Times Colonist

Opioids for chronic pain offer no advantage over other drugs, study says

Researcher asks: Why prescribe addictive painkiller­s if other products do the job?

- LINDSEY TANNER AP reporter Mike Stobbe in New York contribute­d to this report.

CHICAGO — A yearlong study offers rigorous new evidence against using prescripti­on opioids for chronic pain.

In patients with stubborn back aches or hip or knee arthritis, opioids worked no better than over-the-counter drugs or other nonopioids at reducing problems with walking or sleeping. And they provided slightly less pain relief.

Opioids tested included generic Vicodin, oxycodone or fentanyl patches although few patients needed the most potent opioids.

Nonopioids included generic Tylenol, ibuprofen and prescripti­on pills for nerve or muscle pain. The study randomly assigned patients to take opioids or other painkiller­s. That’s the gold standard design for research.

If they don’t work better than less risky drugs, there’s no reason to use opioids given “their really nasty side-effects — death and addiction,” said lead author Dr. Erin Krebs, a physician and researcher with the Minneapoli­s Veterans Affairs Health Care System.

The results likely will surprise many people “because opioids have this reputation as being really powerful painkiller­s, and that is not what we found,” Krebs said.

The results echo less rigorous studies and bolster guidelines against routine use of opioids for chronic pain.

The study was published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

About 42,000 drug overdose deaths in the U.S. in 2016 involved opioids, including prescripti­on painkiller­s, heroin and fentanyl. Many people get hooked while taking opioids prescribed for injuries or other short-term pain and move on to cheaper, more accessible illicit drugs such as heroin.

A report released Tuesday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found emergency rooms saw a big jump in overdoses from opioids last year.

Opioid overdoses increased 30 per cent late last summer, compared to the same three-month period in 2016.

The biggest jumps were in the Midwest and in cities, but increases occurred across the U.S. The report did not break down overdoses by type of opioid.

U.S. government guidelines in 2016 said opioids are not the preferred treatment for chronic pain, and they recommend non-drug treatment or nonopioid painkiller­s instead.

Opioids should only be used if other methods don’t work for chronic pain, the guidelines recommend. Prescribin­g rates have declined slightly in recent years, although they are still much higher than two decades ago.

Krebs said the strongest evidence from other studies shows that physical therapy, exercise or rehabilita­tion therapy works best for chronic pain. And she said that there are a variety of nonopioid drugs to try if one type doesn’t work.

The study involved 234 patients from Minneapoli­s-area VA clinics who were assigned to use generic versions of opioids or nonopioids for a year. Followup ended in 2016.

“This is a very important study,” said Dr. David Reuben, geriatrics chief at UCLA’s medical school. “It will likely change the approach to managing longterm back, hip and knee pain.”

He noted one limitation — most study participan­ts were men, but Krebs said the results in women studied were similar.

The study’s opioid patients started on relatively low daily doses of morphine, oxycodone or generic Vicodin.

They switched to higher doses if needed or to long-acting opioids or fentanyl patches. The nonopioid group started on acetaminop­hen, ibuprofen or similar anti-inflammato­ry drugs. They also could switch to higher doses or prescripti­on nonopioid pain pills. Few in either group used the strongest medicines.

Patients reported changes in function or pain on questionna­ires. Function scores improved in each group by about two points on an 11-point scale, where higher scores meant worse function. Both groups started out with average pain and function scores of about 5.5 points.

Pain intensity dropped about two points in the nonopioid group and slightly less in the opioid patients.

Other research has shown that overthe-counter medicines can also work as well as opioids at treating short-term pain, including from broken bones, kidney stones or dental work.

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