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Guidance on How Best to Manage Opioid Risks in Older Adults


 

New Protocols for Pain Management in Older Adults

At the health system level, clinicians can use treatment agreements for patients taking opioids. At Novant, patients must attest they agree to take the medications only as prescribed and from a specified pharmacy. They promise not to seek opioids from other sources, to submit to random drug screenings, and to communicate regularly with their clinician about any health issues.

If a patient violates any part of this agreement, their clinician can stop the treatment. The system encourages clinicians to help patients find additional care for substance abuse disorder or pain management if it occurs.

Over the past 2 years, Novant also developed an AI prediction model, which generates a score for the risk a patient has in developing substance use disorder or experiencing an overdose within a year of initial opioid prescription. The model was validated by an internal team at the system but has not been independently certified.

If a patient has a high-risk score, their clinician considers additional risk mitigation strategies, such as seeing the patient more frequently or using an abuse deterrent formulation of an opioid. They also have the option of referring the patient to specialists in addiction medicine or neurology. Opioids are not necessarily withheld, according to Dr. Meyer. The tool is now used by clinicians during Medicare annual wellness visits.

And coming later this year are new protocols for pain management in patients aged 80 years and older. Clinicians will target a 50% dose reduction, compared with what a younger patient might receive to account for physiologic differences.

“We know that especially with some opioids like morphine, they’re not going to metabolize that the same way a young person with a young kidney will, so we’re trying to set the clinician up to select a lower starting dose for patients that are older,” Dr. Meyer said.

In 2017, the system implemented a program to reduce prescription of opioids to less than 350 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per order following any kind of surgery. The health system compared numbers of prescriptions written among surgical colleagues and met with them to discuss alternative approaches. Novant said it continues to monitor the data and follow-up with surgeons who are not in alignment with the goal.

Between 2017 and 2019, patients switching to lower doses after surgeries rose by 20%.

Across the country at Cedars-Sinai Medical Network, leadership in 2016 made the move to deprescribe opioids or lower doses of the drugs to less than 90 MME per day, in accordance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines established that year. Patients were referred to their pain program for support and for nonopioid interventions. Pharmacists worked closely with clinicians on safely tapering these medications in patients taking high doses.

The program worked, according to Dr. Goldzweig. Dr. Goldzweig could only find two patients currently taking high-dose opioids in the system’s database out of more than 7000 patients with Medicare Advantage insurance coverage.

“There will always be some patients who have no alternative than opioids, but we established some discipline with urine tox screens and pain agreements, and over time, we’ve been able to reduce the number of high-risk opioid prescriptions,” she said.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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