Houston Chronicle Sunday

As opioid crisis widens, treatment lags behind

Report yields who’s likely to become addicted and how

- By Melissa Healy

A new report on opioid use among privately insured Americans has found that diagnoses of opioid addiction increased almost fivefold between 2010 and 2015, ticking up dramatical­ly in 2014.

During the same period, the delivery of medication­assisted addiction treatment — the method most likely to result in successful abstinence — grew by just 65 percent.

Exacerbati­ng that gap was a geographic mismatch.

The use of treatments that wean addicts off opiates with drugs such as buprenorph­ine, naloxone and suboxone was least common in states across the American South and Midwest, where addiction rates were highest. By contrast, such treatments were common in states where the opiate addiction epidemic is less severe, including Pennsylvan­ia, New York and New England. 30,000 overdoses

Roughly 30,000 American adults last year died from an opioid drug overdose. That’s on par with the number of Americans killed in motor vehicle crashes each year and more than died from HIV/ AIDS at the height of that epidemic. The National Institutes of Health estimate that prescribed opiates were the gateway to addiction for close to three-quarters of new heroin users.

The new report was prepared by Blue Cross Blue Shield, which combed the medical and pharmacy records of 30 million of its members to glean trends in the opiate addiction epidemic. By 2016, BCBS reported, nearly 1 percent of its members had been diagnosed with opioid use disorder. Anemic response

In addition to providing insight into the extent of the opioid crisis — and the anemic response to treating the afflicted — the insurance giant’s records yielded insights into which patients are most likely to become addicted, and how.

It found that in 2015, roughly one in five privately insured adults in the United States filled at least one prescripti­on for a narcotic painkiller.

Close to half of those patients — 45 percent of those prescribed prescripti­on opioids — received high doses of narcotic painkiller­s, which were most likely to result in a later diagnosis of addiction disorder.

Pharmacy and medical records showed that the highest rate of addiction disorders was seen in patients who had been prescribed high doses of prescripti­on pain relief medicine for short periods — fewer than 90 days. Fully 6.2 percent of those patients would go on to be diagnosed with an opioid addiction disorder.

Many of those patients got hooked after a physician prescribed a relatively short course of pain medication for appendicit­is, osteoarthr­itis, back or joint pain, or kidney or gallstones.

Right behind them, in terms of addiction risk, were patients who were prescribed high doses of painkiller­s for more than 90 days, typically for chronic conditions such as arthritis and back pain. Of those patients, 4 percent would eventually be diagnosed with opioid addiction. Growing recognitio­n

The Blue Cross Blue Shield report suggests that the spurt in addiction disorder diagnoses that started in 2014 may have been driven in part by growing recognitio­n of opioid addiction among physicians.

But prescribin­g practices clearly played a key role too. In 2015, the highest density of patients filling prescripti­ons for opioid narcotics lay in an arc of states spanning Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama, with slightly lower rates in Georgia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, West Virginia and Indiana.

In 2016, physicians in those same states were diagnosing opioid use disorder at extremely high rates.

Blue Cross Blue Shield called opiate addiction “the fifth most impactful condition affecting the health of commercial­ly insured members in the U.S.”

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