阿片类药物使用和处方阿片类药物使用障碍:临床慢性疼痛队列的生物心理社会特征

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q1 ANESTHESIOLOGY
Sofia Wagner, Hanna Ljungvall, Hedvig Zetterberg, Rolf Karlsten, Lisa Ekselius, Pernilla Åsenlöf
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在研究:(a)与长期阿片类药物使用相关的特征和(b)与问题阿片类药物使用相关的特征,这里定义为处方阿片类药物使用障碍(P-OUD),涉及专业疼痛护理的患者。方法:本横断面研究利用临床慢性疼痛队列的基线数据。符合条件的参与者包括18岁的成年人,未接受癌症治疗,疼痛3个月,并被转介到瑞典的专门疼痛护理中心。使用双变量逻辑回归和多变量逻辑回归与正向选择来检查生物心理社会变量与长期阿片类药物使用或P-OUD之间的关系。结果纳入的339例患者中,194例(57%)正在使用阿片类药物,159例(47%)长期使用阿片类药物(>; 90天),34例(占长期使用阿片类药物的21%)患有P-OUD。较长的疼痛持续时间、失业、更多的疼痛灾难性、较低的健康相关生活质量和较差的平衡增加了长期使用阿片类药物的可能性。与长期使用低至中等剂量相比,长期使用高剂量与更大的精神和认知行为问题患病率相关。长期使用阿片类药物、年龄较小、创伤暴露、更多的疼痛灾难和对运动的恐惧增加了P-OUD的可能性。结论我们的研究结果表明识别和治疗可能维持疼痛状况和长期阿片类药物使用的显着因素的重要性。与长期阿片类药物使用和P-OUD相关的许多生物心理社会变量可以在跨学科疼痛管理和康复规划中得到解决。本研究是U-PAIN队列研究的一部分,该研究来自瑞典一个高度专业化的疼痛中心的临床样本。它是基于一个深入和彻底的特征的病人转介到诊所评估慢性疼痛阿片类药物治疗的风险和收益。它增加了阿片类药物治疗慢性疼痛复杂性的宝贵信息;结果强调了跨学科多模式评估和治疗的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Opioid Use and Prescription Opioid Use Disorder: Biopsychosocial Characterisation of a Clinical Chronic Pain Cohort

Opioid Use and Prescription Opioid Use Disorder: Biopsychosocial Characterisation of a Clinical Chronic Pain Cohort

Background

This study aimed to examine: (a) characteristics associated with long-term opioid use and (b) characteristics associated with problematic opioid use, here defined as prescription opioid use disorder (P-OUD), in patients referred to specialised pain care.

Methods

This cross-sectional study utilised baseline data from a clinical chronic pain cohort. Eligible participants included adults > 18 years old, not undergoing cancer treatment, had pain > 3 months, and had been referred to a specialised pain care centre in Sweden. Bivariate logistic regression and multivariable logistic regression with forward selection were used to examine the associations between biopsychosocial variables and either long-term opioid use or P-OUD.

Results

Of the 339 patients included, 194 (57%) were using opioids, 159 (47%) had long-term opioid use (> 90 days), and 34 (21% of those with long-term opioid use) had P-OUD. Longer pain duration, unemployment, more pain catastrophising, lower health-related quality of life, and worse balance increased the likelihood of long-term opioid use. Long-term use of high doses was associated with a greater prevalence of psychiatric and cognitive-behavioural problems compared to long-term use at low to moderate doses. Long-term opioid use, younger age, trauma exposure, more pain catastrophising, and fear of movement increased the likelihood of P-OUD.

Conclusions

Our results demonstrate the importance of identifying and treating salient factors that may sustain both the pain condition and long-term opioid use. Many of the biopsychosocial variables associated with long-term opioid use and P-OUD can be addressed within interdisciplinary pain management and rehabilitation programmes.

Significance

This study is part of the U-PAIN cohort study on a clinical sample from a highly specialised pain centre in Sweden. It is based on a deep and thorough characterisation of patients referred to the clinic to evaluate risks and benefits of opioid therapy in chronic pain. It adds valuable information on the complexity of opioid therapy in chronic pain; the results highlight the need for interdisciplinary multimodal evaluation and treatment.

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来源期刊
European Journal of Pain
European Journal of Pain 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
5.60%
发文量
163
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: European Journal of Pain (EJP) publishes clinical and basic science research papers relevant to all aspects of pain and its management, including specialties such as anaesthesia, dentistry, neurology and neurosurgery, orthopaedics, palliative care, pharmacology, physiology, psychiatry, psychology and rehabilitation; socio-economic aspects of pain are also covered. Regular sections in the journal are as follows: • Editorials and Commentaries • Position Papers and Guidelines • Reviews • Original Articles • Letters • Bookshelf The journal particularly welcomes clinical trials, which are published on an occasional basis. Research articles are published under the following subject headings: • Neurobiology • Neurology • Experimental Pharmacology • Clinical Pharmacology • Psychology • Behavioural Therapy • Epidemiology • Cancer Pain • Acute Pain • Clinical Trials.
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