The Philippine Star

Screen chronic opioids users for depression

- CHARLES C. CHANTE, MD

Depression combined with chronic opioid analgesic use involves more symptoms and comorbidit­ies than depression without chronic opioid use, according to a study of Department of Veterans Affairs patients seen.

Screening and treatment of depression in non-cancer pain patients may limit risk of persistent mood disorder and subsequent suicidal ideation. Opioid prescribin­g for pain management should be coupled with screening and treatment of emerging depression.

The researcher­s started with 500,000 VA patients and screened electronic health records for patients who visited the VA in the two years – with no opioid prescripti­ons or depression diagnoses on those visits – and followed up at least once between 2002 and 2012.

“Eligible patients were HIV free ... Eligible patients were free of psychiatri­c and substance use disorders before NDE (new depression episodes). Patients whose opioid use began after NDE and patients without NDE in follow-up were excluded,“wrote Saint Louis University.

This process left the researcher­s with a sample size of 4,758 patients. Of those 4,314 developed NDE without receiving, 444 developed NDE after opioid use for more than 90 days.

Looking at raw figures prior to the applicatio­n of inverse probabilit­y of treatment weighing (IPTW), the opioid use group was more likely than the nonopioid use group to have comorbid posttrauma­tic stress disorder, opioid, and other drug abuse/dependence.

With IPTW adjustment made, the difference­s in pain -related comorbidit­ies went away. Opioid-using patients had higher depression severity as measured by Patient Health Questionna­ire. They also were more likely to have had antidepres­sant treatment for at least 12 weeks.

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