The Jerusalem Post

Surgery to remove wisdom teeth puts some young patients on path to opioid use

- • By MELISSA HEALY

For older teens and young adults, the extraction of so-called wisdom teeth is a painful rite of passage. A new study suggests it is likely made more perilous by the package of narcotic pain pills that patients frequently carry home after undergoing the common surgical procedure.

The study offers fresh evidence of how readily – and innocently – a potentiall­y fatal addiction to opioids can take hold. It also underscore­s how important it is that dentists rethink their approach to treating their patients’ postoperat­ive discomfort.

In a group of close to 15,000 people whose first-ever prescripti­on for opioid painkiller­s came from a dentist or dental surgeon, researcher­s found that about 7% filled another opioid prescripti­on 90 to 365 days later. In the year following their dental procedure, close to 6% of patients who left their dentist’s office with a prescripti­on for opioids had a “health care encounter” – a hospitaliz­ation or trip to the emergency room, a physician consultati­on, or a session with an addiction specialist – in which a diagnosis of opioid abuse was documented.

That’s well over 10 times the rate at which a comparison group of patients who did not receive a prescripti­on for opioid painkiller­s got that diagnosis. Patients in both groups were 16 to 25 years old, and all were treated by dentists during 2015. Researcher­s then were able to track the patients for at least a year.

Compared with the study’s boys and young men, girls and young women were more likely to continue using narcotic pain relievers after getting their wisdom teeth out, and they were much more likely to abuse the drugs.

The typical prescripti­on capable of setting such havoc into motion was a pack of about 20 pills of an opioid narcotic such as OxyContin, Vicodin or Percocet.

Published this week in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, the new research comes at a time when opioid drugs are claiming the lives of 115 Americans a day. Although those fatalities are also caused by street drugs such as heroin and, increasing­ly, synthetic opioids such as fentanyl, as many as 80% of those addicted to heroin say they started by abusing medication­s that were prescribed for legitimate purposes.

That in turn has shined a light on the medical profession’s prescribin­g practices and its role in the public health crisis. In 2016, as the epidemic of overdose deaths continued its steep rise, those in the medical and dental profession­s prescribed enough painkiller­s to medicate every American daily for close to a month.

Although many of those pills are prescribed to manage the agony of patients with excruciati­ng pain conditions, physicians and dentists still prescribe opioids to patients whose pain could be treated more safely, and just as effectivel­y, with nonnarcoti­c drugs.

The new study also calls into question the wisdom of routinely extracting those pesky molars that tend to push through our rear-most gums in late adolescenc­e or early adulthood, often crowding other teeth or becoming impacted.

Study author Dr. Alan R. Schroeder, a Stanford University pediatrici­an with an interest in “safely doing less,” said the benefits of wisdom tooth extraction have not been rigorously studied or demonstrat­ed. Nor, he added, have its risks.

Studying the risk of opioid addiction or abuse, at least, seemed a good place to start, he said.

The surgical removal of wisdom teeth comes with such potential downsides as dry sockets, gum pain and nerve damage, as well as risks associated with the anesthesia used during those procedures.

And then there are the drugs. Dental surgeons have been among the most liberal prescriber­s of opioid painkiller­s, and they’re also heavy prescriber­s of antibiotic­s. Those medication­s can come with side effects of their own, and over-prescripti­on is believed to foster the rise of antibiotic-resistant infections in population­s.

Indeed, Schroeder said, the dearth of research about wisdom tooth extraction makes its frequency hard to judge. And that, in turn, forced Schroeder and his coauthors to make a key assumption in their study.

Dental insurance databases are scarce and many wisdom tooth extraction­s are paid for out of pocket. But given the age of most of the patients leaving a dentist’s office with an opioid prescripti­on, Schroeder and his coauthors figured the most likely cause was wisdom tooth surgery (a third-molar extraction in dental parlance). The authors’ conclusion that opiate abuse is a possible risk of wisdom tooth removal rests on this assumption.

But when you consider how many young people have their wisdom teeth removed, and how routinely dentists send their patients home with a prescripti­on for narcotic pain relief, the implicatio­ns are pretty alarming. An unpublishe­d 1999 study by the American Dental Associatio­n and cited by the authors estimated that about five million such extraction­s are performed per year. By 2009, another study had concluded that dentists were the leading source of opioid prescripti­ons for children and adolescent­s ages 10 to 19, accounting for close to onethird of opioid prescripti­ons in this age group.

The ADA, meanwhile, has vowed that its members will reduce their opioid prescribin­g. In a statement released in March, then-president Dr. Joseph P. Crowley called on dentists to “double down on their efforts” to write fewer prescripti­ons of opioids for dental pain, to lower the doses that are prescribed, and to shorten the duration of prescripti­ons – all measures known to reduce addiction risk. The associatio­n has also backed state legislatio­n to limit opioid prescripti­ons’ dosage and duration, and to track medical profession­als’ prescribin­g practices.

“The dental profession deserves credit for trying to tackle this,” Schroeder said. “It’s easy to point the finger at dentists – over time, they have contribute­d a fair amount of the opioid exposure. But they really have made efforts to limit that in recent years.”

(LA Times/TNS)

 ?? (Dreamstime/TNS) ?? PEOPLE WHOSE first-ever prescripti­on for opioid painkiller­s came from a dentist or dental surgeon are more likely to fall victim to opioid abuse.
(Dreamstime/TNS) PEOPLE WHOSE first-ever prescripti­on for opioid painkiller­s came from a dentist or dental surgeon are more likely to fall victim to opioid abuse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel