Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia

Abstract Background Pain is common among individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD), and use of opioids has been increasing over the last decade. Yet, it is unclear to what extent opioids are appropriately prescribed for patients with ADRD and whether the appropriateness of op...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yu-Jung Jenny Wei, Siegfried Schmidt, Cheng Chen, Roger B. Fillingim, M. Carrington Reid, Steven DeKosky, Laurence Solberg, Marco Pahor, Babette Brumback, Almut G. Winterstein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-021-00818-3
id doaj-57105ee7227f4680bc14593b621d789d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-57105ee7227f4680bc14593b621d789d2021-04-25T11:45:13ZengBMCAlzheimer’s Research & Therapy1758-91932021-04-0113111410.1186/s13195-021-00818-3Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementiaYu-Jung Jenny Wei0Siegfried Schmidt1Cheng Chen2Roger B. Fillingim3M. Carrington Reid4Steven DeKosky5Laurence Solberg6Marco Pahor7Babette Brumback8Almut G. Winterstein9Department of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy, University of Florida College of PharmacyDepartment of Community Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of FloridaDepartment of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy, University of Florida College of PharmacyPain Research and Intervention Center of Excellence, University of FloridaDivision of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical CollegeDepartment of Neurology, McKnight Brain Institute, University of FloridaNF/SG Veterans Health System, Malcom Randall VAMC, Geriatrics Research, Education, Clinical Center (GRECC)Department of Aging and Geriatric Research, Institute on Aging, University of Florida College of MedicineDepartment of Biostatistics, University of Florida Colleges of Medicine and Public Health & Health ProfessionsDepartment of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy, University of Florida College of PharmacyAbstract Background Pain is common among individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD), and use of opioids has been increasing over the last decade. Yet, it is unclear to what extent opioids are appropriately prescribed for patients with ADRD and whether the appropriateness of opioid prescribing differs by ADRD status. The objective of this study is to compare the quality of opioid prescribing among patients with or without ADRD who have chronic noncancer pain. Methods A nationally representative cohort study of Medicare beneficiaries aged 50 years or older who had chronic pain but who had no cancer, hospice, or palliative care from 2011 to 2015. Four indicators of potentially inappropriate opioid prescribing were measured in patients residing in communities (75,258 patients with and 435,870 patients without ADRD); five indicators were assessed in patients in nursing homes (NHs) (37,117 patients with and 5128 patients without ADRD). Each indicator was calculated as the proportion of eligible patients with inappropriate opioid prescribing in the year after a chronic pain diagnosis. Differences in proportions between ADRD and non-ADRD groups were estimated using a generalized linear model adjusting for covariates through inverse probability weighting. Results Patients with ADRD versus those without had higher concurrent use of opioids and central nervous system–active drugs (community 44.1% vs 33.3%; NH 58.8% vs 54.1%, both P < 0.001) and no opioids or scheduled pain medications for moderate or severe pain (NH 60.1% vs 52.5%, P < 0.001). The ADRD versus non-ADRD group had higher use of long-term opioids for treating neuropathic pain in communities (21.7% vs 19.5%, P = 0.003) but lower use in NHs (26.9% vs 36.0%, P < 0.001). Use of strong or high-dose opioids when naive to opioids (community 1.5% vs 2.8%; NH 2.5% vs 3.5%) and use of contraindicated opioids (community 0.08% vs 0.12%; NH 0.05% vs 0.21%) were rare for either group. Conclusion Potential inappropriate opioid prescribing in 2 areas of pain care was more common among patients with ADRD than among patients without ADRD in community or NH settings. Further studies aimed at understanding the factors and effects associated with opioid prescribing patterns that deviate from guidelines are warranted.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-021-00818-3Alzheimer’s disease and related dementiasPrescription opioidsInappropriate prescribing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yu-Jung Jenny Wei
Siegfried Schmidt
Cheng Chen
Roger B. Fillingim
M. Carrington Reid
Steven DeKosky
Laurence Solberg
Marco Pahor
Babette Brumback
Almut G. Winterstein
spellingShingle Yu-Jung Jenny Wei
Siegfried Schmidt
Cheng Chen
Roger B. Fillingim
M. Carrington Reid
Steven DeKosky
Laurence Solberg
Marco Pahor
Babette Brumback
Almut G. Winterstein
Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias
Prescription opioids
Inappropriate prescribing
author_facet Yu-Jung Jenny Wei
Siegfried Schmidt
Cheng Chen
Roger B. Fillingim
M. Carrington Reid
Steven DeKosky
Laurence Solberg
Marco Pahor
Babette Brumback
Almut G. Winterstein
author_sort Yu-Jung Jenny Wei
title Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
title_short Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
title_full Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
title_fullStr Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
title_full_unstemmed Quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without Alzheimer disease and related dementia
title_sort quality of opioid prescribing in older adults with or without alzheimer disease and related dementia
publisher BMC
series Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
issn 1758-9193
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Pain is common among individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias (ADRD), and use of opioids has been increasing over the last decade. Yet, it is unclear to what extent opioids are appropriately prescribed for patients with ADRD and whether the appropriateness of opioid prescribing differs by ADRD status. The objective of this study is to compare the quality of opioid prescribing among patients with or without ADRD who have chronic noncancer pain. Methods A nationally representative cohort study of Medicare beneficiaries aged 50 years or older who had chronic pain but who had no cancer, hospice, or palliative care from 2011 to 2015. Four indicators of potentially inappropriate opioid prescribing were measured in patients residing in communities (75,258 patients with and 435,870 patients without ADRD); five indicators were assessed in patients in nursing homes (NHs) (37,117 patients with and 5128 patients without ADRD). Each indicator was calculated as the proportion of eligible patients with inappropriate opioid prescribing in the year after a chronic pain diagnosis. Differences in proportions between ADRD and non-ADRD groups were estimated using a generalized linear model adjusting for covariates through inverse probability weighting. Results Patients with ADRD versus those without had higher concurrent use of opioids and central nervous system–active drugs (community 44.1% vs 33.3%; NH 58.8% vs 54.1%, both P < 0.001) and no opioids or scheduled pain medications for moderate or severe pain (NH 60.1% vs 52.5%, P < 0.001). The ADRD versus non-ADRD group had higher use of long-term opioids for treating neuropathic pain in communities (21.7% vs 19.5%, P = 0.003) but lower use in NHs (26.9% vs 36.0%, P < 0.001). Use of strong or high-dose opioids when naive to opioids (community 1.5% vs 2.8%; NH 2.5% vs 3.5%) and use of contraindicated opioids (community 0.08% vs 0.12%; NH 0.05% vs 0.21%) were rare for either group. Conclusion Potential inappropriate opioid prescribing in 2 areas of pain care was more common among patients with ADRD than among patients without ADRD in community or NH settings. Further studies aimed at understanding the factors and effects associated with opioid prescribing patterns that deviate from guidelines are warranted.
topic Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias
Prescription opioids
Inappropriate prescribing
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-021-00818-3
work_keys_str_mv AT yujungjennywei qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT siegfriedschmidt qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT chengchen qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT rogerbfillingim qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT mcarringtonreid qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT stevendekosky qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT laurencesolberg qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT marcopahor qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT babettebrumback qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
AT almutgwinterstein qualityofopioidprescribinginolderadultswithorwithoutalzheimerdiseaseandrelateddementia
_version_ 1721509454083522560