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How physicians can reverse the opioid crisis


 

The CDC received more than 4,300 comments about the draft version of its guidelines. Some patients were worried about losing access to drugs that have helped them. And, while supportive of the goals, some professional groups questioned the evidence behind the proposals and worry about undertreatment of pain, among other issues.

“The problem with a lot of the guidelines is that they’re all around limiting prescribing. They don’t really tell doctors what to do instead,” said Dr. Peter Friedmann, an addiction treatment specialist in Springfield, Mass., and chief research officer for Baystate Health.

An alternative for chronic pain

For noncancer chronic pain, recent evidence supports multimodal therapy. Opioids might bring temporary relief, but “throwing drugs at people isn’t going to solve the problem,” said Dr. Tauben, the University of Washington pain expert.

Dr. Peter Friedmann

“Multimodal therapy” means focusing more on the burden of pain instead of its intensity, with team-based care. Reducing the burden – anxiety, sleeplessness, reduced mobility, and other problems – seems to reduce the significance and intensity of pain to the point where it can be managed, if needed, with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), trigger-point injections, and other nonopioid options.

Depending on the patient’s needs, primary care physicians might find themselves coordinating services from psychologists, physical therapists, social workers, or others.

For the approach to work, the impact of pain has to be accurately gauged, along with underlying psychological or social issues; to save time, the University of Washington has patients complete an online survey prior to their office visit.

There are national efforts underway to support the approach, and a growing recognition that “by doing it right, you save downstream costs. Primary care must get involved; that’s where chronic pain presents,” Dr. Tauben said.

Batting cleanup

There’s a role for primary care when patients are hooked on opioids, too. Requests for early refills and higher doses are a clue.

Dr. Gail D'Onofrio

Dr. Gail D'Onofrio

“Given the stigma, a lot of doctors don’t want to deal with addiction, but we have to deal with it. We need to move addiction treatment into the mainstream of what we do in medicine,” Dr. Friedmann said. “These patients are no more or no less challenging than any other patients we deal with; the only way doctors are going to find that out is by starting to manage some of them.”

He estimates that about 60% of his patients do well on buprenorphine, a sublingual, partial opioid agonist that blocks the effects of full agonists and dulls withdrawal symptoms. Incorporating it into practice “is not something you need to figure out yourself,” Dr. Friedmann noted. There are training programs and people who can help.

There simply aren’t enough methadone clinics to handle the current situation, especially in suburbs and rural areas where drug dealers have found a new market for heroin. Another option, abstinence programs, “have contributed to the problem of overdose;” people lose their tolerance, reuse, and die, he said.

Buprenorphine treatment might soon get easier. The FDA is expected to make an approval decision soon on probuphine, a matchstick-size subdermal implant that delivers buprenorphine continuously for 6 months.

Dr. Friedmann disclosed relationships with Alkermes, Inavir, and Orexo. The other doctors had no relevant disclosures.

aotto@frontlinemedcom.com

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