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Study to Eval Relation Btw Doctor/Pharmacy Shopping & Outcomes of Misuse, Diversion, Abuse, Addiction by Med Rec Review

M

Member Companies of the Opioid PMR Consortium

Status

Completed

Conditions

Opiate Addiction
Opioid-Related Disorders
Drug Abuse
Narcotic Abuse

Treatments

Other: Medical Record Review

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Industry

Identifiers

NCT02667210
Observational Study 3033-10
Study 3033-10 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

To assess whether the percentage of patients with behaviors suggestive of misuse, diversion, abuse and/or addiction described in the medical record increases across pre-defined categories of increasing doctor/pharmacy shopping behavior.

Full description

Based on a review of the literature, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) concluded that more data are needed regarding the serious risks of misuse, abuse, addiction, overdose, and death associated with the long-term use of extended release/long acting (ER/LA) opioid analgesics. Thus, the FDA is requiring that ER/LA opioid analgesic drug sponsors conduct post-marketing studies to assess these risks. The four observational post-marketing requirement (PMR) studies are labeled Study #2065-1, Study #2065-2, Study #2065-3, and Study #2065-4.

The objective of PMR Study #2065-4 is to define and validate doctor/pharmacy shopping as outcomes suggestive of misuse, diversion, abuse and/or addiction.

Study #2065-4 consists of three sub-studies, Study 4A, Study 4B, and Study 4C. In the current study (#2065-4 sub-study, Study 4C), the association of doctor/pharmacy shopping behavior with misuse, diversion, abuse and/or addiction will be assessed by reviewing medical charts in a sample of patients within specific categories of a priori defined doctor/pharmacy shopping. The four categories of doctor/pharmacy shopping behaviors identified and defined in Study 4A and will be applied to Study 4C. The medical chart is a rich source of information about the patient's medical conditions and behaviors suggestive of misuse and abuse. Medical record review for behaviors suggestive of misuse and abuse in patients with chronic pain discriminates between patients with and without opioid use disorders. Therefore, Study 4C was designed to utilize an insurance/health plan database (HealthCore Integrated Research Database [HIRD]) with access to medical records, to evaluate the association of a priori defined categories of doctor/pharmacy shopping and behaviors suggestive of misuse, diversion, abuse and/or addiction.

Enrollment

590 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Patients 18 years or older on the date of first IR or ER/LA opioid dispensing in 2012
  2. Patients with at least two dispensings of any IR or ER/LA opioid. The first of these dispensings will have occurred in 2012 and an additional dispensing within 18 months after the first.
  3. Continuous, fully insured enrollment with medical and pharmacy eligibility in a health plan included in the HealthCore Integrated Research Database (HIRD) for at least six months prior to the start of the follow-up period.
  4. Patients with continuous enrollment during the follow-up period of 18 months

Exclusion criteria

  1. Patients who cannot be classified into one of the four a priori defined doctor/pharmacy shopping categories
  2. Patients for whom no medical records can be accessed
  3. Patients with a known history of abuse identified through the administrative claims data will be excluded because HealthCore is not permitted to request their medical records.

Trial design

590 participants in 4 patient groups

No shopping behavior
Treatment:
Other: Medical Record Review
Minimal shopping behavior
Treatment:
Other: Medical Record Review
Marked shopping behavior
Treatment:
Other: Medical Record Review
Extensive shopping behavior
Treatment:
Other: Medical Record Review

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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