| Literature DB >> 29379630 |
Lynnette A Averill1,2, Christopher L Averill1,2, Lyndsay A Staley3, J L Ozawa-Kirk4, John Sk Kauwe3, Patricia Henrie-Barrus4.
Abstract
The Opioid Abuse Risk Screener was developed to support well-informed decision-making in opioid analgesic prescribing by extending the breadth of psychiatric risk factors evaluated relative to other non-clinician-administered measures. We examined the preliminary predictive validity of the Opioid Abuse Risk Screener relative to the widely used Screener and Opioid Assessment for Patients with Pain-Revised in predicting aberrant urine drug tests and controlled substance database checks. The Opioid Abuse Risk Screener is significantly different from the Screener and Opioid Assessment for Patients with Pain-Revised in predicting aberrant same-day urine drug tests (Z = 2.912, p = 0.0036) and controlled substance database checks within 1 year of assessment (Z = 3.731, p = 0.0002). Promising preliminary analyses using machine learning methods are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: assessment; chronic pain; controlled substance; controlled substance database; machine learning; opioid abuse; prescription drug abuse; risk stratification; scale; urine drug testing; validation
Year: 2017 PMID: 29379630 PMCID: PMC5779942 DOI: 10.1177/2055102917748459
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Psychol Open ISSN: 2055-1029
Figure 1.Predictive validity relative to aberrant UDTs.
Figure 2.Predictive validity of identifying aberrant CSDB checks.