| Literature DB >> 35760423 |
Edward R Melnick1,2, Bidisha Nath3, James D Dziura3,2, Martin F Casey4, Molly M Jeffery5, Hyung Paek2, William E Soares6, Jason A Hoppe7, Haseena Rajeevan2, Fangyong Li2, Rachel M Skains8, Lauren A Walter8, Mehul D Patel4, Srihari V Chari4, Timothy F Platts-Mills9, Erik P Hess10, Gail D'Onofrio3,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of a user centered clinical decision support tool versus usual care on rates of initiation of buprenorphine in the routine emergency care of individuals with opioid use disorder.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35760423 PMCID: PMC9231533 DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2021-069271
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Fig 1CONSORT (Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials) flow diagram. Note that repeat visits do not equate to patients, and therefore sums of patient numbers might not seem complete. NP=nurse practitioner; PA=physician associate
Participant characteristics. Data are number (%) of participants unless stated otherwise
| Characteristics | Intervention | Usual care | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Total (No) | 2787 | 2260 | 5047 |
| Median (IQR) age (years) | 36.0 (29.0-48.0) | 36.0 (29.0-46.0) | 36.0 (29.0-47.0) |
| Sex: | |||
| Men | 1870 (67.1) | 1447 (64.0) | 3317 (65.7) |
| Women | 917 (32.9) | 813 (36.0) | 1730 (34.3) |
| Race: | |||
| Black or African American | 452 (16.2) | 406 (18.0) | 858 (17.0) |
| White | 2048 (73.5) | 1565 (69.2) | 3613 (71.6) |
| Other | 196 (7.1) | 219 (9.8) | 415 (8.2) |
| Unknown or not reported | 91 (3.3) | 70 (3.1) | 161 (3.2) |
| Ethnicity: | |||
| Hispanic or Latino | 505 (18.1) | 196 (08.7) | 701 (13.9) |
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 2166 (77.7) | 1934 (85.6) | 4100 (81.2) |
| Unknown or patient refused | 116 (4.2) | 130 (5.8) | 246 (4.9) |
| Insurance: | |||
| Medicare | 313 (11.4) | 274 (12.3) | 587 (11.8) |
| Medicaid | 1113 (40.4) | 786 (35.3) | 1899 (38.1) |
| Private or HMO | 770 (28.0) | 347 (15.6) | 1117 (22.4) |
| Self-pay | 468 (17.0) | 762 (34.2) | 1230 (24.7) |
| Other | 57 (2.1) | 44 (2.0) | 101 (2.0) |
| Unknown or not reported | 32 (1.2) | 14 (0.6) | 46 (0.9) |
| Opioid use disorder phenotype: | |||
| Algorithm 1 | 2443 (87.7) | 1984 (87.8) | 4427 (87.7) |
| Algorithm 2 | 344 (12.3) | 276 (12.2) | 620 (12.3) |
| Naloxone given in emergency department | 266 (9.6) | 105 (4.7) | 371 (7.4) |
| Naloxone prescribed in past 24 months | 606 (22.4) | 132 (5.9) | 738 (14.9) |
| Opioid use disorder previously on problem list | 409 (14.7) | 194 (8.6) | 603 (11.9) |
|
| |||
| Total (No) | 340 | 259 | 599 |
| No of missing demographics | 26 (7.6) | 49 (19.9) | 75 (12.5) |
| Sex: | |||
| Men | 210 (66.9) | 141 (67.1) | 351 (67.0) |
| Women | 104 (33.1) | 69 (32.9) | 173 (33.0) |
| Age group (years): | |||
| <35 | 68 (21.7) | 41 (19.5) | 109 (20.8) |
| 35-44 | 124 (39.5) | 82 (39.0) | 206 (39.3) |
| 45-54 | 84 (26.8) | 56 (26.7) | 140 (26.7) |
| 55-64 | 29 (9.2) | 24 (11.4) | 53 (10.1) |
| ≥65 | 9 (2.9) | 7 (3.3) | 16 (3.1) |
| X waiver trained before trial: | |||
| No | 161 (51.4) | 128 (61.0) | 289 (55.3) |
| Yes | 102 (32.6) | 52 (24.8) | 154 (29.4) |
| No of patients with opioid use disorder during trial: | |||
| <5 | 145 (42.6) | 119 (45.9) | 264 (44.1) |
| 5-20 | 165 (48.5) | 112 (43.2) | 277 (46.2) |
| 20+ | 30 (8.8) | 28 (10.8) | 58 (9.7) |
IQR=interquartile range; HMO=health maintenance organization.
Patient and physician level outcomes
| Outcomes | Implementation outcome type (RE-AIM) | Counts (No (%)) | Unadjusted (odds ratio (95% CI))† | Adjusted (odds ratio (95% CI))‡ | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Usual care | Effect size | P value | Effect size | P value | ||||
|
| |||||||||
| Total (No) | — | 2787 | 2260 | — | — | — | — | ||
| EMBED launched | Reach | 261 (9.4) | — | — | — | — | — | ||
| Buprenorphine administered in emergency department or prescribed at discharge* | Effectiveness | 347 (12.5) | 271 (12.0) | 1.52 (0.72 to 3.23) | 0.27 | 1.22 (0.61 to 2.43) | 0.58 | ||
| Referral for ongoing medication for opioid use disorder | Effectiveness | 367 (13.2) | 226 (10.0) | 1.03 (0.43 to 2.47) | 0.95 | 0.91 (0.52 to 1.59) | 0.74 | ||
| Naloxone prescription at discharge | Effectiveness | 517 (18.6) | 135 (6.0) | 1.62 (0.81 to 3.22) | 0.17 | 1.17 (0.45 to 3.10) | 0.74 | ||
| Buprenorphine administered or prescribed with EMBED | Implementation | 161/261 (61.7) | — | — | — | — | — | ||
| Maintenance: buprenorphine initiated after trial | Maintenance | 108/763 (14.2) | — | — | — | — | — | ||
|
| |||||||||
| Total (No) | 340 | 259 | — | — | — | — | |||
| Unique attending physicians who launched EMBED | Adoption | 130 (38.2) | — | — | — | — | — | ||
| Initiated buprenorphine (administered or prescribed) | Adoption | 151 (44.4) | 88 (34.0) | 1.55 (1.11 to 2.16) | 0.01 | 1.83 (1.16 to 2.89) | 0.01 | ||
| Obtained X waiver during trial | Adoption | 50 (14.7) | 30 (11.6) | 1.32 (0.81 to 2.14) | 0.27 | 1.31 (0.69 to 2.48) | 0.42 | ||
| Provided referral for ongoing medication for opioid use disorder | Adoption | 141 (41.5) | 100 (38.6) | 1.13 (0.91 to 1.57) | 0.48 | 0.86 (0.57 to 1.32) | 0.49 | ||
| Prescribed naloxone at discharge from emergency department | Adoption | 177 (52.1) | 71 (27.4) | 2.88 (2.03 to 4.07) | <0.001 | 5.30 (3.33 to 8.44) | <0.001 | ||
| Initiated buprenorphine using EMBED | Implementation | 92/130 (70.7) | — | — | — | — | — | ||
RE-AIM=reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance framework; EMBED=EMergency department initiated BuprenorphinE for opioid use Disorder.
Primary outcome.
Obtained from a generalized estimating equations model accounting for clustering by site.
Obtained from a generalized estimating equations model accounting for clustering by site and these covariates: healthcare system, electronic health record vendor, practice setting, urbanicity, annual patient volume, presence of additional providers in the emergency department, other resources for opioid use disorder in the emergency department, presence of any attending physicians with a waiver to prescribe buprenorphine before the start of the trial, age, sex, race, ethnicity, insurance type and status, naloxone prescription in past 24 months, opioid use disorder on problem list, urine drug screen results, and time (months) since the start of the trial.
Fig 2Bubble plot by study arm (intervention or usual care) showing proportion of patients with opioid use disorder receiving buprenorphine by cluster site (academic and community). Each bubble represents one cluster. Bubble area is proportional to the number of patients with opioid use disorder. Vertical position represents the proportion of these patients with buprenorphine initiated. Box lines indicate median, top, and bottom quartile values of the primary outcome by cluster, whiskers indicate the last value within 1.5 interquartile ranges, and the diamond indicates the mean value of the primary outcome by cluster. An interactive version of this graphic is available at https://bit.ly/39aojsT
Fig 3Temporal trends in visits to the emergency department for opioid use disorder and cumulative proportion of physicians who initiated buprenorphine at least once during the trial and obtained an X waiver to prescribe buprenorphine by study arm (intervention or usual care). Monthly visits for opioid use disorder is charted by study arm. An interactive version of this graphic is available at https://bit.ly/3NvGuIj
Fig 4Forest plot of subgroup analyses showing the effect of patient baseline characteristics and practice setting on the primary outcome for the usual care and intervention arms. Odds ratios, 95% confidence intervals, and P values are from analyses adjusted for site level variables included in the constrained randomization and account for clustering. HMO=health maintenance organization