| Literature DB >> 26818474 |
William C Becker1,2, Jessica S Merlin3, Ajay Manhapra4,5, Ellen L Edens6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients, providers, communities and health systems have struggled to achieve balance between access to opioid treatment for chronic pain and its potential harmful consequences: especially misuse, addiction and overdose. We developed an interdisciplinary clinic embedded within primary care (the Opioid Reassessment Clinic-ORC) with the goal of improving the quality of care of patients with co-occurring chronic pain and issues related to opioid safety, efficacy and/or misuse. CASE DESCRIPTIONS: We present three cases referred to the ORC that highlight complex clinical scenarios related to assessment and treatment of patients with chronic pain and issues related to opioid safety, efficacy and misuse. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: In the context of the three cases, with respect to assessment, we discuss: making the diagnosis of opioid use disorder; allowing the patient space to endorse lack of efficacy; identification of co-occurring hazardous alcohol use; and recognizing barriers to multimodal pain care. With respect to treatment, we discuss: making a change in treatment with which the patient may not agree; effectiveness of buprenorphine/naloxone for the treatment of chronic pain; responding to low efficacy; and making continued opioid therapy contingent on engagement with substance abuse treatment.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26818474 PMCID: PMC4730605 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-016-0050-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Core opioid reassessment clinic (ORC) treatment strategies in three cases
| Case | Plan regarding opioid therapy | Plan regarding multi-modal pain treatment | Plan regarding management of co-occurring conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 64-year-old with severe COPD, PTSD and degenerative joint disease of the lumbar spine, chronic pain and long-term, high-dose opioid therapy. Diagnosed with mild opioid use disorder (OUD) in ORC | Prior to OUD diagnosis: offered lower dose full-agonist opioid versus switch to buprenorphine/naloxone (BUP/NX) |
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| 65-year-old with history of low back pain, cervical and lumbar surgeries, spinal cord stimulator placement and high-dose opioid therapy. No opioid misuse present. Assessed as having low efficacy, high-dose opioid therapy | Initially offered options: (1) taper down/off current opioid; (2) rotate to another full agonist, at a lower equivalent dose; (3) switch to BUP/NX for off-label treatment of pain. (Patient chose option 3) |
| Patient had no significant pain-impacting co-occurring conditions |
| 56-year-old with alcohol use disorder and bilateral hip pain due to severe osteoarthritis treated with morphine. Exhibited opioid misuse and experienced a return to alcohol use | Initially, expectations regarding safe opioid use were made explicit; morphine was continued and closely monitored |
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