State Laws Had Little Impact on Opioid Prescribing

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

When the CDC’s opioid prescribing guideline was released in 2016, dozens of states began efforts to codify the guideline’s “voluntary” recommendations into laws and regulations. To date, according to The Pew Charitable Trust, 40 states limit the dose or initial supply of opioid medication, and all 50 states have implemented prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs) to track opioid prescriptions and the doctors who write them.

On the surface, it may appear the state policies are working, because opioid prescribing in the U.S. has plunged over 40 percent, to levels not seen in 20 years. But a large new study found that state laws regulating opioids have had very little effect on prescribing – suggesting that other factors may be at work making doctors reluctant to prescribe opioids.

Researchers at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health studied commercial insurance claims for nearly 7.7 million adults in 13 “treatment states” that limited prescribing, established PDMPs or targeted pill mills. The analysis included data for nearly 2 million patients diagnosed with arthritis, low back pain, headache, fiibromyalgia or neuropathic pain.

The study findings, published in Annals of Internal Medicine, show that prescribing and PDMP laws in treatment states were associated with an average change of less than 1% in the proportion of patients receiving an opioid prescription.

For example, in Idaho an estimated 9.18% of pain patients received an opioid prescription prior to the state passing a mandatory PDMP law that required doctors to look up a patient’s prescription drug history. In the first two years of the law’s implementation, that percentage fell only slightly to 9.03% of patients.

State laws have also had a negligible impact on dose and supply. Patients who received an opioid prescription in treatment states had an average change of less than one day in the supply of opioids and an average dosage change of less than 4 morphine milligram equivalents (MME) per day.

“We did not find an association between state opioid prescribing laws and receipt of opioid prescriptions or guideline-concordant nonopioid pain treatments among commercially insured adults. Across the 13 states that implemented laws, the change in treatment attributable to the law was consistently small in magnitude and not
statistically significant,” researchers reported.

“The findings suggest that the decreasing volume of opioid prescribing in the United States may be driven more by shifting clinical guidelines, professional norms, or other factors than by these laws.”

PNN asked lead author Beth McGinty, PhD, if the “other factors” that caused opioid prescribing to decline were the CDC guideline itself or the chilling effect many doctors felt from expanded investigations by state medical boards, law enforcement and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

“Our study was not designed to identify those other factors, so I can’t say for sure what has driven these declines.  Overall declines could be due to changing clinical practices nationwide in response to the CDC guidelines or many others,” McGinty replied in an email.

“Declines could also be driven by a range of other efforts to curb opioid prescribing, perhaps the DEA investigations you mention but also other efforts like health system interventions to reduce prescribing. As I said above, our study was designed to evaluate just the state laws, not these other factors, so I can’t say for sure."

“It's really hard to tell exactly what the findings here mean, despite a valiant effort on the part of the researchers,” says Bob Twillman, PhD, former Executive Director of the Academy of Integrative Pain Management.

Twillman says the CDC guideline was “weaponized” in so many ways by regulators, insurers and states that it’s difficult to measure the impact of any single policy or regulation. It was the cumulative impact of them all that drove down opioid prescribing.

“In truth, the most that you can conclude from this study is that these laws did not appear to reduce prescribing. Unfortunately, in the context of an avalanche of other policies, that conclusion doesn't paint a very accurate picture of what is happening to patients because of all the policies,” Twillman told PNN.

State Laws Failed to Reduce Overdoses

McGinty’s study is not the first to find that PDMPs have been largely ineffective – and may even be making the opioid crisis worse. A 2021 study by the Reason Foundation found that overdoses from illicit fentanyl and heroin increased in states after PDMP’s were adopted. A 2018 study by researchers at Columbia University and University of California, Davis had similar findings. 

State laws that limit the dose and quantity of prescription opioids have also failed to stop overdoses from increasing.

In 2016, Massachusetts became the first state in the nation to limit the initial supply of opioid prescriptions to 7 days. The law has had little impact on overdoses. Over 2,000 people still die annually from opioid overdoses in Massachusetts, a rate that has remained steady. The most recent data shows that illicit fentanyl was involved in 92 percent of overdose deaths in the state.

It was the 2016 CDC guideline that encouraged Massachusetts and many other states to adopt limits on initial opioid prescriptions. For short-term acute pain, the guideline said that opioids for “three days or less will often be sufficient; more than seven days will rarely be needed.”

A newly revised draft guideline drops any reference to the number of days and gives physicians more latitude, recommending that opioids be prescribed for acute pain “for no longer than the expected duration of pain severe enough to require opioids.”

Overdose Deaths Fell by 4.1% in 2018

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

A new analysis by the CDC has confirmed earlier estimates that drug overdose deaths in the U.S. decreased by 4.1% in 2018, the first decline in the nation’s overdose rate in nearly three decades.

The decline was led by a drop in overdoses involving prescription opioids (-13.5%) and heroin (-4.1%). Much of that progress was offset by a 10% increase in deaths involving synthetic opioids, a category that includes illicit fentanyl and fentanyl analogs.

Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids were involved in 31,335 overdose deaths -- nearly half of the 70,237 drug deaths in 2018 and over two-thirds of the 46,802 opioid deaths.

The 14,975 deaths linked to prescription opioids represent about 22% of the total number of fatal overdoses.

“Decreases in overdose deaths involving prescription opioids and heroin reflect the effectiveness of public health efforts to protect Americans and their families,” CDC Director Robert Redfield, MD, said in a statement. “While we continue work to improve those outcomes, we are also addressing the increase in overdose deaths involving synthetic opioids. We must bring this epidemic to an end.”

U.S. DRUG OVERDOSE DEATHS IN 2018

SOURCE: CDC

Synthetic opioid deaths in 2018 increased in the Northeast, South and West and remained stable in the Midwest. The highest synthetic opioid death rate (34 deaths for every 100,000 people) occurred in West Virginia, which also has the highest death rate involving prescription opioids (13.1 deaths per 100,000 people).

Seventeen states experienced declines in prescription opioid deaths in 2018, with no states experiencing significant increases.

While opioid prescribing has been declining since 2012, much of the CDC’s public messaging remains focused on reducing the use of opioid pain medication.

“Because of the reductions observed in deaths involving prescription opioids, continued efforts to encourage safe prescribing practices, such as following the CDC Guideline for Prescribing Opioids for Chronic Pain might be enhanced by increased use of nonopioid and nonpharmacologic treatments for pain,” wrote Nana Wilson, PhD, a CDC epidemiologist and lead author of the study.

“Additional public health efforts to reduce opioid-involved overdose deaths include expanding the distribution of naloxone, addressing polysubstance use, and increasing the provision of medication-assisted treatment.”

Wilson and her colleagues noted that an increase in overdose deaths among African-American and Hispanics showed a need for “culturally tailored interventions” to address health and other societal factors.   

While the decline in overdose deaths in 2018 is encouraging, preliminary CDC data indicates the trend is not continuing into 2019. Deaths are increasing from synthetic opioids, cocaine, methamphetamine and psychostimulants such as attention deficit disorder drugs.

Overdose deaths often involve multiple drugs, so a single death might be included in more than one category and be counted multiple times. The quality of the data also varies widely from state to state. Only 39 states have good to excellent overdose data, according to the CDC.

Study Debunks Myths About Origins of Opioid Abuse

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

It’s become a popular myth – and for some, a propaganda tool – to claim that opioid pain medication is a gateway drug to heroin and other street drugs.

An opioid education campaign called The Truth About Opioids – funded with taxpayer dollars from the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy — declares in big bold letters on its website that “80% of heroin users started with a prescription painkiller.”

The 80% figure stems from a 2013 study that found four out of five new heroin users had previously abused prescription opioids by using them non-medically.

Importantly, the heroin users were not asked if they had a valid prescription for opioids or even where they got them – but that doesn’t stop federal agencies from citing the study as proof that illegal drug use often starts with a legal opioid prescription.

The Drug Enforcement Administration last year used the 80% figure to justify steep cuts in the supply of prescription opioids, claiming in the Federal Register that addicts often get hooked “after first obtaining these drugs from their health care providers.”

“The 80% statistic is misleading and encourages faulty assumptions about the overdose crisis and medical care,” Roger Chriss explained in a PNN column last year.

A new study by researchers at Penn State University debunks the myth that the opioid crisis was driven primarily by doctors’ prescriptions. The researchers conducted a series of surveys and in-depth interviews with opioid abusers in southwestern Pennsylvania -- a region hard hit by opioid addiction -- asking detailed questions about their drug use.

The study was small – 125 people were surveyed and 30 of them were interviewed – but the findings provide a an important new insight into the origins of opioid abuse and the role played by painkillers.

"What emerged from our study -- and really emerged because we decided to do these qualitative interviews in addition to a survey component -- was a pretty different narrative than the national one,” said lead author Ashton Verdery, PhD, an assistant professor of sociology, demography and social data analytics at Penn State. "There's a lot about that narrative that I think is an overly simplistic way of thinking about this."

‘Opioids Were Never the First Drug’

Verdery and his colleagues found that over two-thirds of those interviewed (66.7%) first abused a prescription opioid that was given, bought or stolen from a friend or family member. Another 7% purchased the drugs from a stranger or dealer. Only one in four (26%) started by abusing opioid medication that was prescribed to them by a doctor.

“We found that most people initiated through a pattern of recreational use because of people around them. They got them from either siblings, friends or romantic partners," said Verdery. “Participants repeatedly reported having a peer or caregiver in their childhood who had a substance use problem. Stories from childhood of witnessing one of these people selling, preparing, or using drugs were very common. Being exposed to others’ substance use at an early age was often cited as a turning point for OMI (opioid misuse) and of drug use in general.”

And prescription opioids were not the gateway drugs they are often portrayed to be. Polysubstance abuse was common and usually began with drugs such as alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamine, prescription sedatives and prescription stimulants.

“It is important to note that interviewees universally reported initiating OMI only after previously starting their substance use career with another drug (e.g., alcohol, marijuana, cocaine). Opioids were never the first drug used, suggesting that OMI is likely associated with being further along in one’s drug using career,” Verdery reported in the Journal of Addictive Studies.

Verdery says additional studies are needed on the origins of drug abuse and that researchers should focus on the role that other substances play in opioid addiction. Only then can proper steps be taken to prevent abuse and addiction before they start.

"We think that understanding this mechanism as a potential pathway is worth further consideration," said Verdery. "It's not just that people were prescribed painkillers from a doctor for a legitimate reason and, if we just crack down on the doctors who are prescribing in these borderline cases we can reduce the epidemic.”