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Medical outcomes associated with prescription opioid abuse via oral and non-oral routes of administration. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Prescription opioid abuse is a growing public health concern, with abusers often opting for non-oral routes like injection or inhalation to achieve faster effects.
  • A study using data from the RADARS System found that while most opioid abuse occurs through oral ingestion, non-oral routes were linked to a significantly higher risk of death or severe medical outcomes.
  • The findings suggest that interventions to reduce non-oral abuse, such as developing abuse-deterrent formulations, could greatly benefit public health.

Article Abstract

Background: Prescription opioid abuse and misuse is a serious and growing public health issue. While the most common form of abuse is swallowing intact tablets/capsules, some abusers manipulate, or tamper with, these medications by altering the dosage form to allow for non-oral routes of administration (e.g., injection, inhalation) in order to achieve more rapid or enhanced psychoactive effects. Because administration of opioids via non-oral routes results in greater systemic availability and more rapid central nervous system penetration, we hypothesized that death and major medical outcomes occur more frequently with non-oral routes compared to oral route alone.

Methods: This retrospective cohort study analyzed data from the Researched Abuse, Diversion and Addiction-Related Surveillance (RADARS) System Poison Center Program to investigate relative risk of prescription opioid abuse via oral and non-oral routes.

Results: While the oral route was the most commonly reported route of abuse (64.0%), non-oral routes were reported in 14.6% exposures and unknown routes in 21.4% exposures. The relative risk of an exposure resulting in death or major effect was 2.43 (95% CI 1.97, 2.99) if non-oral routes were reported compared to exposures involving oral route only.

Conclusion: Analysis of acute health events recorded by poison centers indicates that death or major effects are twice as likely to occur with intentional abuse of prescription opioids via non-oral routes of administration than ingestion alone. Effective interventions to prevent abuse via non-oral routes of solid dosage forms of prescription opioids, such as abuse-deterrent formulations could have a significant public health impact.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.01.039DOI Listing

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