| Literature DB >> 35845971 |
Rosalind Gittins1,2, Louise Missen3, Ian Maidment2.
Abstract
Background: Concerns about the misuse of over the counter (OTC) and prescription only medication (POM) are due to their impact upon physical/mental wellbeing, drug interactions and drug-related deaths. Improving an understanding of the pattern of use by people accessing specialist substance misuse services (SMSs) should enable improvements to treatment provision. Aim: To review the literature on the misuse of OTC/POM among adults accessing SMS, including the pattern of use, types of medication and associated characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Systematic review; misuse; over the counter; prescription only medication
Year: 2022 PMID: 35845971 PMCID: PMC9280808 DOI: 10.1177/11782218221111833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse ISSN: 1178-2218
Figure 1.Summary of the publication selection process.
Summary of publications including key findings.
| Study | Author(s) | Year | Title of publication | Journal name | Summary of findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Armstrong et al | 1992 | The use of over-the-counter preparations by drug users attending an addiction treatment unit |
| OTC misuse common. Easy to obtain in large amounts but not primary substance and only disclosed when asked. Duration of use and amount consumed varied greatly. Stimulants often used intermittently and regardless of street drug availability. Opioids often used for several days, for self-detoxification, if street drugs unavailable, to supplement use, for its own effect, to avoid withdrawal symptoms and experimentation. |
| 2 | Baird et al | 2014 | Gabapentinoid abuse in order to potentiate the effect of methadone: a survey among substance misusers |
| Gabapentinoids used to potentiate methadone/to become intoxicated |
| 3 | Coombes et al | 2019 | Staff perceptions of prescription and over-the-counter drug dependence services in England: a qualitative study |
| Staff concerns about stigma and lack of support, awareness, guidelines, pathways, funding and resources affecting treatment (especially for opioids). Current services perceived as inappropriate, variable and more suited for illicit drug users. Suggested service improvements include commissioning new services, developing national guidelines/pathways and increasing awareness. |
| 4 | Cooper et al | 2013 | ‘I can’t be an addict. I am’. Over-the-counter medicine abuse: a qualitative study |
| Mainly codeine combination product, but also decongestant and sedative antihistamines, usually started for genuine medical reasons. Considered themselves different from illicit users, self-blamed for losing control following cessation of prescribing. Subsequent use was for the ‘buzz’, obtained unproblematically via pharmacies/online. Withdrawal symptoms described, with work and health problems at higher doses. Mixed views about treatment options. Standard drug treatment services considered inappropriate. Concerns of ‘hidden addiction’ recorded in medical notes. Most supported continued OTC availability with addiction warnings and pharmacy training. |
| 5 | Fleming et al | 1986 | Dependence on dextromethorphan hydrobromide |
| Analysis of a sample of white powder believed to be an amphetamine of high purity detected dextromethorphan hydrobromide. Highlights need for continued vigilance as potential for abuse of any psychoactive drug and supports routine testing of substances (including drug checking). |
| 6 | Jaffe et al | 2003 | A postmarketing study of relative abuse liability of hypnotic sedative drugs |
| Benzodiazepines have high abuse potential, commonly used, more than antidepressants and non-benzodiazepine hypnotics. More likely to be purchased to get high and on the street than via GP. Converse for antihistamines and other medicines used to aid sleep. Recommend benzodiazepines should not be prescribed with history of substance use: sedating antidepressants or non-benzo hypnotics could be alternatives. |
| 7 | McBride et al | 1996 | Three cases of nalbuphine hydrochloride dependence associated with anabolic steroid use |
| Three case reports of nalbuphine hydrochloride dependence, obtained from illicit sources and alongside performance enhancing drugs. Supports further research into dependence potential of nalbuphine and relationship between anabolic steroid, other drug use and high-risk behaviours. |
| 8 | Oyefeso et al | 1996 | Prevalence and pattern of benzodiazepine abuse and dependence among patients in a methadone detoxification programme: a repeated cross-sectional analysis (benzodiazepine abuse among opiate addicts) |
| Prevalence of benzodiazepine dependency, combined use of multiple benzodiazepines, cannabis, amphetamines and cocaine, obtained from GPs. Rates of injecting increased and age of first benzodiazepine use and prevalence of barbiturates decreased. On admission, for methadone detoxification need to routinely assess for use of benzodiazepines, barbiturates, cannabis and severity of dependence, and monitor treatment completion rates. |
| 9 | Perera et al | 1987 | The use of benzodiazepines among drug addicts |
| High prevalence of benzodiazepines (especially diazepam). No difference in average age and sex ratios from non-users. Continued use for sleep, anxiety and withdrawal reactions. Minority stated using to intensify the ‘high’, to reduce or limit the quantity of their primary substance. Mostly oral, some injecting. Males more likely to use alcohol/greater polypharmacy. Majority cited easy (and initial) availability from GP/others with a prescription (parents/elderly relatives) as a reason for using. |
| 10 | Ruben et al | 1992 | Temazepam misuse in a group of injecting drug users |
| Gel-filled temazepam capsules readily injected, causing medical complications. Obtained via GP, friends/relatives, street dealers, elderly people selling excess supplies, doctor shopping under false names/registering as a temporary resident, some attempted burglary. Used for desired drug effects, also sedating/relaxing effect to alleviate anxiety/depression. Some used as more available than heroin, to help sleep, commit crime or suppress opiate withdrawals. Some mixed with illicit heroin to provide a better ‘hit’. Temazepam tablets reported to be easier to inject than gel formulation. |
| 11 | Seivewright et al | 1993 | Withdrawal symptoms from high dose benzodiazepines in poly drug users |
| Withdrawal symptoms from high dose benzodiazepines prevalent amongst polydrug users, uncomplicated by simultaneous cessation of other drugs. Range of withdrawal symptoms similar but greater severity with higher doses, multiple benzodiazepines and oral use. |
| 12 | Strang et al | 1994 | Survey of use of injected benzodiazepines among drug users in Britain |
| Prevalence of benzodiazepine use, especially diazepam and temazepam. Notable levels of injecting, especially for temazepam capsules. |
| 13 | Thomas et al | 2009 | Diphenhydramine abuse and detoxification: a brief review and case report |
| Addiction to diphenhydramine significantly impacted on finances and travel to different community pharmacies. Withdrawal symptoms experienced within hours of missed doses. Experienced insomnia and memory impairment leading to accidents including fires, overdoses, blackouts and seizures. Highlighted need to ask about OTC/POM use and caution repeat requests. |
Summary of publication characteristics.
| Study ID | Demographic characteristics of people misusing OTC/POM (eg, age, gender) | Sample size | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Range 20-49 years (mean 26.8 years) | 53 | Interviews |
| 2 | Not stated | 129 | Survey/questionnaire |
| 3 |
| 15 | Interviews |
| 4 | 20-60 years, 48% male | 25 | Interviews |
| 5 | 30 years, 100% male | 1 | Case report |
| 6 | 78% male | 297 | Interviews |
| 7 | 22-27 years, 100% male, 66.6% single and unemployed | 3 | Case report |
| 8 | Cohort 1: mean 28.7 years, 55% male, 55% single, 95% unemployed; Cohort 2: mean 27.7 years, 58.8% male, 43.1% single, 96.1% unemployed | 71 | Patient records |
| 9 | Mean 24.4 years, 64.6% male | 79 | Survey/questionnaire |
| 10 | 19-26 years (mean 24.5 years), 74% male | 23 | Interviews |
| 11 | 21-48 years (median 28 years), 54.5% male | 33 | Interviews and patient records |
| 12 | Mean 31 years, 67.8% male | 208 | Survey/questionnaire |
| 13 | 56 years, 100% female | 1 | Case report |
Summary of CERQual assessment.
| Summary of review finding | IDs of studies contributing to the review finding | CERQual assessment of confidence | Explanation of CERQual assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benzodiazepines, opioids and antihistamines are the most misused OTC/POMs by people accessing SMS | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 | High confidence | 12 of the 13 studies specified at least one of these medicines (6 publications mentioned opioids, 9 mentioned benzodiazepines and 5 mentioned antihistamines) |
| When misused, OTC/POMs are usually taken orally or injected | 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 | High confidence | 7 described oral, 6 described injecting (various) and 1 reported snorting, No other routes were reported/explicitly stated |
| OTC/POM misuse often occurs alongside illicit substance use, especially amphetamine, cannabis and opioids | 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 | High confidence | 11 of the 13 studies specified illicit use and at least one of these substances was explicitly mentioned in 9 of them (6 mentioned amphetamines, 7 mentioned cannabis and 6 mentioned opioids). The remaining 3 studies did not provide any details (but an absence of details does not equate to no use) |
| The OTC/POMs being misused are sourced from a variety of places, including online, from (various) pharmacies/GPs, street dealers and friends/family | 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 | High confidence | All stated at least one of these sources. The remaining 3 studies did not provide any explicit details |
| Adverse consequences are common and include complications from injecting, impact on personal finances, pharmacy bans, overdoses, accidents, criminal activity and physical health issues including problems with withdrawal and excessive paracetamol/ibuprofen from codeine combination products | 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13 | High confidence | The remaining 4 studies did not provide any details about adverse effects (but an absence of details does not equate to no adverse effects being experienced). Withdrawal symptoms were a notable issue and contributed to perpetuating use |
| OTC/POMs are being misused for a variety of reasons, including to self-detox, for desired psychoactive effect, to experiment, to manage street drug shortages, psychiatric conditions, pain disorders, withdrawal symptoms, and to potentiate other substances | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11 | High confidence | The remaining 3 studies did not provide any details about reasons for use. Withdrawal symptoms were a notable issue |
| There is significant variance in the pattern of OTC/POM misuse by people accessing SMS | 1, 4, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 | High confidence | Significant variation in use reported on within and between publications, including duration, amount and frequency, ranging from single one-off/minimal use to routine daily heavy use. The remaining 6 studies did not provide any notable details about patterns of use. |