Unequal Access to Chiropractic Pain Relief Care for Back Pain in Patients with Opioid Use Disorder

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Patience Moyo, Ph.D
Assistant Professor of Health Services, Policy and Practice
Center for Gerontology and Healthcare Research
Department of Health Services, Policy, and Practice
Brown University School of Public Health

Patience Moyo, Ph.D
Assistant Professor of Health Services, Policy and Practice
Center for Gerontology and Healthcare Research
Department of Health Services, Policy, and Practice
Brown University School of Public Health

PainRelief.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: Clinical practice guidelines recommend nonpharmacologic treatments as first-line therapies for managing chronic pain. However, little is known about the use of guideline-recommended pain therapies and whether use varies in demographic subgroups. Individuals with co-occurring chronic pain and opioid use disorder deserve particular consideration because of their increased risk of harm from opioids and other pharmacologic therapies combined with their susceptibility to social and structural barriers to accessing health care.

We sought to understand whether the well-established racial and ethnic inequities in pain management extend to individuals with opioid use disorder and to nonpharmacologic pain treatments, specifically physical therapy and chiropractic care.

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Cannabis Smoke Exposure is Not Risk Free

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Beth Cohen, MD MAS
Professor of Medicine, UCSF
Co-Director, PRIME Internal Medicine Residency Program
Staff Physician, San Francisco VA Medical Center

PainRelief.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: Though rates of tobacco use are declining, rates of cannabis use are increasing as it becomes more widely legal and available. Though there is not as much research on the long-term health effects of cannabis, cannabis and tobacco smoke contain many of the same carcinogens and toxins and both have particulate matter than is harmful when inhaled.

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Study Finds More Than 10 Million New Cases of Adult Chronic Pain Per Year

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Richard L. Nahin, MPH, PhD

National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health
National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

PainRelief.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: While there has been extensive research examining the prevalence of chronic pain, far less is known about the incidence of chronic pain.  Understanding the incidence of chronic pain is critical to understanding how such pain manifests and evolves over time.

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State Opioid Prescribing Limits Did Little to Reduce Length of Dental Prescriptions

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Kao-Ping Chua, MD, PhD
Susan B. Meister Child Health Evaluation and Research Center
Department of Pediatrics, University of Michigan Medical School
Ann Arbor MI 48109.

Kao-Ping Chua
Dr. Kao-Ping Chua

PainRelief.com: What is the background for this study? What are the main findings?

Response: U.S. dentists account for approximately 11 million opioid prescriptions each year. Excessive opioid prescriptions from dentists can result in leftover opioids that can be diverted or misused. In part to prevent this, most states enacted policies between 2016 and 2018 that restricted the duration of opioid prescriptions for acute pain, such as dental pain.

The objective of this study was to evaluate whether these state opioid prescribing limits were associated with reductions in the duration of opioid prescriptions from dentists. Using national prescription dispensing data from 2014-2020 and a rigorous quasi-experimental study design, we found that this duration did not change after limit enactment. A likely explanation is that most limits allow up to a 7-day supply of opioids, but the typical duration of dental opioid prescriptions during the study period was about a 3-day supply. For this reason, state limits had little ability to reduce this duration in the first place.

University of Pittsburgh Study Finds Durable Pain Relief in Obese Patients Following Bariatric Surgery

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Wendy C. King, PhD
Epidemiology Data Center
School of Public Health
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA

Dr. King

PainRelief.com: What is the background for this study?

Response: Previous studies had provided evidence that bariatric surgical procedures are associated with improvements in pain, physical function and work productivity. However, most prior studies only followed participants 1-2 years, at which point participants were at the peak of their weight loss. 

Among a large cohort of US adults, we wanted to evaluate how much initial improvements in pain, physical function and work productivity declined during long-term follow-up, when some degree of weight regain is not uncommon. We limited our study to adults who underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) or sleeve gastrectomy (SG), the two most common bariatric surgical procedures done today.

Headache: Clinical Trial Finds Oral Atogepant Reduced Monthly Migraine Days

Dr. Trugman

PainRelief.com Interview with:

Joel M. Trugman, MD
Associate Vice President
Neuroscience Development
AbbVie

PainRelief.com:  What is the background for this study?  What are the main findings?

Response: Migraine is a disabling chronic disease characterized by recurrent headache attacks and associated symptoms, including nausea, phonophobia, or sensitivity to sound, and photophobia, or sensitivity to light.

The ADVANCE clinical trial is a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial and examined the safety and efficacy of atogepant, an oral, small-molecule calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist in patients with episodic migraine. The primary efficacy endpoint was the change from baseline in mean monthly migraine days (MMD) across the 12-week treatment period. This analysis that was recently published examined the efficacy of atogepant using 4 levels of mean monthly migraine day (MMD) responder rates. 

This analysis found that all doses of atogepant significantly increased the proportion of participants who achieved a ≥25%, ≥50%, ≥75% and 100% reduction in mean monthly migraine days over 12 weeks of treatment.

More Nonopioid Medications Prescribed for Pain Relief since CDC Released Chronic Pain Guidelines

PainRelief.com Interview with:

JASON GOLDSTICK
Dr. Goldstick

Jason E. Goldstick, PhD
Injury Prevention Center
Department of Emergency Medicine
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

PainRelief.com:  What is the background for this study?  What are the main findings?

Response: In 2016, the CDC released the Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain. A primary goal of this voluntary guideline is that individuals should receive pain management care that provides the greatest overall benefit. Among other things, this may entail beginning opioid treatment only when the clinician determines that the expected benefits outweigh the risks.

Other research has shown reductions in opioid prescribing as reduced since the guideline release; this report examines whether there were changes in nonopioid pain medication prescribing.

Our overall findings were that nonopioid prescribing increased nationally following the guideline release, above and beyond what would’ve been predicted based on the pre-guideline trends, and this finding was generally consistent across patient subpopulations (e.g., those with vs. without prior opioid exposure).

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Study Highlights Challenges of Opioid Use Disorder in Patients with Cancer Pain

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Katie Fitzgerald Jones MSN, APN
PhD candidate Connell School of Nursing
Boston College
Jonas Mental Health Scholar 2021-2023
American Academy of Nursing Jonas Policy Scholar 
Ruth L. Kirschstein National Service Award (F31NR019929-01)

PainRelief.com:  What is the background for this study? 

Response: I am a Palliative and Addiction Nurse Practitioner at VA Boston and a Ph.D. candidate at Boston College Connell School of Nursing. In my clinical practice, I regularly care for people with cancer who have a co-occurring substance use disorder. 

How to best care for people with substance use disorders, such as opioid use disorder is especially complex in people with cancer because opioid management is a standard of cancer-pain management and cancer prognoses can influence opioid decisions and vary. It is important when prescribing opioids that you attend to safety while also addressing pain. People with untreated opioid use disorder or concerning opioid behaviors (such as taking more opioids than prescribed or using opioids with unprescribed medications that increase the risk for opioid-related harm such as benzodiazepines) have an increased risk for opioid related-harms. It is also an area that lacks consensus and is absent from cancer-specific pain guidelines.

This study was conducted with leaders in palliative care including senior author, Jessica Merlin to tackle the question of what is consensus among palliative care and addiction clinicians to caring for people with opioid misuse or use disorder and cancer-related pain and how this is influenced by prognosis?

More Kids Poisoned by Cannabis Since Legalization

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Daniel Myran, MD, MPH, CCFP, FRCPC
Family and Public Health and Preventive Medicine Physician 
CIHR Fellow, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute 
Department of Family Medicine Innovation Fellow
University of Ottawa 

Dr. Myran

PainRelief.com:  What is the background for this study? 

Response: Canada legalized recreational, or non-medical, cannabis in October 2018. Canada took phased approach to legalization initially only allowing flower-based cannabis products and oils and after one year permitting the sale of commercial cannabis edibles (e.g. THC containing candies, baked goods, and drinks). In this study we took advantage of this phased roll out of legal cannabis to understand the impact of legalization on cannabis exposures or poisonings in children aged 0-9 years and the contribution of different types of cannabis products to these events. 

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Older Adult Black Men at Disproportionate Risk of Fatal Opioid Overdose

PainRelief.com Interview with:
Maryann Mason, PhD
Department of Emergency Medicine
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Buehler Center for Health Policy and Economics,
Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois

PainRelief.com:  What is the background for this study?

Response: This study came about because we were looking at data for Cook County, Illinois and saw an increase in older adult opioid overdose deaths.  That made us wonder if there was a national trend or the observation was limited to our local area.  We undertook the research to determine that and found that it is indeed a national phenomenon.

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