Opioid and Nonopioid Analgesic Prescribing Patterns of Hepatologists for Medicare Beneficiaries.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.14309/ctg.0000000000000729
Preetha Iyengar, Nicole Prause, Wendi LeBrett, Anna Lee, Lin Chang, Arpan Patel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Opioids are commonly prescribed to patients with chronic liver disease, but little is known regarding medication prescribing patterns of hepatologists. Opioid use increased until national guidelines limited opioid prescriptions in early 2016. We aimed to describe rates of opioid and nonopioid analgesics to Medicare beneficiaries by hepatologists from 2013 to 2017 and identify demographic characteristics associated with higher prescribing.

Methods: Prescription data from 2013 to 2017 by 761 hepatologists identified in the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Part D Public Use File were analyzed. Annual prescription volumes were compared for providers with >10 annual prescriptions of a given drug type. Provider characteristics associated with opioid prescriptions were identified through multivariate logistic regression analyses.

Results: The proportion of hepatologists prescribing >10 annual opioid prescriptions decreased from 29% to 20.6%. Median annual opioid prescriptions per hepatologist significantly decreased from 24 to 20. Tramadol remained the most prescribed analgesic. Nonopioid analgesic prescription volume did not increase significantly. Provider characteristics associated with increased opioid prescriptions included male sex, practice location in the South and Midwest (vs West), more years in practice, and a greater proportion of beneficiaries who are white or with low-income subsidy claims. Characteristics associated with fewer prescriptions included non-university-based practice, having a greater proportion of female beneficiaries, and later prescription year.

Discussion: Hepatologists are prescribing less opioids. However, the prevalence of tramadol use and the lack of increase in nonopioid analgesic use highlights the need for advancing the science and training of pain management in chronic liver disease and targeted implementation of nonopioid treatment programs.

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肝病医生为医疗保险受益人开具阿片类和非阿片类镇痛药处方的模式。
简介:阿片类药物是慢性肝病患者的常用处方药,但人们对肝病医生的处方用药模式知之甚少。在 2016 年初国家指南限制阿片类药物处方之前,阿片类药物的使用有所增加。我们旨在描述 2013-2017 年间肝病专家为医疗保险受益人开具阿片类和非阿片类镇痛药的比例,并确定与较高处方量相关的人口统计学特征:方法: 分析了美国医疗保险与医疗补助服务中心 D 部分公共使用文件中确定的 761 名肝病医生 2013-2017 年的处方数据。对年度处方量大于 10 个特定药物类型的医疗机构的年度处方量进行了比较。通过多变量逻辑回归分析确定了与阿片类药物处方相关的医疗机构特征:结果:每年开具超过 10 张阿片类药物处方的肝病医生比例从 29% 降至 20.6%。每位肝病专家的阿片类药物年处方量中位数从 24 例大幅降至 20 例。曲马多仍然是处方量最大的镇痛药。非阿片类镇痛药处方量没有明显增加。与阿片类药物处方量增加相关的提供者特征包括:男性、执业地点位于南部和中西部(相对于西部)、执业年限较长、白人或低收入补贴申请受益人比例较高。与处方较少相关的特征包括非大学执业、女性受益人比例较高以及处方年份较晚:结论:肝病医生开出的阿片类药物处方越来越少。然而,曲马多使用的普遍性和非阿片类镇痛药使用的不增加突出表明,有必要推进慢性肝病疼痛管理的科学和培训,并有针对性地实施非阿片类治疗计划。
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来源期刊
Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology
Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY-
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
114
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology (CTG), published on behalf of the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG), is a peer-reviewed open access online journal dedicated to innovative clinical work in the field of gastroenterology and hepatology. CTG hopes to fulfill an unmet need for clinicians and scientists by welcoming novel cohort studies, early-phase clinical trials, qualitative and quantitative epidemiologic research, hypothesis-generating research, studies of novel mechanisms and methodologies including public health interventions, and integration of approaches across organs and disciplines. CTG also welcomes hypothesis-generating small studies, methods papers, and translational research with clear applications to human physiology or disease. Colon and small bowel Endoscopy and novel diagnostics Esophagus Functional GI disorders Immunology of the GI tract Microbiology of the GI tract Inflammatory bowel disease Pancreas and biliary tract Liver Pathology Pediatrics Preventative medicine Nutrition/obesity Stomach.
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