Bone fractures in patients using tapentadol or oxycodone: an exploratory US claims database study

Author:

Morlion Bart J1ORCID,Margarit César23,Wild Imane4,Karra Ravi4,Liedgens Hiltrud5,Sohns Melanie6,Finco Gabriele7

Affiliation:

1. Leuven Centre for Algology & Pain Management, Anaesthesiology & Algology, Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University Hospitals Leuven, University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

2. Pain Unit, Health Department of Alicante-General Hospital, Alicante, Spain

3. Neuropharmacology on Pain (NED), Alicante Institute for Health & Biomedical Research (ISABIAL-FISABIO Foundation), Alicante, Spain

4. Global Medical Affairs, Grünenthal GmbH, Aachen, Germany

5. Health Economics & Outcomes Research, Grünenthal GmbH, Aachen, Germany

6. Grünenthal Innovation, Drug Development, Data Sciences, Grünenthal GmbH, Aachen, Germany

7. Department of Medical Sciences & Public Health, University of Cagliari, Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria of Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy

Abstract

Aim: To explore fracture outcomes with tapentadol or oxycodone, two opioids with differing mechanisms of action. Materials & methods: Retrospective cohort pilot study, using MarketScan® Commercial and Medicare Supplemental claims databases, on patients with postoperative pain, back pain, or osteoarthritis and ≥1 claim for tapentadol (n = 16,457), oxycodone (n = 1,356,920), or both (n = 15,893) between June 2009 and December 2015. Results: During 266,826 and 9,007,889 days of tapentadol and oxycodone treatment, patients evidenced 1080 and 72,275 fractures, respectively. Fracture rates per treatment-year were 1.512 for tapentadol and 3.013 for oxycodone. Conclusion: Examination of administrative claims has inherent limitations, but this exploratory analysis indicates a lower fracture rate with tapentadol than oxycodone in the analyzed dataset, which needs confirmation by further clinical trials.

Funder

Grünenthal GmbH

Publisher

Future Medicine Ltd

Subject

General Medicine

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