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Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment

BACKGROUND: As a population, non-medical prescription opioid users are not well-defined. We aimed to derive and describe typologies of prescription opioid use and nonmedical use using latent class analysis in an adult population being assessed for substance abuse treatment. METHODS: Latent class ana...

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Autores principales: Green, Traci C., Black, Ryan, Grimes Serrano, Jill M., Budman, Simon H., Butler, Stephen F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3206947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22087270
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027244
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author Green, Traci C.
Black, Ryan
Grimes Serrano, Jill M.
Budman, Simon H.
Butler, Stephen F.
author_facet Green, Traci C.
Black, Ryan
Grimes Serrano, Jill M.
Budman, Simon H.
Butler, Stephen F.
author_sort Green, Traci C.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: As a population, non-medical prescription opioid users are not well-defined. We aimed to derive and describe typologies of prescription opioid use and nonmedical use using latent class analysis in an adult population being assessed for substance abuse treatment. METHODS: Latent class analysis was applied to data from 26,314 unique respondents, aged 18-70, self-reporting past month use of a prescription opioid out of a total of 138,928 cases (18.9%) collected by the Addiction Severity Index-Multimedia Version (ASI-MV®), a national database for near real-time prescription opioid abuse surveillance. Data were obtained from November 2005 through December 2009. Substance abuse treatment, criminal justice, and public assistance programs in the United States submitted data to the ASI-MV database (n = 538). Six indicators of the latent classes derived from responses to the ASI-MV, a version of the ASI modified to collect prescription opioid abuse and chronic pain experience. The latent class analysis included respondent home ZIP code random effects to account for nesting of respondents within ZIP code. RESULTS: A four-class adjusted latent class model fit best and defined clinically interpretable and relevant subgroups: Use as prescribed, Prescribed misusers, Medically healthy abusers, and Illicit users. Classes varied on key variables, including race/ethnicity, gender, concurrent substance abuse, duration of prescription opioid abuse, mental health problems, and ASI composite scores. Three of the four classes (81% of respondents) exhibited high potential risk for fatal opioid overdose; 18.4% exhibited risk factors for blood-borne infections. CONCLUSIONS: Multiple and distinct profiles of prescription opioid use were detected, suggesting a range of use typologies at differing risk for adverse events. Results may help clinicians and policy makers better focus overdose and blood-borne infection prevention efforts and intervention strategies for prescription opioid abuse reduction.
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spelling pubmed-32069472011-11-15 Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment Green, Traci C. Black, Ryan Grimes Serrano, Jill M. Budman, Simon H. Butler, Stephen F. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: As a population, non-medical prescription opioid users are not well-defined. We aimed to derive and describe typologies of prescription opioid use and nonmedical use using latent class analysis in an adult population being assessed for substance abuse treatment. METHODS: Latent class analysis was applied to data from 26,314 unique respondents, aged 18-70, self-reporting past month use of a prescription opioid out of a total of 138,928 cases (18.9%) collected by the Addiction Severity Index-Multimedia Version (ASI-MV®), a national database for near real-time prescription opioid abuse surveillance. Data were obtained from November 2005 through December 2009. Substance abuse treatment, criminal justice, and public assistance programs in the United States submitted data to the ASI-MV database (n = 538). Six indicators of the latent classes derived from responses to the ASI-MV, a version of the ASI modified to collect prescription opioid abuse and chronic pain experience. The latent class analysis included respondent home ZIP code random effects to account for nesting of respondents within ZIP code. RESULTS: A four-class adjusted latent class model fit best and defined clinically interpretable and relevant subgroups: Use as prescribed, Prescribed misusers, Medically healthy abusers, and Illicit users. Classes varied on key variables, including race/ethnicity, gender, concurrent substance abuse, duration of prescription opioid abuse, mental health problems, and ASI composite scores. Three of the four classes (81% of respondents) exhibited high potential risk for fatal opioid overdose; 18.4% exhibited risk factors for blood-borne infections. CONCLUSIONS: Multiple and distinct profiles of prescription opioid use were detected, suggesting a range of use typologies at differing risk for adverse events. Results may help clinicians and policy makers better focus overdose and blood-borne infection prevention efforts and intervention strategies for prescription opioid abuse reduction. Public Library of Science 2011-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3206947/ /pubmed/22087270 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027244 Text en Green et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Green, Traci C.
Black, Ryan
Grimes Serrano, Jill M.
Budman, Simon H.
Butler, Stephen F.
Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title_full Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title_fullStr Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title_full_unstemmed Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title_short Typologies of Prescription Opioid Use in a Large Sample of Adults Assessed for Substance Abuse Treatment
title_sort typologies of prescription opioid use in a large sample of adults assessed for substance abuse treatment
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3206947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22087270
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0027244
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