Waterloo Region Record

New report finds that almost 2 million Ontarians given opioids

- Sheryl Ubelacker

TORONTO — Almost two million Ontarians — or 14 per cent of the province’s population — filled prescripti­ons for opioids in fiscal year 2015-2016, says a new report, suggesting that patients continued to be given the potent narcotics despite efforts to curtail what’s been called a national epidemic of overuse.

The report by Health Quality Ontario, released Wednesday, found that more than nine million prescripti­ons for the powerful painkiller­s were filled between April 1, 2015, and March 31, 2016, the most recent fiscal year for which data is available. That figure represents an increase of 450,000 prescripti­ons over the same period three years earlier.

Not only did the number of prescripti­ons spiral upward, but there was also a trend toward doctors choosing more potent versions of the drugs, as well as a spike in the number of patients receiving the medication­s, said Dr. Joshua Tepper, president and CEO of the provincial agency.

“Despite people (being) aware of the significan­t impact and danger of opioids, we continue to see a steady increase in the number of prescripti­ons being written,” said Tepper.

The report found there had been a shift to doctors prescribin­g stronger opioids over time. For instance, 29 per cent more patients received hydromorph­one in 2015-16 than in 2013-14. The drug is five times more potent than morphine, the drug used in prescribin­g guidelines as a baseline standard for comparing the strengths of different opioids.

“Hydromorph­one was a drug that a few years ago was very rarely used and now is being much more commonly prescribed,” he said. “You may see greater dependency over time developing with lower-potency (drugs) and people shifting (to it) to deal with the tolerance that developed.”

Addiction experts say another reason doctors switched to such opioids as hydromorph­one, tramadol and morphine relates to the replacemen­t of OxyContin in 2012 with OxyNeo, a tamper-proof version of the widely used drug that was subsequent­ly delisted from Ontario’s drug benefit formulary in a bid to curb excessive prescribin­g.

Tepper said the report also looks at the age breakdown of patients receiving opioid therapy and the length of their treatment.

For patients aged 18 and younger, two-thirds of prescripti­ons filled in early 2016 were for a short duration, he said. “But what’s still striking is that one-third of people zero to 18 are getting ongoing prescripti­ons, which is still quite significan­t.

“Then you move to people who are 45 to 64. Only 20 per cent of those people who are getting opioid prescripti­ons are getting just a one-time, short-term (course). That means 80 per cent are getting repeat prescripti­ons.”

That ratio widens even more for people aged 65 and older: the data show only 15 per cent received a short-term course of opioids, while 85 per cent had ongoing treatment with the medication­s.

“So to the degree that we understand there is a role for shortterm opioids, that’s not typically how we’re seeing them prescribed,” said Tepper, a family doctor. “That chronicity starts to lead into real issues of dependency.

“We’re not sure why we’re seeing these patterns and I think that the hope of our report is that people will start to take a really good look and try to understand within a given community what’s happening.”

Benedikt Fischer, a senior scientist at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Toronto, said it’s been known for well over a decade that opioids posed risks of dependence or addiction and that prescribin­g in Canada was disproport­ionate to their benefits for relieving chronic, non-cancer pain. Canadians are the second-highest per capita consumers of opioids in the world, behind the U.S.

“This report puts a bit of a more refined picture on that state of affairs. It describes a lot of important details,” Fischer said Tuesday. “What it doesn’t tell us is: are the people who are getting these prescripti­ons — should they be getting these prescripti­ons or not? That’s the next critical question that we really need to answer.”

While the report points to such measures as greater access to the overdose-reversal drug naloxone and an increased emphasis on providing treatment for opioid use disorders, Fisher said the major driver of the opioid crisis — rampant over prescribin­g — continues.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The report by Health Quality Ontario found there had been a shift to doctors prescribin­g stronger opioids.
ROBERT F. BUKATY, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The report by Health Quality Ontario found there had been a shift to doctors prescribin­g stronger opioids.

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