Affiliation:
1. Millenium Research Institute, San Diego, CA
Abstract
Background: A major concern of physicians treating pain patients with chronic opioid
therapy and similar drugs is determining whether the patients are also using illicit drugs.
This is commonly determined by urine drug testing (UDT). However, there are few studies
on whether or not monitoring patients by this technique decreases illicit drug use.
Objective: To determine if the presence of illicit drugs decreases over a number of
physician visits where UDT was performed.
Method: The method involved a retrospective study of tests for the illicit drugs
marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, ecstacy (MDMA) phencyclidine (PCP) and the
heroin metabolite, 6-acetylmorphine as confirmed by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem
Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). A database of 150,000 patient visits was examined for
the presence of any of these 6 drugs.
Results: A total of 87,000 patients were initially tested. The number of patients who
were repeatedly tested decreased over time. The percentage of patients positive for any
of these illicit drugs decreased from 23% to 9% after 14 visits where UDT was performed.
When graphed there was a trend to decreasing use. The Spearman correlation = -0.88,
P < 0.0001. The major illicit drug was marijuana. When this was removed from the
analysis, there was an even greater correlation with decreased illicit drug use. Spearman
correlation = -0.92 (P < 0.0001) using a weighted correlation.
Limitation: Patients continuing to use illicit drugs might be dismissed from practices
thus biasing the study towards illicit drug avoidance.
Conclusion: Continued UDT might decrease illicit drug use among pain patients.
Key words: Pain patients, UDT, urine drug testing, LC-MS/MS, illicit drugs, decrease
drug use
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
10 articles.
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