Can Two Questions Identify ‘High Risk’ Pain Patients?

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

“Have you ever felt your pain is terrible and it's never going to get any better?”

“Have you ever used an illegal drug or prescription medication for non-medical reasons?”

If you answered yes to both questions, you’d be considered at high risk of a “poor pain outcome” at Duke University’s Health System. You’d also be invited into a specialized pain management program that takes a more holistic approach to pain treatment.

Duke’s Integrated Pain and Wellness (IPW) Program was launched in 2019 to identify and treat pain patients at high risk of long-term opioid use, which can result in more frequent and costly visits to hospitals and emergency rooms. It’s one of several efforts in recent years aimed at identifying high risk patients, such as the controversial analytical software used by NarxCare or the far simpler Opioid Risk Tool survey.

Many pain patients feel stigmatized by these risk assessments, and feel they’ve been weaponized solely to deny them treatment with opioids.   

The IPW program is a little different. Patients are encouraged – but not required – to reduce their use of opioids, try non-opioid treatments, and undergo behavioral health therapies to help them learn how to accept their pain without being obsessed by it.     

“Our goal was to establish a comprehensive, integrated approach to pain management that prioritizes early intervention, reduces the dependency on opioids by providing alternative pain management strategies, and decreases the utilization of acute care resources,” wrote Padma Gulur, MD, a Professor in Anesthesiology and Population Health Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine. 

Gulur and her colleagues assessed how 432 patients at the highest risk of poor pain outcomes did after being enrolled in the IPW program.  

Their findings, published in NEJM Catalyst, show that about half the patients (224) reduced their opioid use within 30 days, while a small number (50) increased their opioid use. 

The average improvement in self-reported pain scores was modest (from 6.56 down to 6.11), as were minor improvements in physical function, anxiety, depression and fatigue.  

There were more robust signs of the IPW program’s success in reducing healthcare utilization, with emergency room visits falling by 26% and hospital admissions declining by 43% among the high-risk patients. 

“This approach led to marked patient improvements in both physical and psychological health outcomes,” Gulur said. "By demonstrating the effectiveness of early identification and intervention for patients at risk of poor pain outcomes, this research can inform the development of new therapies and treatment approaches focused on prevention.” 

One hurdle that remains is getting more patients to participate. Of the 13,561 patients who answered “yes” to both questions in the high-risk assessment, less than 11% accepted a referral into the IPW program. Researchers say many were already being treated at pain clinics outside Duke Health and declined to participate.