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AN EXAMINATION OF CLAIMS-BASED PREDICTORS OF OVERDOSE FROM A LARGE MEDICAID PROGRAM
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Mar 2017
Source: Med Care. 55(3):291-298.
Details:
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Alternative Title:Med Care
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Personal Author:
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Description:Background
Health systems may play an important role in identification of patients at-risk of opioid medication overdose. However, standard measures for identifying overdose risk in administrative data do not exist.
Objective
Examine the association between opioid medication overdose and 2 validated measures of non-medical use of prescription opioids within claims data.
Research Design
A longitudinal retrospective cohort study that estimated associations between overdose and non-medical use.
Subjects
Adult Pennsylvania Medicaid program 2007-2012 patients initiating opioid treatment who were: non-dual eligible, without cancer diagnosis, and not in long-term care facilities or receiving hospice.
Measures
Overdose (International Classification of Disease, 9th edition, prescription opioid poisonings codes), opioid abuse (opioid use disorder diagnosis while possessing an opioid prescription), opioid misuse (a composite indicator of number of opioid prescribers, number of pharmacies, and days supplied), and dose exposure during opioid treatment episodes.
Results
A total of 372,347 Medicaid enrollees with 583,013 new opioid treatment episodes were included in the cohort. Opioid overdose was higher among those with abuse (1.5%) compared to those without (0.2%, p<0.001). Overdose was higher among those with probable (1.8%) and possible (0.9%) misuse compared to those without (0.2%, p<0.001). Abuse (adjusted rate ratio [ARR]=1.52, 95% CI=1.10-2.10), probable misuse (ARR=1.98, 95% CI=1.46-2.67), and possible misuse (ARR=1.76, 95% CI=1.48-2.09) were associated with significantly more events of opioid medication overdose compared to those without.
Conclusions
Claims-based measures can be employed by health systems to identify individuals at-risk of overdose who can be targeted for restrictions on opioid prescribing, dispensing, or referral to treatment.
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Source:
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Pubmed ID:27984346
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Pubmed Central ID:PMC5309160
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