Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2023)

Opioids for Osteoarthritis: Cross-Sectional Survey of Patient Perspectives and Satisfaction

  • Thomas J. Schnitzer,
  • Rebecca L. Robinson,
  • Lars Viktrup,
  • Joseph C. Cappelleri,
  • Andrew G. Bushmakin,
  • Leslie Tive,
  • Mia Berry,
  • Chloe Walker,
  • James Jackson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12072733
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. 2733

Abstract

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Patients often take opioids to relieve osteoarthritis (OA) pain despite limited benefits and potential harms. This study aimed to compare cross-sectional perspectives of patients that were taking prescription opioid (N = 471) or nonopioid medications (N = 185) for OA in terms of satisfaction, expectations of effectiveness, and concerns. Patients prescribed opioids (>7 days) reported more prior treatments (2.47 vs. 1.74), greater mean pain intensity (5.47 vs. 4.11), and worse quality of life (EQ-5D-5L index value mean 0.45 vs. 0.71) than patients prescribed nonopioid medications (all p p = 0.0322), had less belief that medications were meeting effectiveness expectations (2.72 vs. 3.13, p p = 0.0026) and addiction (3.30 vs. 2.65, p < 0.0001) than patients prescribed nonopioid regimens. When the models were replicated for subgroups with ≥30 days’ medication regimen duration, the findings were consistent with the main analyses. Patients have concerns about the risk of opioid addiction, but those with greater disease burden and more prior treatments continue taking opioid regimens.

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