Research Points To Increases In Opioid Dispensing
New research provides evidence of increasing dispensing
of opioids in older people and following surgery in New
Zealand patients.
Opioids are a class of pain medications
with potential for addiction, including codeine,
dihydrocodeine, tramadol, and stronger forms, fentanyl,
morphine, pethidine, oxycodone.
In the US, addiction to
these drugs has reached 'epidemic' levels, leading to a
surge in illegal sales, overdoses, and deaths.
“Opioids
are commonly prescribed for pain and, while we don’t yet
have an epidemic in New Zealand, as in the US, these
findings should spark concern,” says Associate Professor
Amy Chan of the School of Pharmacy in the University of
Auckland.
Risks of opioid dependency following
surgery
One new opioid study looked at
persistent use among opioid-naïve patients who underwent
surgery and were dispensed opioids after
discharge.
Researchers looked at community pharmacy
dispensing records for more than 260,000 patients who were
admitted to any New Zealand hospital between 2007 and
2019.
They found the overall rate of persistent use to be
9.1 percent. See Anesthesiology and Analgesia[paper
available from media adviser Jodi Yeats].
Persistent
opioid use is a common signal of opioid-related harm in
research literature, defined as when opioids are used beyond
90 days after an event.
“Risk factors for persistent
use included prescriptions of higher opioid doses, multiple
types of opioids and changing to different opioids in the
first 90 days after discharge,” lead author, pharmacy
lecturer, Jiayi Gong says.
Conversely, being prescribed
non-opioid pain relief post-surgery was associated with a
reduced risk of developing persistent opioid use.
Other
risk factors included: surgical specialties
(cardiac/neurological), having other serious health
conditions, smoking, and pre-operative use of certain
medications, notably sedatives and non-opioid pain relief,
Gong says.
Trending upwards in older
people
Another study from the University looked
at health records for more than 800,000 people over 65 years
old, from 2007 to 2018, finding steadily increasing opioid
prescribing, particularly among women and those over 85
years of age. See Australasian
Journal on Ageing.
Hoda Fahmy, of the School of
Pharmacy at the University of Auckland, led the research
using national health databases with the aim of addressing a
gap in knowledge of opioid prescribing in Aotearoa New
Zealand.
Fahmy says opioid use in older adults can be
problematic.
“Opioid therapy should only be considered
when potential benefits are likely to surpass risks, where
it should be prescribed with extensive monitoring and
regular assessments to determine the need for
continuation,” she says.
The researchers found that
codeine was the most commonly prescribed opioid, followed by
tramadol.
At the time of the study, codeine was allowed
to be prescribed for three months’ supply. From October
2023, codeine supply was limited to one month.
Both
codeine and tramadol are weak opioids, but co-author Dr Chan
says weak opioids are still a cause for concern, especially
in older adults.,
“Weak opioids can still lead to
dependency and carry additional risks for older people who
are more susceptible to side effects, as their kidney
function is often reduced and it is important for processing
these medicines,” Chan says
Fentanyl was the drug that
showed the greatest increase over the study period, which
Fahmy says probably relates to the fact funding for fentanyl
patches became unrestricted in February 2011.
“Future
research is warranted to discern whether the increase in
opioid dispensing is a consequence of overprescribing or
reflects appropriate pain management practices and to
establish evidence-based guidelines for the use of opioids
in the older population,” Fahmy says.
Fahmy conducted
the research as part of her master’s and contributing to a
suite of studies looking at dispensing of opioids in
different groups and associated harms.
The increasing
prescription of opioids in older adults should continue to
be monitored further and inform policies and prescribing,
Fahmy says.
A related study involving a sample of almost
270,000 opioid-naïve older adults without a cancer
diagnosis investigated risk factors for persistent opioid
use.
The strongest risk factors included: use of
fentanyl, slow-release opioids, strong opioids, multiple
health issues, history of substance abuse, residing in the
most socioeconomically deprived areas, and the use of
medications like anti-epileptics, non-opioid pain
medications, antipsychotics, or antidepressants. See Age and
Ageing.
These findings, which augment our
understanding of rising prescription rates, underscore the
need for targeted interventions to prevent persistent opioid
use and its associated adverse outcomes, says Assistant
Professor Kebede Beyene, Hoda’s primary masters
supervisor.
“The findings from both studies emphasise
the importance of precise opioid management for older
people, aiming to optimize treatment while minimising
risks,” says Beyene.
Chan suggests that individuals and
families should keep an eye on opioid use and seek a
medication review for long-term use. She also calls for
cautious prescribing and policy vigilance regarding opioid
supply.
Future research out of the School of Pharmacy
will look at opioid prescription in rest homes and the
social and economic impacts of opioid use, especially as
more up-to-date data become available.
US warns
NZ high risk for illegal fentanyl trade
The
University research comes as a United States
Government-backed briefing highlighted New Zealand as a
country with a high risk emerging of fentanyl abuse.
Dr
Vanda Felbab-Brown, Senior Fellow of Foreign Policy at the
Brookings Institution’s Strobe Talbott Center for
Security, Strategy and Technology told a press briefing on
the United States fentanyl crisis that New Zealand and
Australia are highly valuable markets where existing drug
networks provide ample opportunities for the spread of
synthetic opioids. See 1News
16
February.