Daily Dose Strongly Associated With Opioid-Related Mortality Among Nonmalignant Pain Patients

Patients who take daily doses of opioids for nonmalignant pain are at higher risk of opioid-related mortality, especially if daily doses exceed clinically recommended thresholds, according to research published in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

Advertisement

Researchers assessed a population of more than 607,000 patients, aged 15-64 years, who were prescribed an opioid from Aug. 1997-Dec. 2006 for nonmalignant pain. They identified 498 patients whose deaths were associated with their opioid prescription and 1,714 matched controls. Their analysis showed that an average daily opioid dose of 200 mg or more of morphine was connected to a three-fold increased risk of opioid-related mortality. Intermediate opioid doses (50-99 mg of morphine) still showed significantly increased risk of opioid-related mortality.

Read the study about opioid-related mortality among nonmalignant pain patients.

Read other coverage about pain management:

Florida’s Surgeon General Signs Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Into Effect

National Institute on Drug Abuse Releases Teaching Tools for Physicians

Multi-Pronged Therapy Including Spinal Decompression Reduces Chronic Back Pain

At the Becker's 23rd Annual Spine, Orthopedic and Pain Management-Driven ASC + The Future of Spine Conference, taking place June 11-13 in Chicago, spine surgeons, orthopedic leaders and ASC executives will come together to explore minimally invasive techniques, ASC growth strategies and innovations shaping the future of outpatient spine care. Apply for complimentary registration now.

Advertisement

Next Up in Uncategorized

  • As the ASC industry continues to grow alongside new waves of surgical innovation, patient preferences and shifts to value-based care,…

  • A Pleasant View, Utah-based physician has been indicted on charges of obtaining unapproved drugs from China and selling them to…

  • From payer obstacles to operational pressures, five ASC leaders discuss the biggest frictions they’re facing. Note: Responses were lightly edited.…

Advertisement

Comments are closed.