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Citation

Punches, Brittany E.; Stolz, Uwe; Freiermuth, Caroline E.; Ancona, Rachel M.; McLean, Samuel A.; House, Stacey L.; Beaudoin, Francesca L.; An, Xinming; Stevens, Jennifer S.; & Zeng, Donglin, et al. (2022). Predicting At-Risk Opioid Use Three Months after Ed Visit for Trauma: Results from the AUROA Study. PLOS ONE, 17(9), e0273378. PMCID: PMC9506640

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Whether short-term, low-potency opioid prescriptions for acute pain lead to future at-risk opioid use remains controversial and inadequately characterized. Our objective was to measure the association between emergency department (ED) opioid analgesic exposure after a physical, trauma-related event and subsequent opioid use. We hypothesized ED opioid analgesic exposure is associated with subsequent at-risk opioid use.
METHODS: Participants were enrolled in AURORA, a prospective cohort study of adult patients in 29 U.S., urban EDs receiving care for a traumatic event. Exclusion criteria were hospital admission, persons reporting any non-medical opioid use (e.g., opioids without prescription or taking more than prescribed for euphoria) in the 30 days before enrollment, and missing or incomplete data regarding opioid exposure or pain. We used multivariable logistic regression to assess the relationship between ED opioid exposure and at-risk opioid use, defined as any self-reported non-medical opioid use after initial ED encounter or prescription opioid use at 3-months.
RESULTS: Of 1441 subjects completing 3-month follow-up, 872 participants were included for analysis. At-risk opioid use occurred within 3 months in 33/620 (5.3%, CI: 3.7,7.4) participants without ED opioid analgesic exposure; 4/16 (25.0%, CI: 8.3, 52.6) with ED opioid prescription only; 17/146 (11.6%, CI: 7.1, 18.3) with ED opioid administration only; 12/90 (13.3%, CI: 7.4, 22.5) with both. Controlling for clinical factors, adjusted odds ratios (aORs) for at-risk opioid use after ED opioid exposure were: ED prescription only: 4.9 (95% CI 1.4, 17.4); ED administration for analgesia only: 2.0 (CI 1.0, 3.8); both: 2.8 (CI 1.2, 6.5).
CONCLUSIONS: ED opioids were associated with subsequent at-risk opioid use within three months in a geographically diverse cohort of adult trauma patients. This supports need for prospective studies focused on the long-term consequences of ED opioid analgesic exposure to estimate individual risk and guide therapeutic decision-making.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273378

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

PLOS ONE

Author(s)

Punches, Brittany E.
Stolz, Uwe
Freiermuth, Caroline E.
Ancona, Rachel M.
McLean, Samuel A.
House, Stacey L.
Beaudoin, Francesca L.
An, Xinming
Stevens, Jennifer S.
Zeng, Donglin
Neylan, Thomas C.
Clifford, Gari D.
Jovanovic, Tanja
Linnstaedt, Sarah D.
Germine, Laura T.
Bollen, Kenneth A.
Rauch, Scott L.
Haran, John P.
Storrow, Alan B.
Lewandowski, Christopher
Musey, Paul I Jr
Hendry, Phyllis L.
Sheikh, Sophia
Jones, Christopher W.
Kurz, Michael C.
Gentile, Nina T.
McGrath, Meghan E.
Hudak, Lauren A.
Pascual, Jose L.
Seamon, Mark J.
Harris, Erica
Chang, Anna M.
Pearson, Claire
Peak, David A.
Merchant, Roland C.
Domeier, Robert M.
Rathlev, Niels K.
O'Neil, Brian J.
Sanchez, Leon D.
Bruce, Steven E.
Pietrzak, Robert H.
Joormann, Jutta
Barch, Deanna M.
Pizzagalli, Diego A.
Smoller, Jordan W.
Luna, Beatriz
Harte, Steven E.
Elliott, James M.
Kessler, Ronald C.
Ressler, Kerry J.
Koenen, Karestan C.
Lyons, Michael S.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9506640

Data Set/Study

Advancing Understanding of RecOvery afteR traumA (AURORA) Study

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

ORCiD

Bollen - 0000-0002-6710-3800