Affiliation:
1. Pain Management Center of Paducah, Paducah, KY, and University of Louisville, Louisville, KY
Abstract
The treatment of chronic pain, therapeutic opioid use and abuse, and the nonmedical use of
prescription drugs have been topics of intense focus and debate. After the liberalization of laws
governing opioid prescribing for the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain by state medical boards
in the late 1990s, and with the introduction of new pain management standards implemented
by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) in 2000, opioids,
in general, and the most potent forms of opioids including Schedule II drugs, in particular, have
dramatically increased.
Despite the escalating use and abuse of therapeutic opioids, nearly 15 to 20 years later the scientific
evidence for the effectiveness of opioids for chronic non-cancer pain remains unclear. Concerns
continue regarding efficacy; problematic physiologic effects such as hyperalgesia, hypogonadism
and sexual dysfunction; and adverse side effects – especially the potential for misuse and abuse –
and the increase in opioid-related deaths.
Americans, constituting only 4.6% of the world’s population, have been consuming 80% of the
global opioid supply, and 99% of the global hydrocodone supply, as well as two-thirds of the
world’s illegal drugs. Retail sales of commonly used opioid medications (including methadone,
oxycodone, fentanyl base, hydromorphone, hydrocodone, morphine, meperidine, and codeine)
have increased from a total of 50.7 million grams in 1997 to 126.5 million grams in 2007. This
is an overall increase of 149% with increases ranging from 222% for morphine, 280% for
hydrocodone, 319% for hydromorphone, 525% for fentanyl base, 866% for oxycodone, to
1,293% for methadone. Average sales of opioids per person have increased from 74 milligrams in
1997 to 369 milligrams in 2007, a 402% increase.
Surveys of nonprescription drug abuse, emergency department visits for prescription controlled
drugs, unintentional deaths due to prescription controlled substances, therapeutic use of opioids,
and opioid abuse have been steadily rising.
This manuscript provides an updated 10-year perspective on therapeutic use, abuse, and nonmedical use of opioids and their consequences.
Key words: Controlled prescription drug abuse, opioid abuse, opioid misuse, nonmedical use
of psychotherapeutic drugs, nonmedical use of opioids, National Survey on Drug Use and Health,
National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine