Waterloo Region Record

Overall opioid volume down in Ontario: report

- Sheryl Ubelacker

TORONTO — Ontario doctors appear to be prescribin­g lower amounts of opioids overall to treat patients with pain, say researcher­s, but many longtime users continue to be given daily doses of the potent narcotics that exceed national practice guidelines.

A report by the Ontario Drug Policy Research Network found the number of people prescribed an opioid remained relatively constant over the past five years, with 1.95 million, or one in seven Ontarians, treated with the potentiall­y addictive medication­s last year.

However, the overall volume of opioids dispensed fell by 18 per cent between January 2015 and March 2017, driven by a reduction in the amount of long-acting, slowreleas­e formulatio­ns — such as fentanyl patches and some types of oxycodone — prescribed to patients.

“There might be a good news story here, in that while there’s similar numbers of people being treated with opioids for pain, it seems as if they’re getting less opioid and they’re getting those opioids in more prescripti­ons,” said lead author Tara Gomes, a scientist at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences.

“That aligns really well with some of the recommenda­tions that have been coming out of guidelines that suggest physicians try and lower doses but also have people get dispensed smaller amounts of opioids at a time,” she said.

“Because that leads to less leftover pills in people’s cabinets, perhaps people not using the drugs for quite so long, so they might not become dependent on them, which can lead to addiction issues.”

Still, researcher­s found that nearly 40 per cent of long-acting opioid prescripti­ons dispensed to people already using the drugs for pain had daily doses that surpassed the recommende­d threshold under 2017 Canadian prescripti­on guidelines for opioid use in chronic non-cancer pain.

A panel of experts who penned the guidelines said opioids like oxycodone, hydromorph­one and the fentanyl patch should be prescribed at a daily dose of less than the equivalent of 90 milligrams of morphine, and ideally less than 50 mg.

Gomes said the number of patients exceeding that dose as suggested by prescripti­on data is likely even higher because longterm opioid users often are treated with both long-acting and immediate-release opioids.

In 2016, the report found almost 12 per cent of Ontarians were prescribed an opioid for all types of pain; 2.3 per cent for mostly seasonal cough suppressio­n; and 0.4 per cent for opioid addiction.

Although 0.4 per cent may seem like an insignific­ant number, Gomes said that figure represents one in every 243 people in the province getting help for an opioid addiction — and that only accounts for those who have sought treatment.

While opioids to treat pain are being prescribed relatively evenly across all income groups in the province, the use of replacemen­t drugs such as methadone and suboxone were disproport­ionately concentrat­ed among lower socioecono­mic population­s.

“In our last work, we’ve also seen that these lower-income groups are also more likely to die of opioid-related causes,” said Gomes, suggesting that less affluent people may be more vulnerable to the negative consequenc­es of opioid use.

Dr. Jason Busse, co-chair of the group that wrote the national prescribin­g guidelines, said it’s interestin­g to see that the total opioid volume has fallen by 18 per cent over the last two years.

“It does suggest that there have been changes in how prescriber­s are approachin­g the use of opioids and it does appear that those trends are going down,” said Busse, a researcher in the National Pain Centre at McMaster University, who was not involved in the report.

 ?? TOBY TALBOT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In 2016, one in every 243 Ontarians got help for an opioid addiction.
TOBY TALBOT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In 2016, one in every 243 Ontarians got help for an opioid addiction.

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