Teens and young adults who receive their initial opioid
prescriptions from their dentists or oral surgeons are at increased risk
for opioid addiction in the following year, a study from the Stanford
University School of Medicine has found.
The study, which will be published Dec. 3 in
JAMA Internal Medicine,
examined opioid use and abuse in a large group of privately insured
patients from across the United States. Among nearly 15,000 young people
who received initial opioid prescriptions from their dentists in 2015,
6.8 percent had additional opioids prescribed between 90 and 365 days
later, and 5.8 percent were diagnosed with opioid abuse during the year
after the initial prescription. In a comparison group that did not
receive an opioid prescription from their dentists, 0.1 percent got
another opioid prescription and 0.4 percent were diagnosed with opioid
abuse over the same period.
The researchers began the study to explore the risks of wisdom tooth
extraction, a common elective dental surgery in teenagers and young
adults. Many patients are prescribed opioids to manage pain after wisdom
tooth removal.
"This work raises two really important related but separate
questions: Do we need opioids, and do we need the procedure?" said the
study's lead author, Alan Schroeder, MD, clinical professor of
pediatrics at Stanford.
Beneficial procedure?
Though extremely common, wisdom tooth extractions are not
well-studied, and the balance of risks and benefits is not clear,
Schroeder said. His overall research focus is "safely doing less" --
trying to identify common interventions in pediatrics that may have
unfavorable risk-benefit profiles and asking if they could be simplified
or eliminated for patient safety. Removal of disease-free wisdom teeth
has not been studied thoroughly enough to determine whether it benefits
patients, according to a 2016 Cochrane review of the subject.
The research team used a database that contains de-identified
information on millions of privately insured patients from across the
United States. The researchers focused on patients who were 16 to 25
years old in 2015, the age group in which wisdom tooth extractions are
typically performed. The database included 754,002 people of these ages
who were enrolled in health insurance for the entire year. Of those,
97,462 (13 percent) received at least one opioid prescription; 30
percent of the opioid prescriptions came from dental practitioners.
To zero in on patients who had probably not had prior opioid
exposure and who were probably receiving the drugs for elective dental
procedures, the researchers excluded patients who had been hospitalized
during the week before they were prescribed dental opioids, as well as
all patients who had received other opioid prescriptions or been
diagnosed with opioid abuse in the year before getting a prescription
from a dentist. This left 14,888 young people who got an initial opioid
prescription in 2015 from a dental practitioner. The median number of
pills prescribed was 20.
Each person in the group was matched with two control individuals
who did not receive dental opioid prescriptions that year. Each control
patient was randomly assigned a start date, which the researchers
referred to as their phantom prescription date, during 2015 for the
study's one-year follow-up period.
The researchers checked whether patients in either group got
subsequent opioid prescriptions 90 to 365 days after the initial or
phantom prescription date. They also examined whether patients' records
during the year included diagnostic codes for opioid abuse.
Tracking the opioid use
Seventy-five percent of the opioid prescriptions were for
hydrocodone-acetaminophen, commonly known by the brand names Lortab,
Norco or Vicodin. In the 12 months prior to the real or phantom opioid
prescription date, about 3 percent of subjects in each group had been
diagnosed with substance abuse of nonopioid substances.
Compared with patients in the control group, the group that received
dental opioids had significantly greater rates of continuing opioid use
and abuse.
"Almost 7 percent of these patients had new, persistent use at least
three months after the initial prescription and almost 6 percent had an
opioid abuse diagnosis," Schroeder said. "That's pretty alarming."
The youngest patients, ages 16 to 18, were significantly more likely
to have persistent opioid use than the oldest patients, ages 22 to 25.
Female patients were more likely to have persistent opioid use, while
patients of Asian race/ethnicity were less likely to have persistent
use.
Follow-up research is needed to determine whether opioids are the
safest method of treating pain from wisdom tooth extractions, and
whether the extractions themselves are always necessary, Schroeder said.
"I think we should ask, No. 1, Why are we prescribing such a high
quantity of opioids so frequently? And No. 2, Are all the procedures
that are driving these opioid prescriptions necessary?" he said.