considered for improving current noncancer pain management in primary health care settings that could decrease diversion, abuse, and overdose of opioid medications. The first general suggestion is to enhance and update clinical teaching and training practices for physicians, nurses, dentists, and pharmacists in the areas of pain management, opioid pharmacology, and abuse/addiction, perhaps through interactive Web-based training. Given that pain is among the most common diagnoses in medicine (with prevalence estimates for chronic noncancer pain ranging from 4% to 40% in primary care settings), that there have been significant research advances in understanding pain and addiction, that there are many new formulations and types of opioid and nonopioid analgesics, and that the current education of pain management for health professionals has been deemed insufficient, a more comprehensive and contemporary training curriculum for prescribers seems warranted. Guidelines recently developed by the American Academy of Pain Medicine should be broadly adopted as a means to harmonize best practices among physicians and dentists regarding the initial prescription of opioids and the subsequent monitoring and management of patients with chronic noncancer pain. Harmonization of best-practice recommendations for the initiation of opioid medications should include the following: (1) standardized screening procedures and special provisions for managing pain in those most at risk for abuse and dependence, including adolescents and young adults, individuals with a current or previous substance use disorder (including nicotine and alcohol), and individuals with a family history of substance use disorders; (2) indications for when and for how long to prescribe nonopioid analgesics, nonpharmacological methods, or both for pain control vs when and for how long to prescribe opioid analgesics; (3) indications for when shortvs long-acting opioids should be prescribed; and (4) rea-
Read full abstract