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NIDA Scientific Panel
Reports on Prescription
Drug Misuse and Abuse
By Patrick Zickler, NIDA NOTES Staff Writer
 As part of its initiative on prescription drug misuse and addiction, NIDA is distributing 400,000 postcards with messages about the dangers of prescription drugs. The cards are available in restaurants, book stores, clubs, record stores, coffee shops, gyms, and other locations in several major cities. |
NIDA launched a new initiative on prescription drug abuse, misuse, and
addiction at a press conference in Washington, D.C., in April. NIDA developed
the initiative in response to reports of increased abuse of prescription
pain relievers and concern over abuse of other prescription drugs. A scientific
program following the press conference provided an overview of current
research into issues associated with prescription opioid drugs used in
pain relief, central nervous system depressants prescribed for anxiety
and sleep disorders, and stimulants used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) and obesity. Dr. Alice Young, a NIDA-supported researcher
at Wayne State University in Detroit, presented a discussion of the neurobiology
of addiction. In subsequent presentations, researchers focused on investigations
into specific aspects of prescription drug abuse.
Dr. Howard Chilcoat of the Johns Hopkins University School of Public
Health and Hygiene in Baltimore discussed research into the epidemiology
of prescription drug abuse. Overall, he said, the number of people who
abuse prescription drugs each year roughly equals the number who abuse
cocaine-about 2 to 4 percent of the population. Whites are more likely
than other racial or ethnic groups to abuse prescription drugs, and many
people who abuse these drugs also have psychiatric disorders. Persons
age 18 to 25 are more likely than persons in other age groups to begin
abusing prescription drugs. Between the ages of 12 and 17, girls are more
likely than boys to begin prescription drug abuse and are more likely
to abuse stimulants and sedatives than other prescription drugs.
Dr. Kenneth Schmader of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, said
that the elderly (persons age 65 or older) represent about 13 percent
of the U.S. population but consume one-third of all prescription drugs.
These patients are generally less healthy than younger persons and often
suffer from multiple diseases for which they take multiple drugs, Dr.
Schmader said, and are therefore more vulnerable than are younger patients
to unintentionally misusing and becoming habituated to prescription medications.
In one study of more than 1,500 elderly patients, 50 patients, roughly
3 percent, were abusing prescription drugs. In a study of consecutive
admissions to a treatment program, 70 of 100 elderly patients admitted
for prescription drug abuse were women. Eighty were dependent (that is,
they experienced withdrawl symptoms if they tried to stop taking the drugs)
on sedatives, 49 on opioids, and 3 on stimulants. Thirty-six were dependent
on 2 drugs and 8 were dependent on 3.
Dr. Timothy Wilens of Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston discussed
prospective studies designed to determine whether children treated for
ADHD with the stimulant methylphenidate (Ritalin) are at risk for abuse
of other stimulant drugs. The research involved two groups of patients
diagnosed with ADHD of similar severity: one group was treated with methylphenidate
and the other received treatment that did not include stimulants. Dr.
Wilens reported that those who were treated with methylphenidate were
less likely to abuse drugs, including prescribed or unprescribed stimulants,
during treatment and throughout youth and adolescence.
In 1998 roughly 1.6 million people used prescription pain relievers nonmedically
for the first time-four times as many as in 1980.
Dr. Richard Brown of the University of Wisconsin Medical School in Madison
said that physicians' misunderstanding of the risks associated with prescription
drugs can lead to inadequate treatment of some illnesses. Dr. Brown based
his statement on research in which he and his colleagues asked physicians
how they would treat a set of hypothetical patients who suffered anxiety
disorders, pain associated with cancer, or back pain. The researchers
gave the clinicians detailed profiles of the hypothetical patients that
included a treatment history and characteristics, such as use of alcohol
and history of substance abuse, related to possible misuse of prescription
medication. The researchers compared the physicians' treatment plans with
a plan developed by a panel of experts. Compared to the experts, the 2,000
physicians who participated in the study were more reluctant to provide
opioids and less cautious about prescribing sedatives. For example, 5
percent of the respondents would not prescribe opioids for severe cancer
pain and nearly 80 percent would avoid opioids for severe, chronic back
pain that had not responded to other treatments. About 25 percent of the
physicians would prescribe benzodiazepines (sedatives such as Valium or
Xanax) for a hypothetical patient with an adjustment disorder (anxiety
or sadness associated with a particular situation), even though they showed
several signs and symptoms of a current alcohol use disorder.
Dr. Steven Passik of Community Cancer Care, Inc., in Indianapolis, Indiana,
discussed a study designed to evaluate the risks of misuse or abuse of
drugs prescribed for management of chronic pain and to compare the risks
with the drugs' benefits. The research involved 264 patients being treated
with opioids for chronic pain not associated with cancer. On average,
patients reported that the drugs relieved nearly 60 percent of their pain,
and more than 90 percent said the pain relief made a significant improvement
in their quality of life. Nearly 80 percent reported improvement in overall
aspects of daily life such as mood, physical functioning, relationships,
and sleep patterns. More than 60 percent of patients reported some adverse
side effects from their medication, but only 1.2 percent described the
side effects as intolerable. Overall, roughly 6 percent of patients (or
their physicians) reported abuse or misuse of prescribed drugs. Drug abuse
issues in pain management are complex, Dr. Passik said, but his study
results suggest that the risk of opioid abuse is low compared with the
benefits of the drugs in chronic pain management.
Source: National Institute On Drug Abuse
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