Friday, April 23, 2021


Trajectories of Opioid Use Following First Opioid Prescription in Opioid-Naive Youths and Young Adults

JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(4):e214552. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.4552
Key Points

Question  What patterns of opioid prescribing exist following the first opioid prescription in a cohort of opioid-naive youths (aged 10-21 years)?

Findings  In this cohort study including 189 477 youths, there were 2 distinct trajectories; and 65.3% of patients in the high-risk trajectory group filled opioids at 12 months compared with 13.1% in the low-risk trajectory. Differences between the 2 trajectories persisted beyond 12 months, with a greater proportion of both opioid fills and opioid use disorder diagnoses in the high-risk group.

Meaning  Among the highest-risk trajectory, even short and low-dose opioid prescriptions were associated with increased risk of persistent opioid use.

Abstract

Importance  Although prescription opioids are the most common way adolescents and young adults initiate opioid use, many studies examine population-level risks following the first opioid prescription. There is currently a lack of understanding regarding how patterns of opioid prescribing following the first opioid exposure may be associated with long-term risks.

Objective  To identify distinct patterns of opioid prescribing following the first prescription using group-based trajectory modeling and examine the patient-, clinician-, and prescription-level factors that may be associated with trajectory membership during the first year.

Design, Setting, and Participants  This cohort study examined Pennsylvania Medicaid enrollees’ claims data from 2010 through 2016. Participants were aged 10 to 21 years at time of first opioid prescription. Data analysis was performed in March 2020.

Main Outcomes and Measures  This study used group-based trajectory modeling and defined trajectory status by opioid fill.

Results  Among the 189 477 youths who received an initial opioid prescription, 107 562 were female (56.8%), 81 915 were non-Latinx White (59.6%), and the median age was 16.9 (interquartile range [IQR], 14.6-18.8) years. During the subsequent year, 47 477 (25.1%) received at least one additional prescription. Among the models considered, the 2-group trajectory model had the best fit. Of those in the high-risk trajectory, 65.3% (n = 901) filled opioid prescriptions at month 12, in contrast to 13.1% (n = 6031) in the low-risk trajectory. Median age among the high-risk trajectory was 19.0 years (IQR, 17.1-20.0 years) compared with the low-risk trajectory (17.8 years [IQR, 15.8-19.4 years]). The high-risk trajectory received more potent prescriptions compared with the low-risk trajectory (median dosage of the index month for high-risk trajectory group: 10.0 MME/d [IQR, 5.0-21.2 MME/d] vs the low-risk trajectory group: 4.7 MME/d [IQR, 2.5-7.8 MME/d]; P < .001). The trajectories showed persistent differences with more youths in the high-risk trajectory going on to receive a diagnosis of opioid use disorder (30.0%; n = 412) compared with the low-risk group (10.1%; n = 4638) (P < .001).

Conclusions and Relevance  This study’s results identified 2 trajectories associated with elevated risk for persistent opioid receipt within 12 months following first opioid prescription. The high-risk trajectory was characterized by older age at time of first prescription, and longer and more potent first prescriptions. These findings suggest even short and low-dose opioid prescriptions can be associated with risks of persistent use for

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