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Cross-Sectional Study to Define and Validate "Doctor/Pharmacy Shopping" as Outcomes Suggestive of Abuse and/or Addiction

Completed
Conditions
Opioid-Related Disorders
Opiate Addiction
Narcotic Abuse
Drug Abuse
Interventions
Other: DB review for Doctor/Pharmacy Shopping Behavior
Registration Number
NCT02668549
Lead Sponsor
Member Companies of the Opioid PMR Consortium
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to formulate definitions of doctor/pharmacy shopping and evaluate its association with abuse/addiction

Detailed 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, abuse and/or addiction.

Study #2065-4 consists of three sub-studies, Study 4A, Study 4B, and Study 4C. In the current study (#2065 sub-study, Study 4A), the IMS® LRx database, a longitudinal pharmacy database that captures both third-party and self-pay transactions, will be linked to the PharMetrics Plus™ database, which contains provider, facility and pharmacy claims. From these databases, patients with shopping behavior will be identified and evaluated against an algorithm for abuse/addiction that will be developed and validated in PMR Study #2065-3B. Study #2065-3B will review the literature for health information suggestive of abuse/addiction in medical charts and medical claims. Then, through iterative processes that involve experts reviewing claims profiles and medical charts, text searches of medical records using natural language processing and supervised machine learning will identify and create a compilation of codes and health information with the best specificity and sensitivity to identify patients with opioid abuse/addiction. The compilation of codes and health information will be used to develop the algorithm that Study 4A will apply to define abuse/addiction. Restricting the validation of shopping behavior to only patients with diagnoses related to abuse would ignore the population with undiagnosed abuse. By supplementing ICD-9 codes with other information available on claims (e.g., addiction treatments, emergency visits) to define abuse/addiction, the measurement bias will be decreased and the estimates of the association of shopping behavior with abuse/addiction will be more valid. Categories of doctor shopping will be derived from the population distributions of the multiple variables analyzed for opioid users. The 4 categories will range from no shopping behavior (lowest level) to extensive shopping behavior (most extreme). The specifics of how the categories will be defined will be driven by the data.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
164923
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Age ≥ 18 years
  2. Minimum of two dispensings for IR or ER/LA opioids or two or more diuretic dispensings
Exclusion Criteria

N/A

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Patients with Opioid dispensingsDB review for Doctor/Pharmacy Shopping BehaviorPatients receiving two or more opioid dispensings within 18 months
Patients with Diuretic dispensings (neg control)DB review for Doctor/Pharmacy Shopping BehaviorPatients receiving two or more Diuretics dispensings within 18 months will serve as negative control
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Numbers and proportions of patients with shopping behaviorRetrospective review over 18 month period starting with first dispensing in 2012
Sensitivity and predictive value of different levels of shopping behavior in relation with Algorithmically Identified Abuse and Addiction (AIAA)Retrospective review over 18 month period starting with first dispensing in 2012
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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