Times Colonist

Patient got 26 opioid prescripti­ons over 4 months

No questions asked by 10 B.C. doctors and pharmacies

- PAMELA FAYERMAN

VANCOUVER — Over a four-month period, a 39-year old B.C. man went doctor shopping to obtain opioids and other addictive drugs, finding 10 willing doctors to write a few dozen prescripti­ons and 10 pharmacies to fill them.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of B.C. discovered the case while doing a routine review of prescribin­g patterns on the PharmaNet database where all dispensed prescripti­ons are recorded. When certain classes of drugs (such as narcotics) are flagged as being overprescr­ibed by individual doctors, investigat­ions are conducted and files are opened on the particular doctors, College spokeswoma­n Susan Prins said.

The case in question is being communicat­ed to all of B.C.’s 12,000 doctors so they know that the College “isn’t tilting at windmills” in efforts to curb overprescr­ibing of narcotics and other addictive medication­s.

In this case , a Lower Mainland resident with post-traumatic stress disorder related to his occupation in the law/justice field was abusing opioids and benzodiaze­pines for chronic abdominal pain. He was admitted last year to hospital for a soft-tissue infection and severe constipati­on and while there, a hospital psychiatri­st diagnosed him with PTSD, agoraphobi­a and panic attacks. He denied abusing either prescribed or illicit drugs.

After being discharged from hospital, the man’s family doctor noticed his patient was refilling prescripti­ons too frequently and started to do drug testing on his urine, finding evidence of cocaine, hydromorph­one and amphetamin­es. When that doctor asked the patient to start a weaning-off program, the man found a walk-in clinic where he got a month’s supply of oxycodone and other addictive tablets. A week later, he went back to the same clinic for a renewal of the pills. The doctor did not ask why a month’s supply had been consumed in one week.

Over the next four months, the patient got 26 more prescripti­ons from 10 doctors and as many pharmacies, “perpetuati­ng his substance use disorder.” Only the last physician reviewed his PharmaNet records and referred him to an addictions specialist.

The patient is said to be stable now.

Dr. Ailve McNestry, a deputy registrar for the College, said even the hospital physicians who treated the patient failed in not noticing that the reasons for his admission were side-effects of the drugs. (Opioids can suppress the immune system and cause soft-tissue infections, abdominal pain and severe constipati­on.) McNestry said doctors involved in the case have been contacted by the College and asked to attend prescripti­on-review educationa­l courses. McNestry said 150 to 200 doctors are ordered to take such courses each year.

When the College suspects doctors are not following guidelines, it looks at their prescribin­g histories.

“Inappropri­ate prescribin­g, for the most part, seems to be a generation­al problem. I’m 63 and most of these doctors who are prescribin­g such medication­s too generously are my peers,” said McNestry.

Gillian Vrooman, spokeswoma­n for the College of Pharmacist­s of B.C., said pharmacist­s are expected to review PharmaNet histories of customers before filling prescripti­ons and “take action if necessary” when the dose or any other aspect of drug therapy appears inappropri­ate.

Young children whose mothers have been prescribed an opioid are at an increased risk of being hospitaliz­ed for an overdose from the potent pain medication­s, most often through accidental ingestion, a study has found.

“It wouldn’t be at all surprising for a two- or three-year-old to find a tablet and put it in his or her mouth,” said Dr. David Juurlink, a senior scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences who co-authored the study.

“And it’s important to understand that a single tablet could kill a small child. These are very dangerous drugs at the high end of the dose range.”

The study used 2002-2015 health records to identify 103 children ages 10 or younger who were treated in an Ontario hospital for an overdose and whose mothers had received publicly funded prescripti­ons for an opioid in the preceding year.

Each case was matched for risk comparison with a control group — children who had not suffered an opioid overdose and whose mothers had been prescribed an anti-inflammato­ry pain killer.

The researcher­s found that kids whose moms were given an opioid had more than twice the risk of suffering an overdose compared with children whose mothers were put on anti-inflammato­ry pills. Codeine, oxycodone and methadone were the most common cause of the drug overdoses.

More than half the children treated for opioid toxicity were under two years old, including nine who were babies under one year old, say the researcher­s, whose study was published Monday in the journal Pediatrics.

“We don’t know why the younger kids, under one, might have been exposed,” said Juurlink, noting that children that age typically don’t have the coordinati­on or motor skills to independen­tly access medication­s.

“It could have been an accident, it could have been a sibling,” he said. “I suppose there’s the possibilit­y it could have been malicious. We simply couldn’t say.”

Thirty-nine of the children had to be admitted to hospital — 13 of them to critical care units. None of the 103 children included in the study died as a result of the overdose.

But that’s not always the case, said Dr. Yaron Finkelstei­n, an emergency medicine specialist at Toronto’s Hospital for Sick Children, who co-authored the study.

Overall, more than 700 cases of opioid overdoses in young children were identified during the study period, but the researcher­s could only link 103 of them through the province’s drug benefit plan to maternal prescripti­ons.

Some of these children in the larger group died, but Finkelstei­n declined to say how many for privacy reasons.

Children who suffer an opioid overdose typically exhibit a unique combinatio­n of symptoms, he said.

“Most of them are lethargic or have an altered level of consciousn­ess, and they breathe very slowly and their heart rate and blood pressure go down many times, and there are other special signs like their pupils are pinpoints.”

Injections of the drug naloxone can reverse the effects of the overdose, but some kids end up in the ICU on a ventilator to support their breathing until the opioid toxicity resolves.

With what’s been described as an “opioid epidemic” in Canada due to overprescr­ibing of the drugs and growing illicit use, “there’s some evidence that these numbers of cases are creeping up now with more accessibil­ity of those medication­s in the house,” Finkelstei­n said.

Juurlink said the study’s findings underline the need for people taking opioids to protect children from exposure to the medication­s.

“It’s incumbent upon parents and grandparen­ts to keep their pills well out of reach — ideally under lock and key, but certainly inaccessib­le — and simply having a child-resistant cap isn’t adequate.”

That’s also a message prescribin­g doctors and pharmacist­s need to emphasize to patients every time they dispense one of these powerful and potentiall­y deadly drugs, he said.

“The key point is that children are at risk from drugs in the household.”

 ??  ?? Dr. Ailve McNestry: Inappropri­ate prescribin­g “seems to be a generation­al problem.”
Dr. Ailve McNestry: Inappropri­ate prescribin­g “seems to be a generation­al problem.”
 ??  ?? A study used health records to identify 103 children ages 10 or younger who were treated for an overdose and whose mothers had received publicly funded prescripti­ons for an opioid in the preceding year.
A study used health records to identify 103 children ages 10 or younger who were treated for an overdose and whose mothers had received publicly funded prescripti­ons for an opioid in the preceding year.

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