Pain Patients Tired of Being Labeled as Addicts

By Pat Anson, Editor

If there’s one thing that gets a pain patient frustrated or angry, it’s being labeled as an addict or a “drug seeker” in search of opioids.  So imagine hearing that from a doctor or nurse at a hospital where you’ve gone for treatment because your pain is out of control or unbearable.

But it happens all the time.

“I refuse to go to the ER for pain. Unless I feel I'm absolutely dying, I will not go. It isn't worth being made to feel like I'm only ‘putting on a show’ or I'm a junkie just trying to get high,” one pain sufferer told us. “In every situation I've experienced in going to the ER with a complaint (of) pain, I've been made to feel less than human and was automatically met with suspicion.”

“I was screamed at and humiliated by the front desk nurse in front of a whole lobby of people for having pain and no medication or treatment. Had nowhere to go and didn’t know what else to do. She was so angry at me, I was shocked. I couldn’t believe it,” said another pain patent.

“My husband experienced a ruptured appendix at home,” wrote one woman. “His hospital experience was a nightmare! I had to stay at the hospital 24/7 just to make sure that his pain was kept under control. He was ridiculed, humiliated and not believed to the point that he was ready to walk out.”

Those are some of the typical responses we received in a survey of over 1,250 acute and chronic pain patients by Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation (IPain).  Nearly three out four patients surveyed said they currently take an opioid pain medication.

When asked if they ever felt labeled as an addict or drug seeker by hospital staff, nearly half (46%) said they often were and over a third (34%) said it happens sometimes. Only 20% of pain patents said they had not been labeled.

“I was treated like a drug seeker and humiliated in front of the staff and patients. This has happened several times,” wrote one pain sufferer.

“I was insulted, berated, and humiliated by hospital staff while seeking help for my chronic pain conditions,” said another.

DID YOU EVER FEEL YOU WERE LABELED AS AN ADDICT OR "DRUG SEEKER" BY HOSPITAL STAFF?

“I have panic attacks about going to the hospital because I have been treated so badly,” wrote one woman. “I've heard nurses say, ‘She's only here for the free meds.’ I've had nurses and doctors yell at me when I explain my pain symptoms and ask for something simple like a pillow, or an IV in a different spot. I've been told, ‘You’re in a hospital. You are supposed to be uncomfortable!’”

“Doctors have called me a liar when it comes to why I have previously been in the ER or hospital. I have been told I am no better than a street addict,” wrote a patient who has pancreatitis and lupus.

“The nurses that treated me saw on the state Rx monitoring website I was taking opioids (although I had already told them). They shut the curtain and told me to take a nap! I was not seen by a doctor and was told I was a drug seeker,” wrote a patient who was seeking treatment for abdominal pain. “I got up and left and a couple weeks later was diagnosed with diverticulitis and a serious infection that could have killed me. I had 2 1/2 feet of my intestine taken out.”

Asked if doctors were reluctant to give them opioid pain medication while they were hospitalized, 38% of pain patients said it happens often and 36% said sometimes. Only 26% said no.

“I had a doctor in an emergency room situation one time during an episode I was having, who actually stood in the open doorway of my room, I was still in the ER, and yelled at me as loud as he could, that he wasn't giving me any pain medicine,” said one patient.

“I understand why opioids are scary to prescribe and I do understand that there are a lot of people just looking to get high. But doctors and hospitals discriminate (against) all of us with real medical problems and it’s inhumane,” wrote another.

WERE DOCTORS RELUCTANT TO GIVE YOU OPIOID PAIN MEDICATION WHILE YOU WERE HOSPITALIZED?

“The nurses and doctors need to understand the difference between the 98% who are not drug seeking and be able to address the patients’ needs who present in front of them,” said Barby Ingle, president of IPain.  “Treatment based on misconceptions and poor pain understanding is not ethical or appropriate. We must create policies that support the pain patient and their individual needs.”

Even patients who do not take opioid medication said they were labeled as addicts or drug seekers --  just as often as those who take opioids.

“I am really sick of being looked at as if I am there for dope meds. Not all of us is addictive or crazy about pain meds,” wrote one patient.

“I am not a bad person. I am sick. I did not do this to myself, it was done to me in childhood trauma. I was abused, please don't abuse me more,” pleaded another patient.

“Everyone needs to be treated with compassion, respect, and have their concerns listened to. This is not happening. We need to start holding people accountable for how they treat people in pain,” says Janice Reynolds, a pain sufferer and retired palliative care nurse.

“I would encourage everyone when you have been to the ER or in the hospital to write a letter to the CEO of the hospital, the vice president of nursing, and the medical and nursing managers of the department you were in.  Tell them how you were treated, how they made you feel, what happened that didn’t work, and try to get names and write them down.  Do this for good treatment as well as bad treatment,” Reynolds wrote in an email Pain News Network.

“I have actually done this and while one letter may not be effective, you are a costumer and if they get several letters they may start seeing there is a problem.  I know at the hospital I worked at, we were always told about a positive or negative comment which mentioned us by name.”

Another way to lodge a complaint – or compliment – is in patient satisfaction surveys, which Medicare requires hospitals to conduct to prove they provide quality care. Medicare rewards hospitals that are rated highly by patients, while penalizing those who do not. 

However, Maine Sen. Susan Collins (R) and 25 of her colleagues in the U.S. Senate have sent a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell asking that Medicare stop asking patients about their pain care because that could lead to opioid overprescribing.

“We are concerned that the current evaluation system may inappropriately penalize hospitals and pressure physicians who, in the exercise of medical judgment, opt to limit opioid pain relievers to certain patients and instead reward those who prescribe opioids more frequently,” the letter states.

Pain patients say that’s nonsense. When we asked if patients should still be asked about their pain care in hospital satisfaction surveys, over 92% said yes and less than 3% said no.

“I find this notion that we would stop asking patients how well their pain was controlled in the hospital appalling,” said Cindy Steinberg, National Director of Policy and Advocacy for the U.S. Pain Foundation. “Dropping these questions from the Medicare survey sends the message that pain relief is no longer part of a quality-of-care measure that hospital staff need be concerned about. Controlling patients’ pain is just not that important any more.  Is this really where we want to go?

SHOULD PATIENTS BE ASKED ABOUT THEIR PAIN CARE IN HOSPITAL SATISFACTION SURVEYS?

“We have moved from the war on drugs to the war on pain patients and now to the war on the very concept of appropriately treating pain.  This is a shameful perspective that condones a cavalier and uncaring attitude toward the pain and suffering of fellow human beings.  I wonder what the Senators who signed this letter would say about the responsibility for doctors and nurses in hospitals to relieve pain if it was their loved ones or themselves who was experiencing unrelieved pain in the hospital?”

A request to Sen. Collins’ office for an interview or statement on the survey findings went unanswered.

To see the complete survey results, click here.

Tomorrow we'll see how pain patients feel about non-opioid medications and whether they are effective in providing pain relief.

Pain Patients Fed Up with Poor Treatment in Hospitals

By Pat Anson, Editor

Eight out of ten pain patients feel hospital staff have not been adequately trained in pain management and over half rate the quality of their pain care in hospitals as either poor or very poor, according to a new survey.

Over 1,250 acute and chronic pain patients participated in the online survey by Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation (IPain). The survey findings -- supported by the comments and experiences of hundreds of pain patients -- amount to a stinging indictment of hospital pain care in the United States.

It’s not uncommon for pain patients to suffer from a variety of chronic conditions and diseases, and many told us they've been hospitalized several times. 

Asked to rate the overall quality of their medical care in hospitals, pain patients were fairly even-handed in their ratings. About a third said it was good or very good, 37% said it was fair and 29% said it was poor or very poor.

But some said they were so badly treated and traumatized by the experience, they’re afraid to go back.

“It's so bad that I will not seek treatment in an ER or hospital unless I really feel like my life is in jeopardy. They do not get it, they do not listen, and they do not care,” is how one pain patient put it.

“I refuse to go to ER. It will end up killing me because I know how sick I am, but I would rather die than deal with ignorant, condescending doctors and nurses,” wrote another.

HOW WOULD YOU RATE THE OVERALL QUALITY OF YOUR MEDICAL CARE IN HOSPITALS?

Several healthcare providers also wrote to us, admitting pain patients were often treated poorly.

"Many of my colleagues would refuse to medicate patients in pain, especially women in pain. They had many misconceptions that women were attention seeking, or exaggerating their pain. They also believed that even short term opioid therapy would 'create' addiction," wrote a nurse.

"I am a nurse anesthetist as well as a patient with fibromyalgia and severe arthritis," said another nurse. "The USA does a horrible job treating chronic pain. Too many suffer and too many commit suicide because of this."

When asked to rate only the quality of their pain treatment, the survey results were decidedly negative. Over 52% said their pain treatment in hospitals was poor or very poor, 25% rated it fair, and only 23% said it was good or very good.

Many patients complained that their pain went untreated or under-treated, even though pain was usually the primary reason they were admitted to a hospital. 

“I was at the ER once crying because I was in so much pain and I had a nurse tell me to shut up and cut the act. Never been treated so inhumanely,” said one pain patient.

“I've had to fight for proper pain management every time I've been in a hospital in the last 10 years. The DEA created this problem and the CDC is only reinforcing it. It's a travesty,” wrote another.

HOW WOULD YOU RATE THE QUALITY OF YOUR PAIN TREATMENT IN HOSPITALS?

“If I were an animal and was treated the way I was after surgery my owner would have been arrested for cruelty to an animal. As a human being, don't I deserve to be treated at least as well as an animal?” asked another pain sufferer.

"I've stopped going to hospitals even if I feel I'm having another stroke or heart attack, due to the horrific lack of pain control," wrote a patient who has multiple autoimmune diseases. "I'd rather die than be judged or be left writhing in pain."

"Pain is under-treated and at times downright ignored. I believe that this is leading to the cause of chronic pain in some patients," wrote another patient.

There is some evidence to support the claim that untreated or under-treated acute pain can turn into chronic pain. A study published in the Lancet warned thatan alarmingly high number of patients develop chronic pain after routine surgery.”

Yet when pain patients were asked in our survey if their pain was adequately controlled after surgery or treatment in a hospital, nearly two-thirds (64%) said no and only 34% said yes. 

“There is research demonstrating that the intensity of acute postoperative pain correlates with the risk of going on to develop chronic pain. This suggests that aggressive early therapy for postoperative pain is critical for preventing the pain from turning chronic,” says Cindy Steinberg, National Director of Policy and Advocacy for the U.S. Pain Foundation.

IF YOU EXPERIENCED PAIN AFTER A SURGERY OR TREATMENT IN A HOSPITAL, WAS IT ADEQUATELY CONTROLLED?

“Minimizing and deemphasizing the focus on controlling acute pain in hospital settings is likely going to set us up for potentially dramatic increases in the number of Americans with long term chronic pain.”

By treating acute pain so poorly, could our hospitals and emergency rooms be mass-producing future chronic pain patients?

And, if so, what can be done to stop it?

One solution – overwhelmingly supported by respondents to our survey – is better education in pain management for doctors, nurses and other healthcare providers.

Asked if they feel hospital staff are adequately train in pain management, nearly 83% of pain patients said no and just 9% said yes.  

“All staff should be educated and able to understand the difference between opioid dependency and opioid abuse," wrote one pain patient. "Over the last decade I have witnessed the quality of care for pain management plummet, and I have also observed increased chronic mistreatment of pain patients.”

"I am a nurse. Anyone who has chronic pain is labeled automatically as a drug seeker. The under-education about chronic pain is alarming. The way truthful patients are treated is just deplorable," wrote another pain sufferer.

OVERALL, DO YOU FEEL HOSPITAL STAFF ARE ADEQUATELY TRAINED IN PAIN MANAGEMENT?

"I think that hospital staff members are trained to be afraid of pain patients. They know what is necessary to treat pain, even chronic pain, but the fear that is instilled in them by oversight committees, the DEA, and Congress that all opiod pain prescriptions lead to drug addiction has led them to be afraid of treating pain patients. Education is the key," wrote another pain sufferer.

“In my 20+ years of having CRPS (Chronic Regional Pain Syndrome), I have never been to an ER where the staff even knew what it was,” wrote one of several readers who lamented that doctors and nurses are often ignorant about CRPS and RSD (Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy).

“I have experienced this myself. The nurses didn’t understand my pain conditions and how my body reacted. They didn’t understand that I had additional needs," said Barby Ingle, president of IPain, who suffers from RSD. "I have recently had a provider ask, 'Does it really hurt that bad?' while doing a procedure on me under local anesthesia. I was screaming, crying, and moving so much that a normal patient gets 7 anesthetic shots. For me it took 28 and those were extremely painful.

“For a pain patient to go to a hospital for pain care and still have their pain unaddressed, under-treated, or misunderstood is clear evidence that we need better education for hospital staff."

The lack of pain education in medical schools is not new. A 2012 study published in the Journal of Pain  called pain education "lackluster" in the U.S. and Canada. The study of 117 medical schools found that less than 4% required a course in pain education and many did not have any pain courses.

Despite that, opioid prescribing guidelines released this month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention only briefly mention the agency will "work with partners to support clinician education" and even that vague promise is only focused on reducing opioid use. The same is true for the Food and Drug Administration, which recently announced several sweeping changes in its opioid policies, none of which address physician education.  

Only the recently adopted National Pain Strategy (NPS) acknowledges that "most health care professions’ education programs devote little time to education and training about pain and pain care," and suggests several ways to improve them.  But it's unclear how the NPS will ever be implemented, since it has no budget and relies on major policy changes involving medical schools, accreditation groups,  healthcare providers, and regulatory agencies. 

"I think it’s true that many hospital providers are poorly educated about pain management, and, especially if the patient’s condition is complex, understanding what is going on and finding a good solution can be very challenging,” said Bob Twillman, PhD, Executive Director of the American Academy of Pain Management, who believes providers need more empathy, as well as education.

"In my experience, I found that hospitalized patients were much more satisfied if they just felt like someone understood them and their pain, expressed a sense of caring, and made a strong effort to help. For those patients, even if you weren’t able to get their pain controlled for a little while, they really appreciated the fact that someone believed them and was trying to help. Sometimes, it’s as much about caring for the person with pain as it is treating the person with pain."

To see the complete survey results, click here.

 

New Anti-Opioid Campaigns Launched

By Pat Anson, Editor

Two provocative anti-opioid campaigns were launched this week -- one aimed at educating parents and the other warning physicians about the risks associated with opioid pain medications.

A report by the National Safety Council claims that 99 percent of doctors are prescribing opioid pain medication longer than the three-day period recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly a quarter (23%) of the doctors surveyed said they prescribe at least a month's worth of opioids to their patients.  

Guidelines for primary care physicians released last week by the CDC state that three days or less supply of opioids “often will be sufficient” for acute pain caused by trauma or surgery, and that 7 days supply “will rarely be needed.”

The small survey of 201 family medicine and internal medicine physicians by the National Safety Council (NSC) did not distinguish between acute and chronic pain in their questions, making the findings somewhat misleading.

“For what period of time do you ordinarily prescribe opioid pain medication?” is what the doctors were asked.

Acute pain was the most common reason (87%) opioids were prescribed, but doctors said they prescribe opioid pain medication for many other conditions that the NSC considers inappropriate, including:

  • 72% Chronic back pain
  • 63% Chronic joint pain
  • 55% Dental pain
  • 55% Neuropathic pain
  • 32% Fibromyalgia
  • 28% Chronic headaches

The NSC’s report on the survey findings also claim that acetaminophen and ibuprofen are far more effective at providing pain relief than opioids and that doctors “overestimate the efficacy of opioids and underestimate the impact of safer alternatives.”

"Opioids do not kill pain; they kill people," said Donald Teater, MD, medical advisor for the National Safety Council. "Doctors are well-intentioned and want to help their patients, but these findings are further proof that we need more education and training if we want to treat pain most effectively."

The NSC survey also found that 99% of the doctors “have seen patients with pill-seeking behavior or evidence of drug abuse,” but handled the situation in very different ways:

  • 44% Continued to treat the patient, but without opioids
  • 38% Referred patient to addiction treatment
  • 10% “Fired” the patient
  •    5% Treated patient for addiction themselves
  •    1% Refilled the opioid prescription
  •    1% Never had a patient abuse opioids

Nearly 90% of doctors said it was difficult or very difficult to refer a patient for addiction treatment. Most blamed their patients, saying they were unwilling or uncooperative. Lack of insurance for addiction treatments and long waiting lists were two other reasons often cited.

The National Safety Council is a nonprofit organization focused on preventing injuries and deaths. It is funded largely through corporate donations and the insurance industry. The NSC has long had an aggressive campaign against opioids and claims they are the root cause of the prescription drug overdose epidemic.

“Opioids are being overprescribed. And it is not children reaching in medicine cabinets who have made drug poisoning the #1 cause of unintentional death in the United States. Adults have been prescribed opioids by doctors and subsequently become addicted or move from pills to heroin,” the NSC says on its website.

"Would you give your child heroin?"

Linking opioid pain medication to heroin is the focus of an advertising campaign launched this week, called "You Decide Before They Prescribe."

Created by the Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey, the campaign encourages parents to tell their doctors to prescribe alternative pain medications instead of opioids to their children.

“Would you give your child HEROIN to remove a wisdom tooth?” asks a new billboard unveiled in New York’s Times Square. "Ask your dentist how prescription drugs can lead to heroin abuse."

Similar ads will appear on trains and buses in New Jersey, and the organization eventually hopes the campaign will spread nationwide.

"40% of New Jersey parents still walk into a physician's office not understanding the link between prescription pain medicine and heroin – that opioids are a synthetic version of heroin," said Angelo Valente, Executive Director of Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey.

“The majority of New Jersey parents strongly agree that physicians should be legally required to discuss the risk of developing either a physical or psychological dependency on the prescription pain medication with patients prior to prescribing it." 

PARTNERSHIP FOR DRUG-FREE NEW JERSEY

PARTNERSHIP FOR DRUG-FREE NEW JERSEY

Montana Doctor to Seek ‘Medical Asylum’

By Pat Anson, Editor

A doctor whose license was suspended indefinitely by the Montana Board of Medical Examiners for over-prescribing opioids plans to seek “medical asylum” in other states or even overseas.

The Montana medical board issued its 80-page final order suspending Dr. Mark Ibsen’s license on Tuesday, the latest chapter in a three year investigation into Ibsen’s opioid prescribing practices. Ibsen was accused of over-prescribing pain medication to nine patients and keeping inadequate medical records on them, even though investigators did not cite a single case where Ibsen’s practices led to someone’s death or injury. Ibsen disputes the charges and will file an appeal.

(Update: District Court Judge James P. Reynolds on Thursday issued a temporary restraining order that prohibits the Montana Board of Medical Examiners from suspending Ibsen's license for 30 days.)

“I was kind of hoping for a Hail Mary. I was hoping they’d come to their senses, but they didn’t,” Ibsen said.

The board left the door open for Ibsen to someday get his license reinstated if he takes a class on medical record keeping and is under the supervision of another physician. Ibsen says the terms for reinstatement are “impossibly vague” and impractical, but he doesn’t intend to give up medicine.

“I’ll go wherever I can get a license. I’m considering myself a medical refugee and I’m seeking medical asylum, whether it’s in New Zealand or Australia or Canada or one of the United States,” he told Pain News Network.

In May, Ibsen plans to go to India and do volunteer work.

dr. mark ibsen

dr. mark ibsen

“I do have an agreement to travel with a mission to northern India in Zanskar province, with a group that’s going to help the Dali Lama open up a hospital there,” he said. “I’m going be bringing an ultrasound for them, hopefully train them how to use it, and I’m going to screen kids for congenital heart disease and rheumatic heart disease. There’s a lot of strep infections in that area. And I’ll be doing general medicine.”

Ibsen said he last visited India in 1989 and is not worried about needing a license to practice medicine there.

“I’ll treat the underserved and people who don’t get care anyway. The Indian government is not at the level of regulating licenses of volunteers,” he said.

Ibsen was one of the last doctors in Montana willing to prescribe opioids to new patients and became something of a folk hero in the pain community, treating patients that other doctors had abandoned.

In December, financial problems forced Ibsen to close his Urgent Care Plus clinic in Helena. Since then, various efforts to reopen it under new management have fallen through. Ibsen is not sure what will become of the clinic.

“Right now the business is dead and rotting,” he said.

FDA Orders Stronger Warning Labels for Opioids

By Pat Anson, Editor

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is strengthening the warning labels on the nation’s most widely used opioid painkillers. The FDA is adding a “black box” warning to immediate release (IR) opioid pain medications, such as hydrocodone and oxycodone, stating that they pose serious risks of misuse, abuse, addiction, overdose and death.

The FDA will also require additional safety labeling changes on all other opioid medications, warning they can interact with antidepressants and migraine medications, or cause impotence and infertility.

The actions are the latest in a series of steps taken by the Obama administration to combat the so-called epidemic of opioid abuse and addiction by reining in the use of opioid pain medications. Last week the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new guidelines that discourage primary care physicians from prescribing opioids for chronic pain,

The updated warning will state that IR opioids should be reserved for pain severe enough to require opioid treatment and for which alternative treatment options (non-opioid analgesics or opioid combination products) are inadequate or not tolerated. Dosing information will also provide clearer instructions about the initial recommended dosage, dosage changes during therapy, and a warning not to abruptly stop treatment in a physically dependent patient.

A sample of the new black box warning label can be seen here:

"Opioid addiction and overdose have reached epidemic levels over the past decade, and the FDA remains steadfast in our commitment to do our part to help reverse the devastating impact of the misuse and abuse of prescription opioids,” said Robert Califf, MD, FDA commissioner.

“Today’s actions are one of the largest undertakings for informing prescribers of risks across opioid products, and one of many steps the FDA intends to take this year as part of our comprehensive action plan to reverse this epidemic.”

Califf, a cardiologist who was recently confirmed by the U.S. Senate, has also pledged to prioritize development of non-opioid alternatives for pain and to convene an expert advisory committee before approving any new drug applications for opioids that do not have abuse deterrent properties. 

In 2013, the FDA ordered labeling changes only for extended release opioids, a move that angered some politicians and addiction treatment specialists, who wanted stronger warning labels on all opioids. At the time, the agency said there was not enough evidence to support stronger warnings for IR opioids, which are intended for use every four to six hours.

Today’s action sweeps that earlier objection away.

“The broad set of actions announced today is reflective of the FDA’s efforts to improve informed prescribing of opioids across the board,” said Janet Woodcock, MD, director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, who opposed IR labeling changes three years ago.

“We have been and will continue to evaluate all new data to ensure that labels of opioid drugs contain appropriate prescribing information about the benefits and risks of prescription opioids,” she said.

As part of the new boxed warning on IR opioids, the FDA will requires a statement that chronic use of opioids by pregnant women could result in neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS), which may occur in a newborn exposed to opioids for a prolonged period while in utero.

“We know that there is persistent abuse, addiction, overdose mortality and risk of NOWS associated with IR opioid products,” said Douglas Throckmorton, M.D., deputy center director of regulatory programs, FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

Last week, the head of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), disputed that claim in a response to the CDC guidelines, saying they overstated the risk to pregnant women and newborns.

“Neonatal abstinence syndrome is the most established risk to newborns from use of opioids in pregnancy, but it is expected and treatable, and does not appear to pose permanent risks to the neonate,” said ACOG president Mark DeFrancesco, MD.

“However, evidence shows that withdrawal from opioid use during pregnancy may be associated with complications including fetal demise.  While some studies have suggested an association between birth defects and other adverse outcomes with opioid use in pregnancy, the absolute risk of these problems is low and data demonstrating a causal connection are lacking.”

Sen. Edward Markey (D-Mass) applauded the label changes by the FDA, but said they should have come sooner.

“Today’s announced changes to the labels of opioid products will finally reflect what we have known about these drugs for decades - they are dangerous and addictive and can lead to dependency, overdose and death,” said Markey in a statement. “Whether it's immediate or extended release, or abuse-deterrent, the labels given by the FDA have done little to prevent opioid addiction. Unfortunately, it has taken FDA far too long to address the grave risks of these drugs that have claimed the lives of thousands this year alone.”

Markey said the FDA also needs to convene an external advisory committee whenever it considers a new opioid for approval, something Califf has promised to do.

Doctors Have Mixed Reaction to CDC Guidelines

By Pat Anson, Editor

Although generally supportive of the CDC’s new opioid prescribing guidelines, some doctors are worried that patients who need opioid pain medications may lose access to them.

The voluntary guidelines, which discourage the prescribing of opioids for chronic pain, are intended for primary care physicians, but are widely expected to have a ripple effect throughout the healthcare system and on anyone who prescribes opioids.

"If these guidelines help reduce the deaths resulting from opioids, they will prove to be valuable. If they produce unintended consequences, we will need to mitigate them. They are not the final word," said Patrice Harris, MD, the board chair-elect of the American Medical Association, the nation’s largest medical group.

Like many other medical organizations that submitted public comments on the CDC guidelines, the AMA said it had concerns about the poor quality of scientific evidence supporting several of the recommendations. But the dozen guidelines are largely unchanged from a draft version that was released last September.

“We remain concerned about the evidence base informing some of the recommendations; conflicts with existing state laws and product labeling; and possible unintended consequences associated with implementation, which includes access and insurance coverage limitations for non-pharmacologic treatments, especially comprehensive care; and the potential effects of strict dosage and duration limits on patient care,” said Harris, who chairs the AMA Task Force to Reduce Opioid Abuse.

The lack of clinical evidence was also pointed out by other physicians.

 “There are few well-controlled clinical studies on opioid-prescribing methods for chronic pain. While the guidelines will be updated as new data become available, concerns may be raised that appropriate access to opioids could be negatively affected by federal guidelines based on admittedly weak data,”  wrote William Renthal, MD, of the Department of Neurology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in an editorial in JAMA Neurology.

The head of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) said he was concerned the guidelines overstate the risks of opioids for women during pregnancy and after labor.

“ACOG agrees with the CDC that opioid should only be used for treatment of pain when alternatives are not appropriate or effective, but we also know that there are times, including during pregnancy and the postpartum period, when such use is both appropriate and safer than the alternative,” wrote ACOG president Mark DeFrancesco, MD. “Opioids may be needed to treat acute pain such as from cesarean delivery, kidney stones, sickle cell crisis or trauma in pregnancy, or as part of an established plan to treat problems associated with substance use disorders.”

DeFrancesco said the risk of birth defects and other problems caused by opioids was low and research demonstrating a connection was lacking.

“We are concerned that some of the CDC's patient education communications regarding use of opioids during pregnancy could discourage women from needed, appropriate care by overstating the risk of rare complications associated with opioid use during pregnancy and by understating the potential risk associated with opioid discontinuation, “ he said.

Two pediatric physicians are concerned the guidelines are only intended for patients 18 and older and do not address pain or opioid use by children.

“Unfortunately, the exclusion of children from the national discussion on pain is not new,” wrote Neil Schechter, MD, of Boston Children’s Hospital and Gary Walco, PhD, of Seattle Children’s Hospital in an editorial in JAMA Pediatrics. “Data clearly show that poorly treated pain in the young has deleterious long-term consequences on the development of pain systems and related responses, as well as psychological well-being. Furthermore, the long-term impact of pain on a developing organism may be quite different than on an adult and may suggest more aggressive, or at least different, interventions.”

Schechter and Walco urged the CDC to provide ”an explicit and definitive statement that this guideline should not be applied to those younger than 18 years of age for fear of untoward consequences.”

The Alliance for Balanced Pain Management (AfBPM), a coalition of patient groups and professional societies, said it was concerned about opioid dosing limits and the CDC recommendation that three days or less supply of opioids “often will be sufficient” to treat acute pain from surgery or trauma.

“When the CDC suggests the exact number of days and the precise dosing limit, the agency may be inserting itself too far, interfering with physician care of patients who live day to day with serious pain,” said Brian Kennedy, Alliance for Patient Access and a member of the AfBPM Steering Committee. “These guidelines mark a milestone in the national conversation about how we treat pain, both chronic and acute. Multimodal approaches to pain treatment make use of non-opioid treatments and have tremendous value for patients, but we shouldn’t tie physicians’ hands when it comes to treatment options.”

 “The data will never be perfect. The measures will never be perfect. The guidelines will never be perfect. And neither will clinicians and their performance,” wrote Thomas Lee, MD, of Press Ganey and Harvard Medical School in a JAMA editorial. “But by acknowledging these imperfections and trying to get better with the tools available, physicians can more effectively reduce the suffering of patients.”

1 in 6 Seniors Take Risky Drug Combinations

By Pat Anson, Editor

One in six older adults now regularly use potentially deadly combinations of prescription drugs, over-the-counter (OTC) medications and supplements, a two-fold increase over a five-year period, according to new research published in JAMA Internal Medicine.

Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago surveyed over 2,200 Americans between the ages of 62 and 85 and found that over half (54%) were taking some type of pain reliever in 2011.

Over 40 percent used aspirin; nearly 14% took non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs); and about 11% used an opioid analgesic.

Only 44% were using a pain reliever in 2006.

Researchers identified 15 potentially life-threatening drug combinations of the most commonly used medications and supplements. Statins, anti-platelet drugs such as aspirin, and supplements (specifically omega-3 fish oil) accounted for the vast majority of interacting drug medications, some of which worsen cardiovascular problems. Opioids were not listed among the 15 risky combinations.

Nearly 15% of older adults regularly used at least one of the dangerous drug combinations in 2011, compared to 8% five years earlier.

"The risk seems to be growing, and public awareness is lacking," said Dima Mazen Qato, an assistant professor of pharmacy systems at the University of Illinois.

"Many older patients seeking to improve their cardiovascular health are also regularly using interacting drug combinations that may worsen cardiovascular risk. For example, the use of clopidogrel in combination with the proton-pump inhibitor omeprazole, aspirin, or naproxen -- all over-the-counter medications -- is associated with an increased risk of heart attacks, bleeding complications, or death.”

As Pain News Network reported, European researchers also warned last week that aspirin and some types of NSAID’s could be harmful to patients with heart or kidney problems. The researchers said NSAIDs, in particular, raise cardiovascular risk and there is no "solid evidence" the drugs are safe.

"When doctors issue prescriptions for NSAIDs, they must in each individual case carry out a thorough assessment of the risk of heart complications and bleeding. NSAIDs should only be sold over the counter when it comes with an adequate warning about the associated cardiovascular risks,” said Christian Torp-Pedersen, a professor in cardiology at Aalborg University in Denmark.

In opioid prescribing guidelines released last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends "nonopioid pharmacologic therapy" such as acetaminophen and NSAIDs as the "preferred" treatments for chronic pain. Only briefly do the CDC guidelines even mention that NSAIDs have been associated with cardiovascular risks or that acetaminophen may cause liver failure. Instead, the 52-page guideline focuses on the risks of opioid addiction and abuse.

Over half of the risky drug combinations in the University of Illinois study involved over-the-counter medications or dietary supplements.

Feds Quietly Release National Pain Strategy

By Pat Anson, Editor

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) on Friday quietly released the National Pain Strategy, a comprehensive and ambitious “roadmap” to improve the quality of pain care in the United States. The 83-page report was overshadowed by the opioid prescribing guidelines released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention just a few days earlier.

Development of the National Pain Strategy (NPS) began over five years ago after the Institute of Medicine released a report calling for a “cultural transformation” in pain care, prevention, research, and education. Although the NPS was being closely watched by researchers, academics, regulators and professional societies, many long-suffering pain patients will be surprised to hear the U.S. even has a national pain strategy.

The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) did little to publicize the NPS, issuing a single news release that wasn’t even posted on its own website 24 hours later.  There was no press briefing for reporters to explain why the NPS was developed or what its objectives are.

The announcement wasn't even made by HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell, but by a lower ranking aide.

“Chronic pain is a significant public health problem, affecting millions of Americans and incurring significant economic costs to our society,”  Karen DeSalvo, MD, acting assistant secretary for health at HHS, said in the news release. “This report identifies the key steps we can take to improve how we prevent, assess and treat pain in this country.”

The major goals of the NPS are:

  • Develop new methods to prevent and manage pain.
  • Improve pain education of physicians
  • Develop “integrated, interdisciplinary, patient-centered” pain management teams
  • Provide better insurance coverage of pain treatment options
  • Reduce barriers to pain care, especially for stigmatized and underserved populations.
  • Increase public awareness and patient knowledge of treatment options and risks

The 800-pound gorilla of pain management – opioid pain medicine – is only briefly mentioned in the NPS, and not in a positive way.

“Evidence suggests that wide variations in clinical practices, inadequate tailoring of pain therapies to individuals, and reliance on relatively ineffective and potentially high risk treatments such as inappropriate prescribing of opioid analgesics, or certain surgical interventions, not only contribute to poor quality care for people with pain, but also increase health care costs,” the report says.

“Treatments that are ineffective, whose risks exceed their benefits, or that may cause harm for certain subgroups need to be identified and their use curtailed or discontinued.”

“We need to ensure that people with pain get appropriate care and that means defining how we can best manage pain care in this country,” said Linda Porter, PhD, director of the National Institute of Health’s Office of Pain Policy and co-chair of an interagency committee that helped develop the report.

“To achieve the goals in this report, we will need everyone working together to create the cultural transformation in pain prevention, care and education that is desperately needed by the American public,” said Sean Mackey, MD, who heads the Division of Pain Medicine at Stanford University and is co-chair of the interagency committee.

Still unclear is how the NPS will ever be implemented, since it relies on major policy changes and coordinated action involving medical schools, healthcare providers, insurers, government agencies, Congress and the White House. No estimate is provided on how much it will cost or where funding will come from.

“The NPS is riddled with vague terms and objectives -- which render the whole effort too subject to interpretation,” says David Becker, a patient advocate and author of “Quotes on Pain.” “I find it fascinating that despite the outcry from individuals regarding very specific concerns and problems, they are intent on imposing population based public health solutions on individuals. They can’t see the trees for the forest. And their plan is to help some nameless faceless pain sufferers with a very homogenized approach.

“The whole report reminds me of a Seinfeld episode when he says his show is all about nothing. The NPS is about some vague objectives -- even though the underlying philosophy, politics, privileges -- are only too clear. I guess those privileged pain specialists just don’t wish to be pinned down too much about what their pig in the poke is all about.”

The NPS was quickly endorsed by the American Pain Society (APS), a professional group that focuses on pain research.

“The National Pain Strategy gives the nation a blueprint for aggressive action to expand access to effective pain care,” said APS President Gregory Terman, MD. “Pain is a serious and often neglected public health problem that is draining our health care resources. It is responsible for inestimable lost wages, impaired worker productivity, and extracts a tragic personal toll on patients and their families.”  

Terman and several other APS members were involved in drafting the National Pain Strategy, as well as the CDC’s opioid prescribing guidelines.

“We believe several high impact policy initiatives will emerge from implementation of the National Pain Strategy, especially in helping primary-care physicians, who see that vast majority of pain patients, become more knowledgeable about pain mechanisms, pain assessment, and safe use of analgesic medications,” Terman said.

CDC Guidelines Urge Doctors Not to Test for Marijuana

By Pat Anson, Editor

One of the less publicized provisions in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s opioid prescribing guidelines is a recommendation that doctors stop urine drug testing of patients for tetrahyrdocannabinol (THC), the psychoactive ingredient that causes the “high” for some marijuana users. The guidelines also discourage doctors from dropping patients if marijuana is detected.

Urine drug screens are conducted almost routinely by pain management physicians and other opioid prescribers for a variety of drugs, both legal and illegal.

Some doctors use a positive result for THC as an excuse to discharge patients from their practices, even in states where medical marijuana is legal.

While the CDC guidelines encourage physicians to conduct urine drug tests before starting opioid therapy and at least annually afterwards, they draw the line at THC.

bigstock-Concerned-Doctor-With-Sample-5032694.jpg

Clinicians should not test for substances for which results would not affect patient management or for which implications for patient management are unclear. For example, experts noted that there might be uncertainty about the clinical implications of a positive urine drug test for tetrahyrdocannabinol (THC).” the guidelines state.

"Clinicians should not dismiss patients from care based on a urine drug test result because this could constitute patient abandonment and could have adverse consequences for patient safety, potentially including the patient obtaining opioids from alternative sources and the clinician missing opportunities to facilitate treatment for substance use disorder."

As Pain News Network has reported, “point-of care” (POC) urine drug tests, the kind widely used in doctor’s offices, frequently giving false positive or false negative results for drugs like marijuana, oxycodone and methadone. One study found that 21% of POC tests for marijuana produced a false positive result. The test was also wrong 21% of the time when marijuana is not detected in a urine sample.

Not mentioned in the CDC guidelines is evidence that opioid overdose rates declined by nearly 25 percent in states where medical marijuana was legalized.

"We applaud the CDC's reasoned approach to the use of urine testing and its drawbacks when used on pain patients," said Ellen Komp, Deputy Director of California NORML. "Considering that opioid overdose deaths are significantly lower in states with medical marijuana programs, we are sorry the agency apparently didn't read the letter Elizabeth Warren recently sent to its chief calling for marijuana legalization as a means of dealing with the problem of opiate overdose."

That letter by Sen. Warren encouraged the CDC to adopt the guidelines and its restrictive approach to opioids “as soon as possible,” but also encouraged the agency to further study the impact legalization of medical and recreational marijuana could have on opioid overdose deaths.

The annual cost of drug testing in pain management is estimated at $2 billion per year. While POC tests are relatively cheap, more expensive laboratory testing can cost thousands of dollars and is often not covered by insurance.

New Warning About Over-the-Counter Pain Relievers

By Pat Anson, Editor

At a time when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is recommending that non-opioid pain relievers such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) be used to treat chronic and acute pain, European researchers are warning about health risks associated with those same over-the-counter pain medications.

In guidelines for primary care physicians released on Tuesday, the CDC said "nonopioid pharmacologic therapy" such as acetaminophen and NSAIDs are "preferred" treatments for chronic pain.

Only briefly do the CDC guidelines even mention that NSAIDs “have been associated with hepatic, gastrointestinal, renal, and cardiovascular risks” and that acetaminophen may cause liver failure. The 52-page guideline instead focus on the risks of addiction and abuse associated with opioids.

But in a major new study published this week in the European Heart Journal, researchers at 14 European universities and hospitals, including a number of leading heart specialists, warn that some NSAID’s raise cardiovascular risk and that there is no "solid evidence" the drugs are safe.

"When doctors issue prescriptions for NSAIDs, they must in each individual case carry out a thorough assessment of the risk of heart complications and bleeding. NSAIDs should only be sold over the counter when it comes with an adequate warning about the associated cardiovascular risks. In general, NSAIDs are not be used in patients who have or are at high-risk of cardiovascular diseases," said co-author Christian Torp-Pedersen, a professor in cardiology at Aalborg University in Denmark.

Some of the greatest cardiovascular risk comes from a class of NSAIDs known as COX-2 inhibitors. A COX-2 inhibitor called Vioxx was voluntarily pulled from the market by Merck in 2004, but many other COX-2 inhibitors, such as Diclofenac, are still widely used around the world for pain relief.   

"It's been well-known for a number of years that newer types of NSAIDs - what are known as COX-2 inhibitors, increase the risk of heart attacks. For this reason, a number of these newer types of NSAIDs have been taken off the market again. We can now see that some of the older NSAID types, particularly Diclofenac, are also associated with an increased risk of heart attack and apparently to the same extent as several of the types that were taken off the market," said Morten Schmidt, MD, a postdoctoral research fellow at Aarhus University in Denmark.

Diclofenac is the most widely used NSAID in the world. It is sold under a number of different brand names, including Cambia, Voltaren and Zorvolex.

A second study of NSAIDs, published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that emergency room admissions can be significantly reduced if doctors stopped the “high-risk prescribing” of NSAIDs.

Researchers enrolled a group of primary care physicians in Scotland in an educational program aimed at reducing the exposure of patients with heart or kidney problems to NSAIDs like ibuprofen and aspirin, especially if the patients were taking anticoagulant drugs like warfarin. The study involved over 33,000 high risk patients.

After 48 weeks, the rate of hospital admissions for gastrointestinal ulcers or bleeding was significantly reduced, as was the rate of admissions for heart failure.

"Our previous work has shown that high-risk prescribing is common and often causes important harm. This new study shows that relatively simple interventions can significantly reduce high-risk prescribing in a lasting way, and are associated with reductions in emergency hospital admission for related complications,” said Professor Bruce Guthrie of the University of Dundee in Scotland.

High-risk prescribing and preventable drug-related complications are major concerns for healthcare providers around the world. Up to 4 per cent of emergency hospital admissions are caused by preventable adverse drug events, and in the United States the avoidable cost of drug-related hospital admissions was estimated at $19.6 billion in 2013.

The majority of drug-related emergency admissions to hospitals are caused by commonly prescribed drugs such as NSAIDs and acetaminophen.  Over 50 million people in the U.S. use acetaminophen each week for pain and fever – many not knowing the medication has long been associated with liver injury and allergic reactions such as skin rash. Over 50,000 emergency room visits each year in the U.S. are blamed on acetaminophen overdoses.

A recent study in the British Medical Journal  found that acetaminophen was ineffective in treating low back pain and provides little benefit to people with osteoarthritis. And in a survey of over 2,000 pain patients by Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation, 76 percent said that over-the-counter pain relievers “did not help at all” in relieving their pain.

Few Changes as CDC Releases Opioid Guidelines

By Pat Anson, Editor

After months of controversy, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has released the final version of its opioid prescribing guidelines, which discourage primary care physicians from prescribing opioid medication for chronic pain. The dozen guidelines are largely unchanged from a draft version that was released last September.

You can see the guidelines yourself by clicking here.

“Management of chronic pain is an art and a science. The science of opioids for chronic pain is clear: for the vast majority of patients, the known, serious, and too-often-fatal risks far outweigh the unproven and transient benefits,” CDC director Thomas Frieden, MD, wrote in article published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Although voluntary and intended only for primary care physicians, many experts believe the guidelines will quickly be adopted by other doctors who treat pain, as well as regulatory agencies, local governments,  and professional medical organizations. Many pain patients fear losing access to opioids as a result.

The guidelines state that “nonpharmacologic therapy and nonopioid pharmacologic therapy” are the preferred treatments for chronic pain, and that doctors should only consider opioids if the benefits in pain relief and function outweigh the risks of addiction and abuse. Even if opioids are prescribed, the CDC recommends that they be used in combination with other therapies.

The guidelines also recommend the use of immediate release opioids instead of extended release opioid medication and that doctors be cautious about prescribing doses higher than 50 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day. Doctors are strongly advised to avoid increasing doses over 90 MME per day.

For acute pain from injuries or medical procedures such as surgery, the CDC states that three days or less supply of opioids “often will be sufficient” and that 7 days supply “will rarely be needed.”

Doctors are also advised to consult prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMP) to determine if patients are abusing opioids or using dangerous combinations of medications. Urine drug testing is also recommended before starting opioid therapy and at least annually afterwards. The guidelines also discourage doctors from dropping patients if they fail to pass a drug test as that "could constitute patient abandonment and could have adverse consequences for patient safety."

The guidelines state that opioid pain medication and benzodiazepines should not be prescribed concurrently, and addiction treatment should be offered to patients who show signs of drug abuse.

The new CDC guideline emphasizes both patient care and safety. We developed the guideline using a rigorous process that included a systematic review of the scientific evidence and input from hundreds of leading experts and practitioners, other federal agencies, more than 150 professional and advocacy organizations, a wide range of key patient and provider groups, a federal advisory committee, peer reviewers, and more than 4000 public comments.” Frieden wrote, without mentioning that the CDC initially sought very little input from the public or healthcare providers.

The CDC's own experts also admitted much of the evidence to support the guidelines was weak. The agency planned to implement the guidelines in January, but was forced to delay them after widespread criticism about its secrecy and lack of transparency during the drafting of the guidelines.

In response to critics, a new advisory committee was formed to review the guidelines, but after a handful of private meetings the committee endorsed the guidelines with few changes.  A potential legal problem for the CDC is that none of its advisory committees' meetings were open to the public. The committees also reviewed the guidelines with outside consultants without publicly disclosing who they were.

Last year the Washington Legal Foundation (WLF) threatened to sue the agency for its “culture of secrecy” and “blatant violations” of the Federal Advisory Committee Act (FACA), which requires all such meetings to be open to the public.

"From the beginning we have been very disappointed in the manner CDC has conducted itself. We explained in detail last fall why we thought CDC had not acted in compliance with FACA. And while at first I was encouraged when CDC took steps to open up the process and perhaps try to compensate for some of its previous errors, I've seen nothing to suggest that it has really done so and in fact has just replaced one secret committee with another secret committee," said Richard Samp, WLF chief counsel. "I find it disappointing that a federal agency would not think it was incumbent to comply with federal law."

Samp told Pain News Network he was unsure if WLF would follow through on its threat to sue the agency and block the guidelines from being implemented.

"I can't say what if anything we plan to do from here or what anybody else plans to do," said Samp. "I just want to express our disappointment with the agency's procedural handling of this issue."

"We believe that this final version of the CDC guidelines leaves much to be desired," said Bob Twillman, PhD, Executive Director of the American Academy of Pain Management. "Looking across the two preliminary drafts and the final version, we see virtually no evidence that comments submitted by thousands of people with pain, patient advocacy organizations, and pain management societies resulted in any changes to the 12 recommendations in the guideline."

Twillman said he was concerned the "soft limits" on opioid dosages in the guidelines would be adopted as a rule by physicians, leaving some patients untreated or undertreated.

"Our concern is that, based on experience when states have implemented similar guidelines, some clinicians will interpret these 'soft limits' and thresholds as absolute ceiling doses, and that people with pain will suffer needlessly as a result," Twillman said.

"I don't see how they will contribute much to improved outcomes for people in pain," said Lynn Webster, MD, past president of the American Academy of Pain Medicine and Vice President of scientific affairs at PRA Health Sciences. " I wish the CDC would have advocated for the millions of Americans with chronic pain while also trying to curb the opioid crisis.  We will never solve the opioid problem if we don't do a better job of treating pain.

"The CDC should have called upon Congress to insist payers be part of the solution and not continue to be the major barrier to improved outcomes for people in pain and with opioid addiction."

Many of the non-opioid treatments and therapies the CDC recommends -- such as cognitive behavioral therapy, massage and physical therapy -- are not covered by insurers. 

"The CDC’s recommendations are very sound. They're pointing out that when opioids are used long term for chronic conditions they are more likely to harm patients than help. If you continue to take opioids daily for months and months, the opioids don’t work very well," said Andrew Kolodny, Executive Director and founder of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing (PROP), in an interview with KPCC Radio in Los Angeles.

PROP, which was heavily involved in the initial drafting of the guidelines, is funded by Phoenix House, a chain of addiction treatment centers that stand to benefit from the guidelines' recommendations.

"Opioids don't work well long-term. That's the CDC's message. That's what the evidence tells us. Its the industry and groups that get funding from industry that are promoting this inappropriate treatment," said Kolodny, who is chief medical officer of Phoenix House.

In a survey of over 2,000 pain patients by Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation, many predicted the guidelines will lead to more opioid abuse and addiction, not less.  Nearly 93% said they would be harmful to pain patients. Most also said that non-opioid treatments and therapies provide very little pain relief or none at all.

Study: Opioids Not Always in Patient’s Best Interest

By Pat Anson, Editor

An industry funded report is calling for greater use of non-opioid medication for post-surgical pain to combat what it calls the “frightening reality” of the opioid epidemic.

The report by an expert panel convened at the Jefferson College of Population Health in Philadelphia claims that relieving a patient’s acute pain with opioids is expensive and “not always in their best interest” because it could lead to addiction.

“The added costs attributable to misuse and abuse of opioid prescriptions originating in the acute care setting are considerable. With steadily increasing numbers of surgical procedures being performed, even small increments in the percentage of chronic opioid users will create an unsustainable societal burden,” wrote lead author Janice Clark, RN, Jefferson College of Population Health.

The report also endorsed efforts to have Medicare eliminate a requirement that hospitals ask patients about the quality of their pain care in patient satisfaction surveys.

“Patient satisfaction has been associated with greater inpatient use, higher health care and prescription drug use and expenditures, and increased mortality. Clearly, giving patients what they want, or think they need, is not always in their best interest,” wrote Clark and her two co-authors.  

“There is so much wrong with this article it is hard to know where to start,” says Janice Reynolds, a patient advocate and retired nurse who specialized in pain management and oncology. She called the report “opiophobic” and unethical.

“It is unconscionable these people say the person in pain cannot say whether his pain was well managed or not,” said Reynolds. “Pain is what the person says it is, existing when he says it does.  It is subjective.  Only the person experiencing it knows if treatment was effective or not, as well as whether he was treated in a compassionate, empathic manor. “

The report’s recommendations -- which are being published in the journal of Population Health Management -- are very similar to guidelines released last month by the American Pain Society, which also promote the use of non-opioid medication for post-surgical pain.

“A wide variety of effective alternatives to opioids for pain management are available and patients need to be educated on what strategies are most appropriate for their procedure,” wrote Clark, who said in an email to Pain News Network the Jefferson College report did undergo peer review prior to publication.

The report calls for greater use of acetaminophen, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID’s) and preglabin (Lyrica) for post-surgical pain, as well as an injectable bupivacaine delivery system called Exparel that was developed by Pacira Pharmaceuticals, a New Jersey drug maker. 

The report was sponsored by Pacira and the company’s vice-president of medical health sciences, Richard Scranton, MD, was one of its co-authors.

At times the report reads like a promotion for Exparel, calling it an “innovative delivery system” that achieves “effective pain relief at substantially smaller doses.”

“In the acute pain space, where patients now ask for drugs by name, there is unprecedented risk of overprescribing, overuse, and misuse—particularly of opioid drugs. Exparel is an opioid alternative with equivalent pain control that reduces the need for postsurgical opioids and devices,” the report says.

“There should have been a disclosure up front that the company sponsoring the study makes Exparel,” said Reynolds.   

There is an acknowledgement on Page 2 of the 12-page report that Pacira Pharmaceuticals sponsored it, but the company is not identified as the maker of Exparel, which accounts for virtually all of the company's revenue.

Pacira Pharmaceuticals received a warning letter from the Food and Drug Administration in 2014 for its off-label promotion of Exparel, which was initially only approved for pain caused by bunion or hemorrhoid surgery. The U.S. Justice Department also subpoenaed the company for documents related to its marketing and sales of Exparel. 

“These additional materials suggest an extensive promotional campaign by Pacira to promote the use of Exparel in surgical procedures other than those for which the drug has been shown safe and effective,” the FDA letter states.

Pacira filed a lawsuit against the FDA claiming its first amendment rights were being violated. In an out-of-court settlement late last year, the FDA withdrew the warning letter and Exparel’s label was updated to state that it can be used for other types of postsurgical pain. The case was widely seen as a defeat for the FDA that could greatly expand the use of off-label marketing by drug companies.

A recent story by Stat questioned whether a $285 vial of Exparel provided any better pain relief than a $3 dose of bupivacaine after knee surgery.  The article also points out that other post-operative pain studies were conducted by researchers who received funding from Pacira.

Opioid Battle Shifting from Chronic to Acute Pain

By Pat Anson, Editor

Efforts to limit prescribing of opioid pain medication are no longer confined to just chronic pain.

New York Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D) has introduced legislation that would require the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to issue guidelines for the safe prescribing of opioids for acute pain – generally pain that lasts for three months or less.

“When someone gets a tooth out and only needs medication for three days - why are they sent home from the doctor’s office with 30 Percocet?” asked Sen. Gillibrand.

The Preventing Overprescribing for Pain Act calls on the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the CDC to issue new guidelines for the use of opioids for acute pain within two years. New York Rep. Louise Slaughter (D) will introduce the bill in the House.

“We need to ensure these powerful medications are used safely while cutting down on the risk that extra pills could lead to possible abuse,” said Rep. Slaughter.

The CDC is currently focused on guidelines for primary care physicians to use when prescribing opioids for chronic pain -- which is pain that lasts for three months or more. 

Plans to implement the guidelines in January were delayed by the CDC after widespread criticism about its secrecy and lack of transparency during the drafting of the guidelines.

As many as 11 million Americans use opioids for chronic pain and many fear losing access to them if the guidelines are adopted. The CDC is currently reviewing the guidelines and no timetable has been set for their adoption.

“As the opioid epidemic continues to grow in New York and across the country, we can’t wait any longer to take action and curb this growing crisis,” said Gillibrand. “We have introduced bipartisan legislation that will help fix this problem by requiring the CDC to issue clear guidelines to help medical providers safely prescribe opioids for these common types of acute pain. I am urging my colleagues in Congress to pass this measure to help curb the growing opioid crisis.”

Gillibrand and Slaughter’s offices issued a joint news release citing a recent CDC report which found that in 2014 nearly 19,000 people died in the U.S. from overdose related to opioid pain relievers. Those statistics are somewhat muddied, however, because some overdose deaths may have been counted twice and some heroin deaths may have been misclassified as morphine deaths, according to CDC researchers.

With opioid prescriptions in decline for several years, many experts believe the still rising number of opioid deaths is attributable to a growing number of heroin and fentanyl overdoses, not from pain medication.

Do Non-Opioid Pain Meds Raise Risk of Suicide?

By Pat Anson, Editor

We received a lot of reader reaction to our story about Sherri Little, the 53-year old chronic pain sufferer who committed suicide with an overdose of medication in her Los Angeles hotel room last year (see “Sherri’s Story: A Final Plea for Help”).

“Numerous prescription medications in the decedent’s name were found throughout the hotel room including a bottle labeled Lyrica on the rim of the bathtub next to the decedent’s body,” reads the coroner’s report.

Lyrica has a warning label that states the anti-seizure drug “may cause suicidal thoughts or actions.” At least two other medications Sherri was taking – the sleep aid Ambien and the sedative Klonopin  -- also have labels warning they may worsen depression or suicidal thinking.

Several readers wondered – as we did – why doctors would prescribe the drugs to Sherri, who had been suicidal for at least two years.

SHERRI LITTLE

SHERRI LITTLE

“The off label use of antidepressants and anti-seizure meds for pain control is criminal. People are dying! And it's not because they're addicts! It's because the healthcare professionals have become compliant and have agreed to go against all common decency and sense,” wrote Arianne Grand-Gassaway, a chronic pain patient.

Many doctors are turning to non-opioid drugs like Lyrica to manage pain because they’re considered safer and less addictive. Worldwide sales of Lyrica topped $6 billion for Pfizer in 2014, up 19 percent from the previous year.  

“When a suicide occurs it is hard to know with certainty whether medications like Lyrica contributed to the suicide or pain itself was the primary cause,” said Lynn Webster, MD, past President of the American Academy of Pain Medicine and Vice President of scientific affairs at PRA Health Sciences.  “I feel the risk of suicide is many times greater for inadequately treated moderate to severe pain than with patients on these medications.”

Webster says the cocktail of drugs Sherri Little was taking for her pain, anxiety and depression was not unusual.

“It is very common to prescribe an anticonvulsant like Lyrica with a sleep aid. Lyrica is viewed as a safer medication than most options. Most people with moderate to severe chronic pain have difficulty sleeping so drugs like Ambien and Lunesta are routine.  Klonopin is also very commonly prescribed for an anxiety disorder or muscle spasm. It is also used to facilitate sleep," said Webster.

The Food and Drug Administration added suicide to the warning labels for Lyrica and Klonopin  after a review of nearly 200 clinical studies found that patients taking antiepileptic drugs had almost twice the risk of suicidal thought or behavior than patients taking a placebo. 

The risk is small – about 1 in every 500 patients – but don't tell that to the families of the four patients in the clinical studies who killed themselves.

After reading Sherri Little’s story, one reader told us Lyrica made her suicidal.

“I went to my doctor in January after being on Lyrica for a month. It seemed to be helping my nerve pain so she upped my dose to 50 milligrams twice a day,” said Allison Lindsay Shorter. “A couple of days later I started having deep thoughts like I was out of control of my emotions. My anxiety was sky high. I argued for no reason with everyone. I had feelings of hurting myself and whoever got in my way.”

Shorter told her boyfriend she wanted to kill herself and hid his cellphone before swallowing a bottle of muscle relaxers. She was rushed to the hospital and survived.

“I felt out of control when I had all those thoughts and actions, I was scared of myself because I could not control anything. It felt like a demon or evil spirit,” said Shorter. “I knew then it was the damn medication.”

In addition to Lyrica, Shorter was taking 18 other medications to treat a long list of conditions, including fibromyalgia, complex regional pain syndrome, and neuropathy. At one time she was also taking Neurontin (gabapentin), another antiepileptic drug often prescribed for pain that comes with a  label warning of suicide, depression, panic attacks and dangerous impulses.

Why do doctors prescribe medication with such risky side effects?

“Most doctors are probably aware of the suicide risks but the general belief is that risk of suicide from the medication is very low and the risk of suicide from undertreated pain is much greater,” says Webster, who recently wrote a column on patient suicide (see “A Doctor’s Perspective on Patient Suicide”).

“The potential risks have to be continually weighed against the potential benefits.  Lack of treatment carries significant risk too. Suicide is at least three times more likely in the chronic pain population than the general population.  The risk appears to increase with the number of medical diagnoses. In my opinion the risk of suicide due to pain, treated or untreated, far exceeds the risk of suicide from these medications, prescribed alone or in combination.”

Webster fears the current backlash against opioids and efforts to further limit opioid prescribing will lead to more pain going untreated.

“This is a serious topic and I am afraid there are going to be many more suicides due to the anti-opioid movement.  Very sad,” Webster wrote in an email to Pain News Network.  

Ironically, small doses of an opioid may actually reduce the risk of suicide, according to a recent small study in Israel. Researchers at the University of Haifa gave 40 suicidal patients small doses of buprenorphine and found it reduced their suicidal thoughts after just one week.

Just as opioids reduce physical pain, researchers think it can ease mental pain.

“I think they’re onto something. However, buprenorphine acts on a number of different opioid receptors and it’s still unclear which one or ones are playing a role in the anti-suicidal effects,” psychiatrist Joan Striebel told New Scientist.  “I hope this work spurs more interest in what specific molecules could be involved in suicidal thought.”

Hospital Pain Care Needs Improvement

By Barby Ingle, Columnist 

Most hospital staffs are poorly trained in pain management, in my opinion. They are used to acute emergency situations and seeing many of the same ones over and over. So when a “zebra” (someone with a complex chronic condition) gets pushed in on a stretcher, they tend to have thoughts like these:

“Oh boy, I am going to have to work.”

“I don’t believe that this person is as bad as they say.”

“I have seen others in worse physical condition and this person looks ‘normal’ so they can’t be experiencing what they say is going on.”

I had an emergency room doctor tell me once that I didn’t have a blocked bladder. He got out a machine to measure how full my bladder was, but I think he never even turned it on. He said my bladder was empty.

I was in so much pain at the time that I told him he was reading it wrong and that my bladder was extremely full and hurt dramatically. I begged him use a catheter on me. Finally, probably after being sick of hearing me cry out in pain, he let the nurse use a catheter. Guess what? I was right. After my bladder was drained, the pain subsided and I was released to go home. The doctor apologized.

Another time I was taken to the hospital with multiple kidney stones. The ER rooms were full and patients on stretchers were lining the hallways. I was quietly crying from pain, curled up in a ball on my stretcher, watching as other patients were being paid attention to and given pain care. What were they doing different than me? They were loud and obnoxious.

I finally reached my breaking point. I allowed myself to yell out in pain and a few choice words also followed. In less than a minute, a nurse who had told me before that she couldn't give me anything for pain until they got me in a room was beside me with a dose of pain medication.

I know my body. Most people living with a chronic condition know their body and what is new, different, worse, or better. We just know. It’s time that providers trust us and realize that we are there for a reason. The vast majority of us are not trying to score opioids, but trying to get relief because we have reached our breaking point. 

One of the most important issues in an emergency room after lifesaving measures is the patient’s pain care. This is especially true in an acute situation, which is typically why we go to the emergency room in the first place. I don’t know many people who go to the ER or are hospitalized for chronic pain only.

The need for optimal pain care during hospitalization is high, but unfortunately proper and timely pain care is hit and miss at best.  

That’s why Pain News Network and the International Pain Foundation (IPain) are conducting a survey of pain patients about their treatment in hospitals.

The survey, which you can take by clicking here, will help us document how bad the problem is and what can be done to fix it.

Patients who try to be their own best advocate and take personal responsibility for their health should not be discarded because addicts or a small number of pain patients are abusing medications. Yes, abuse needs to be addressed. But pain should not be neglected. Controlling pain is important to the overall outcome of the emergency situation.

In past columns I have discussed the importance of asking for your pain medication at least 30 minutes before you may need them while in the hospital. That is because hospital nurses are trained to wait for you to ask for the medication before they order it -- even if the provider has it marked in your chart that pain medication is allowed. If you do not know to ask, your pain cycles and levels will become harder to control. I have been in this situation many times myself.

I know if I go to the hospital closest to my house, I will not get as good assistance with pain management as I would if I drove a little farther to another hospital. I have to consider other issues as well, such as how long I may have to stay at the hospital, will they have my regular medications, and will they have a staff that understands reflex sympathetic dystrophy and the secondary challenges that come with treating a ‘thick case file’ patient.

When I know I am being listened to as a valuable and knowledgeable patient and team member in my care, my pain will be better managed and I will rate the hospital higher in patient satisfaction surveys. When my underlying condition is not addressed, they’ll get a negative review.

Should a doctor be worried about how I am going to score them? Not if they treat me fairly, individually and as part of my treatment team. Does this mean they should just hand me whatever I ask for? No. It means that they need to use my personal assessment of pain as part of the planning for my care. Not doing so is neglecting the patient.

Barby Ingle suffers from Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD) and endometriosis. Barby is a chronic pain educator, patient advocate, and president of the International Pain Foundation. She is also a motivational speaker and best-selling author on pain topics.

More information about Barby can be found at her website.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.