Applied Evidence

Is it time to taper that opioid? (And how best to do it)

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Preventing, assessing, and treating chronic pain can be difficult, at the level of both the individual physician and the larger system of care, even without adding in complications of the opioid epidemic. For racial and ethnic minority groups, women, older people, and people with cognitive impairment or cancer, pain can be underrecognized and go inadequately treated.

Among people who began abusing opioids in the 2000s, 75% said that their first opioid was a prescription drug; in prior decades, heroin was the gateway to opioid addiction.

Chronic pain itself has clinical, psychological, and social consequences and is associated with limitations in activity, work productivity, quality of life, and stigma.8 Treatment of chronic pain—with opioids or other modalities—remains an important component of patient-centered primary care. Interestingly, however, many patients struggling through chronic pain report that efforts to curb the opioid epidemic have inadvertently led to lower-quality pain management and, therefore, understandable concern among patients whose chronic pain is well managed with opioid pain medications.9,10

When is it appropriate to continue opioids for chronic pain?

Apart from the treatment of active cancer, palliative care, and end-of-life care, the appropriate use of opioids for chronic and acute pain has become clouded in recent years. To assist with this problem, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued guidelines in 2016 for primary care physicians who are faced with this clinical dilemma.11 The guidelines (1) address circumstances in which it is safe to consider opioid prescribing and (2) provide ongoing reassessment of indications for chronic opioid prescribing within the context of potential risk to the patient and society. Because appropriate use of opioids has grown murky, nonpharmacotherapeutic management and nonopioid pharmacotherapy are preferred for chronic pain.

The therapeutic window— between safe dosages and those that could lead to respiratory depression or overdose— is narrow for older patients.

Plan ahead. Establish goals of treatment that focus on both pain and function when starting opioid therapy. This will facilitate decision-making when it comes time to continue—or discontinue—opioids down the road. Opioids should be prescribed at the lowest effective dosage; ongoing reassessment of benefit should be made, and particular caution should be exercised, if the daily opioid dosage reaches ≥ 50 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) and especially as the dosage approaches ≥ 90 MME/d. Prescribers should ensure that patients are educated about known risks and the limited evidence of benefit of opioid therapy.

An age-related concern. Special consideration is warranted in older patients, who might have reduced renal function even in the absence of renal disease; this can lead to a reduction in clearance of pain medication. Because of that increased risk of drug accumulation, the therapeutic window—between safe dosages and those that could lead to respiratory depression or overdose—is narrow for these patients.11

Continue to: Use in pregnancy

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