| Literature DB >> 28250709 |
Abstract
OxyContin, formerly one of the most commonly prescribed medications for chronic pain in Canada, was discontinued, delisted from the Ontario Drug Formulary, and replaced by a tamper-resistant formulation in 2012. The impact of discontinuing OxyContin on patients formerly prescribed it to treat chronic pain was unreported. Patients with chronic pain aged 45 years and over (n = 13) were recruited from two primary care and one specialty practice sites and interviewed using a semistructured guide to capture their experiences with discontinuing OxyContin, the efficacy of alternate medications, and relationships with physicians. Additional interviews were conducted with their physicians (n = 7) to obtain physician perceptions on discontinuation and to expand understanding of the patients' experiences. Aspects of patients' pain and medical care through the discontinuation process revealed emergent themes that both converge and diverge from that of treating physicians. Areas of divergence include the motive for discontinuation, which was condemned by most patients but supported by all physicians, and the perceived impact of discontinuance on pain control, with the majority of patients experiencing a negative impact and most physicians describing it as insignificant. Perceptions of patients and physicians coincided on the need to optimize pain management practices.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28250709 PMCID: PMC5303858 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5402915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pain Res Manag ISSN: 1203-6765 Impact factor: 3.037
General patient characteristics.
| Patient | Age | Gender | Source of pain | OxyContin use | Care provider |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 49 | Female | Diabetic neuropathy | ≈7 years | General practitioner |
| A2 | 51 | Female | Chronic rotator cuff tears | ≈8 years | General practitioner |
| A3 | 68 | Female | Spinal stenosis | ≈11 years | General practitioner |
| A4 | 52 | Female | Occupational injury causing chronic back and leg pain | ≈10 years | Pain specialist |
| B1 | 53 | Female | Complex regional pain syndrome (lower back pain) | ≈6 years | Pain specialist |
| B2 | 60 | Female | Failed back syndrome | ≈2 years | Pain specialist |
| B3 | 58 | Female | Abdominal wall pain | ≈7 years | Pain specialist |
| B4 | 52 | Female | Fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis, restless leg syndrome | ≈10 years | Pain specialist |
| B5 | 51 | Male | Chronic rotator cuff tendinitis | ≈5 years | Pain specialist |
| B6 | 46 | Female | Severe painful sensory neuropathy | ≈2 years | Pain specialist |
| C1 | 77 | Female | Chronic low back pain | ≈8 years | General practitioner |
| C2 | 78 | Female | Osteoarthritis | ≈4 years | General practitioner |
| C3 | 63 | Female | Car accident causing chronic pain | ≈8 years | General practitioner |
Findings from the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI).
| Patient | Average pain score (0–10) | QOL domains with highest pain interference | Pain medications used since discontinuation of OxyContin |
|---|---|---|---|
| A1 | 2 | Walking ability, appetite | OxyNEO, Gabapentin, Toradol, Tylenol |
| A2 | 4 | Normal work, enjoyment of life | OxyNEO |
| A3 | 5 | Normal work, enjoyment of life | Gabapentin, Tylenol |
| A4 | 8 | Enjoyment of life | Percocet |
| B1 | 6 | Sleep | OxyNEO, Percocet, Fentanyl Patch |
| B2 | 3 | General activity, walking ability | OxyNEO |
| B3 | 6 | General activity, sleep | OxyNEO |
| B4 | 7 | Ability to concentrate, normal work, sleep | OxyNEO |
| B5 | 7 | Sleep | OxyNEO |
| B6 | 8 | Mood, normal work, sleep, ability to concentrate, enjoyment of life | OxyNEO, Lidocaine infusion |
| C1 | 5 | Walking ability, normal work, sleep, enjoyment of life | OxyNEO, Fentanyl, Tylenol, Gabapentin |
| C2 | 1 | Sleep | Hydromorphone |
| C3 | 6 | Mood, normal work, sleep, ability to concentrate | OxyNEO |
Themes identified from patient interviews.
| Themes | Subthemes | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Disagreement with motive for discontinuation | Critical of authorities for discontinuing effective drug | Anticipate persistence of addiction problems | Feel irrationally deprived of pain medication | Address one issue by creating another | Blame prescribers for misuse and abuse | Question GPs ability to prescribe opioids | Discontinuation considered addicts not patients | Alternate solutions to addiction issues |
| (2) Discontinuation negatively impacted pain control | Optimal pain relief with OxyContin | Poorer pain management with substitutes | Endure trials of alternate medications | Experience withdrawal symptoms | Increased pain affecting cognition and function | Retrain self to manage new medications | Cost barrier to OxyNEO | |
| (3) Discontinuation insignificantly impacted pain control | Rate pain relief equivalent to before discontinuation | Continued receiving satisfactory pain control | Continued receiving inadequate pain control | Identification of differences in medications | Discontinuation has impact on other aspects | |||
| (4) Choosing to get off OxyContin permanently | Fear lifelong dependence on OxyContin | Addiction to OxyContin driving decision | Tolerate withdrawal symptoms | Bear worsened pain | Reliance on distraction to ease pain | |||
| (5) Learning to live with pain | Accepting life with pain | Recognize few alternatives | Wishing for a miracle drug | Hope to regain OxyContin | ||||
| (6) Barriers and opportunities in optimizing care | Learning about discontinuation from the media | Communication gap between patients and professionals | Feeling unheard by healthcare providers | Professionals not advising of addictive properties | Professionals not educating patients | Inadequate integration of general and pain clinics | Lack regulatory program to reassess pain | Not involving patients with decision-making |
Themes identified from physician interviews.
| Theme | Subthemes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Support for the motive for discontinuation | Approve discontinuation | Support nonfunding and restricted access of OxyNEO | Addiction potential of OxyContin exceeds that of alternate drugs | Sufficient alternate drugs to OxyContin |
| (2) Discontinuation insignificantly impacted pain control | Patients attain similar pain relief with alternate medications | Transition to other drugs carried out efficiently | Sufficient alternate drugs to choose from | Unsatisfactory outcome ascribed to medication abuse |
| (3) Sufficient resources for opioid prescribing | Appropriate prescribing of opioids results in safe and effective use | Lack of adherence to existing guidelines is the real issue | Narcotic database will enhance monitoring strategies | |
| (4) Disapproval of generics | Existing pain medications are adequate | Introduction of generics defeats discontinuation | Physicians do not prescribe generics | Generics drug of choice for addicts |
| (5) Barriers and opportunities in optimizing care | Switching to a different medication was successfully accomplished | Exceptional Access Program made it extremely difficult to access OxyNEO | Abruptness of the change with short notice period to change drugs | Delay in notifying professionals and in processing applications for patients to start receiving OxyNEO |