Study Finds Low Risk of Rx Opioid Abuse Among Young People  

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

The stories are heartbreaking. A young man gets a prescription for opioid pain medication and quickly becomes addicted.

“I lost everything. I had to leave school, and stop playing sports in college. I started to watch my life slip away. These drugs are addictive. One prescription can be all it takes to lose everything,” says Mike.

A mother loses her son to an overdose.

“My son… was 20 years old when he was prescribed opioids,” says Ann Marie. “It took him five days to get addicted.”

These are some of the real-life stories being told in a CDC awareness campaign that warns against the use of prescription opioids. “It only takes a little to lose a lot,” is the theme in a series of CDC videos, billboards and online ads.

The stories are sad, but the widespread belief that adolescents and young adults can quickly become addicted to prescription opioids is not accurate for the vast majority of young people, according to a large new study published in JAMA Pediatrics.

Researchers at Indiana University looked at a database of over 77,000 young people in Sweden between the ages of 13 and 29 who were prescribed opioids for the first time. They were compared to a control group that was given non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) for pain relief. Both groups had no previous signs of substance abuse.

Only 4.6% of those prescribed an opioid developed a substance use disorder or other substance-related issue, such as an overdose or criminal conviction within five years of being prescribed.  That compared to 2.4% of those in the control group.

"By using several rigorous research designs, we found that there was not a huge difference -- in fact, the difference was smaller than some previous research has found,” said Patrick Quinn, PhD, an assistant professor at the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington. “But the study still shows that even a first opioid prescription may lead to some risk."

Interestingly, young people given oxycodone were at no greater risk of developing a substance abuse problem than those given “weaker” opioids such as codeine or tramadol.

Quinn says further research is needed to determine how much substance abuse risk is caused by opioid medication alone and how much is related to other issues, such as mental health, genetics and environmental factors.

"We need to have a good understanding of what those risks might be in order for patients and doctors to make informed decisions," said Quinn. "Our findings highlight the importance of screening for substance use disorders and other mental health conditions among patients with pain, including those receiving opioid therapy."

A 2018 study of young people given opioids after their wisdom teeth were removed also found the risk of long-term use low. The study of over 70,000 teens and young adults found that only 1.3% were still being prescribed opioids months after their initial prescription by a dentist.  

Social Media’s Role in the Opioid Epidemic

By Douglas and Karen Hughes, Guest Columnists

Drug epidemics since 1900 are dynamic and our hyper-information age makes ours even more pronounced. The so-called “opioid epidemic” is contingent upon socioeconomic demand and available drug supply. To fully understand it, we must look beyond opioid medication as the sole contributing factor.

Social media could be one cause that everyone has overlooked.

Overprescribing of opioids was initially the problem and it helped fill numerous medicine cabinets. Coincidentally, this occurred at about the same time as the explosion of cell phones, texting and social media, and the resultant peer-driven social narrative.

Instantaneous information exchange brought teenagers into contact with “high school druggies” — which their pre-cell phone parents knew only as a separate social group. Contact with them was taboo. Today, however, everyone is part of the larger social narrative.

Relating the euphoria of opioid use in open forums caused adolescents, who already feel indestructible, to rebel by trying them. These impressionable youth become attracted to opioids in the same way their parents were attracted to alcohol, tobacco and marijuana. This sent teens scrambling to find a free sample in grandmother’s medicine cabinet.

Many renowned physicians believe addictive personalities are actually formed by a genetic predisposition to addiction. All that is needed is some substance to abuse. Alcohol is usually the gateway drug for adolescents, the “first contact” for many teens. Forgotten opioids in a medicine cabinet only come later. Addicts will often say, “My drug use began with a prescription opioid.” But addiction experts know the battle was already lost if there was no intervention after “first contact” with drugs.

Society has long blamed overprescribing for the opioid epidemic, but the last three years have proven that to be a red herring. The mass closing of pill mills in 2015, the CDC opioid guideline in 2016, and the steep reduction in opioid production that followed in 2017 have only accelerated the epidemic. Forcing disabled intractable pain sufferers to suffer or self-medicate was not the solution.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention postulated that overprescribing caused the opioid epidemic because they only had clinical evidence for short term opioid therapy. Instead of opening a wider dialogue and seeking more evidence, the lack of critical long-term studies was used as an excuse to limit prescribing. Statistical manipulation of overdose deaths was used to confirm this errant policy.

This is emblematic of all investigations into our present drug problems. Society ran the fool’s errand that one blanket policy could be found for hundreds of diverse regional and local drug problems.

The opioid epidemic most likely emanated from widely accepted alcohol use and the social lure of opioids by adolescents. It has little to do with patients.

Douglas and Karen Hughes live in West Virginia. Doug is a disabled coal miner and retired environmental permit writer. Karen retired after 35 years as a high school science teacher.

Pain News Network invites other readers to share their stories with us. Send them to editor@painnewsnetwork.org.

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.