News

DEA’s rescheduling of hydrocodone tied to declines in prescribing


 

FROM JAMA INTERNAL MEDICINE

References

Prescriptions for hydrocodone analgesics abruptly and markedly declined after the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration reclassified them from schedule III to the more restrictive schedule II of the Controlled Substances Act, according to a research letter to the editor published online in JAMA Internal Medicine Jan. 25.

Hydrocodone, usually formulated in combination with nonopioid analgesics, is one of the most frequently abused opioids, accounting for nearly 100,000 abuse-related emergency department visits during one recent year. In October 2014, the DEA rescheduled these agents to subject them to more rigorous control, said Christopher M. Jones, Pharm.D., MPH, of the Department of Health and Human Services, Washington, and his associates.

David Tulk/Thinkstock

To assess any effect this rescheduling had on prescribing patterns, the investigators analyzed information in the IMS Health National Prescription Audit, a database that captures nearly 80% of all prescriptions dispensed from U.S. pharmacies, focusing on the 3 years before and the 1 year after rescheduling. They also analyzed information in an American Medical Association database to assess prescribing of hydrocodone combination agents across medical specialties during the year after rescheduling.

Prescriptions for hydrocodone combination agents decreased by 22% after rescheduling, and those for hydrocodone combination tablets decreased by 16%. There were 26.3 million fewer prescriptions for hydrocodone combination products, and 1.1 billion fewer hydrocodone combination tablets in the year after rescheduling.

Most of this decline (74%) was attributable to a profound reduction in refills, which is “consistent with the prohibition on prescription refills for schedule II medications,” Dr. Jones and his associates said (JAMA Intern Med. 2016 Jan 25. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.7799).

In contrast, prescriptions for nonhydrocodone combination opioid analgesics increased by 5%, and those for nonhydrocodone tablets by 1%, during the year after rescheduling.

The reductions in prescribing occurred across most medical specialties. Surgeons and primary care physicians accounted for the largest decreases in both hydrocodone-containing prescriptions (-38.4% and -22.9%, respectively) and tablets (-30.8% and -17.1%, respectively). Oncologists, emergency medicine specialists, and nurse practitioners and physician assistants also contributed heavily to the declines. Dentists and physical/rehabilitation/occupational medicine specialists accounted for smaller reductions.

In contrast, pain medicine specialists showed modest increases in prescriptions for hydrocodone combination products and tablets.

“Future research should examine whether these changes are sustained, have had an effect on access for patients, and are associated with the desired goals of reduced abuse, addiction, and overdose,” Dr. Jones and his associates noted.

This study was funded by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Dr. Jones and his associates reported having no relevant financial disclosures.

Recommended Reading

FDA will strengthen heart attack, stroke risk warnings for all NSAIDs
MDedge ObGyn
Unvetted drug indications mean safety uncertainties
MDedge ObGyn
Nipple Raynaud’s can freeze out breastfeeding desire
MDedge ObGyn
Prescription opioid overdoses targeted in new CDC program
MDedge ObGyn
Recall issued on U.S. Compounding sterile products
MDedge ObGyn
California governor signs physician-assisted suicide bill into law
MDedge ObGyn
Off-label prescriptions frequently cause adverse events
MDedge ObGyn
Pain a common cause of revisits after same-day surgery
MDedge ObGyn
2014 sets U.S. record for drug overdose deaths
MDedge ObGyn
Practice guideline released for treating opioid use disorder
MDedge ObGyn