FROM:
J Altern Complement Med. 2018 (Jun); 24 (6): 552–556 ~ FULL TEXT
James M. Whedon, DC, MS, Andrew W.J. Toler, MS, Justin M. Goehl, DC, MS, and Louis A. Kazal, MD
Health Services Research,
Southern California University of Health Sciences,
Whittier, CA.
OBJECTIVE: Pain relief resulting from services delivered by doctors of chiropractic may allow patients to use lower or less frequent doses of opioids, leading to reduced risk of adverse effects. The objective of this investigation was to evaluate the association between utilization of chiropractic services and the use of prescription opioid medications.
DESIGN: The authors used a retrospective cohort design to analyze health insurance claims data.
SETTING: The data source was the all payer claims database administered by the State of New Hampshire. The authors chose New Hampshire because health claims data were readily available for research, and in 2015, New Hampshire had the second-highest age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths in the United States.
SUBJECTS: The study population comprised New Hampshire residents aged 18-99 years, enrolled in a health plan, and with at least two clinical office visits within 90 days for a primary diagnosis of low-back pain. The authors excluded subjects with a diagnosis of cancer.
OUTCOME MEASURES: The authors measured likelihood of opioid prescription fill among recipients of services delivered by doctors of chiropractic compared with nonrecipients. They also compared the cohorts with regard to rates of prescription fills for opioids and associated charges.
RESULTS: The adjusted likelihood of filling a prescription for an opioid analgesic was 55% lower among recipients compared with nonrecipients (odds ratio 0.45; 95% confidence interval 0.40-0.47; p < 0.0001). Average charges per person for opioid prescriptions were also significantly lower among recipients.
CONCLUSIONS: Among New Hampshire adults with office visits for noncancer low-back pain, the likelihood of filling a prescription for an opioid analgesic was significantly lower for recipients of services delivered by doctors of chiropractic compared with nonrecipients. The underlying cause of this correlation remains unknown, indicating the need for further investigation.
KEYWORDS: analgesics; chiropractic; low-back pain; opioid
From the FULL TEXT Article:
Introduction
Epidemic of opioid prescribing
More aggressive pain management efforts that began
in the 1990s have led to an epidemic of prescriptions
for opioid pain medications in the United States (U.S.). More
than 650,000 opioid prescriptions are dispensed per day in
the United States. [1] An estimated one out of five patients with
noncancer pain or pain-related diagnoses is prescribed opioids
in office-based settings. Prescribing rates are high among
providers of pain medicine, surgery, and physical medicine/
rehabilitation, but overall, primary care clinicians account for
nearly 50% of opioid prescriptions. [2]
Safety
There is little evidence that opioids improve chronic pain,
function, or quality of life, and long-term use of opioids, particularly
at higher dosages, is associated with overdose, misuse,
abuse, and opioid use disorder. [3] Other adverse effects include
tolerance, physical dependence, increased sensitivity to pain,
constipation, nausea, vomiting, drymouth, sleepiness, dizziness,
confusion, depression, anxiety, itching and sweating, and lower
sex drive and energy in men due to reduced testosterone levels. [4]
Previous use of prescription opioids is also linked to an increased
risk of heroin abuse and addiction. [5] After as few as
5 days of taking opioids, the chance of an opioid-naive patient
being a chronic opioid user sharply increases. Even 1 day of
opioid exposure carries with it a 6% chance of being on opioids
1 year later, increasing to 13.5% by 8 days and 29.9% by
31 days. [6] Among drug overdose deaths in the United States
in 2014, 28,647, 61% involved an opioid. [7] The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported that prescription
opioid consumption and related deaths tripled from
1999 to 2010. [8] Opioids were involved in 75% of pharmaceutical
overdose deaths in 2010, [9] and in 2015 over 22,000
deaths involving prescription opioids were recorded—an increase
of 19,000 deaths over the previous year. [10]
Costs
The economic impact of the opioid epidemic was estimated
to be nearly $56 billion in health and social costs in 2007, and
since that time the problem has grown considerably. [11] Sales of
prescription opioids in the United States nearly quadrupled
from 1999 to 2014, [12] but without any overall change in the
amount of pain patients reported. [13] Efforts aimed at curbing
the opioids epidemic (including new prescribing guidelines,
monitoring programs, enhanced access to treatment of opioid
use disorder treatment, screening protocols, treatment contracts,
urine testing, regulatory supervising of pain clinics, and
law enforcement strategies) have failed to reduce rates of
prescribing, misuse, and overdose. [7, 14, 15]
A pain management alternative: services provided by doctors of chiropractic
Little attention has been paid to the potential of nonpharmacologic
pain treatment as an upstream strategy for
addressing the opioids epidemic. The Institute of Medicine
has recommended the use of nonpharmacologic therapies
as effective alternatives to pharmacotherapy for patients
with chronic pain. [16] Among U.S. adults prescribed opioids,
59% reported having back pain. [17] Recently published clinical
guidelines from the American College of Physicians recommend
nonpharmacologic treatment as the first-line approach
to treating back pain, with consideration of opioids only as the
last treatment option or if other options present substantial
harm to the patient. [18] A recent systematic review and meta-analysis
found that for treatment of acute low-back pain,
spinal manipulation provides a clinical benefit equivalent to
that of NSAIDs, with no evidence of serious harms. [19] Spinal
manipulation is also shown to be an effective treatment option
for chronic low-back pain. [20]
Association between utilization of chiropractic services and use of prescription opioids
A retrospective claims study of 165,569 adults found that
utilization of services delivered by doctors of chiropractic
was associated with reduced use of opioids. [21] More recently,
it was reported that the supply of chiropractors as well as
spending on spinal manipulative therapy is inversely correlated
with opioid prescriptions in younger Medicare beneficiaries. [22] This finding suggests that increased availability
and utilization of services delivered by doctors of chiropractic
could lead to reductions in opioid prescriptions. It has been
reported that services delivered by doctors of chiropractic may
improve health behaviors [23] and reduce use of prescription
drugs, [21] but it remains uncertain how the utilization of such
services may influence patient use of opioid analgesics. Pain
management services provided by doctors of chiropractic may
allow patients to use lower or less frequent doses of opioids,
leading to lower costs and reduced risk of adverse effects.
The objective of this investigation was to evaluate — among
New Hampshire residents with low-back pain — the association
between utilization of services provided by doctors of chiropractic
and the use of prescription opioid medications. The
authors chose New Hampshire because health claims data were
readily available for research, and in 2015, New Hampshire had
the second highest age-adjusted rate of drug overdose deaths in
the United States, a 31% increase from the previous year and
more than double the national rate. [7, 24] The opioid addiction
crisis in New Hampshire crosses all socioeconomic levels,
affecting the life of every resident, and has many "hidden"
side effects in addition to overdose deaths. Opioid use can
lead to self-neglect and neglect of loved ones, child and elder
abuse, and newborn withdrawal, as well as unemployment
and homelessness. Other associated ill-health effects include
HIV, Hepatitis C, liver damage, and heart problems. [25]
Practical solutions to this societal crisis are urgently needed.
The authors expected this study to generate the outcome that
among patients with low-back pain, recipients of services delivered
by doctors of chiropractic have a lower likelihood of
using prescription opioids, compared with nonrecipients. Such
a finding could exert a positive impact on the value of care for
patients with low-back pain by pointing to a strategy for reducing
unnecessary care, lowering costs, and improving safety.
Materials and Methods
The authors hypothesized that recipients of services delivered
by doctors of chiropractic have a lower likelihood of filling
a prescription for an opioid analgesic compared with nonrecipients
of services delivered by doctors of chiropractic. To
test this hypothesis, they used a retrospective cohort design to
analyze health insurance claims data. The data source was the
all payer claims database administered by the Department of
Health and Human Services of the state of New Hampshire,
which aggregates health claims data submitted by 26 private
and public third-party payers, including preferred provider organizations,
health maintenance organizations, and indemnity
insurance plans. No Medicare or Medicaid claims were included
in the database. This project was conducted subject to the terms
of a data user agreement between the principal investigator and
the state of New Hampshire. The research methods were reviewed
and approved by the Institutional Review Board of the
investigator’s university. All statistical analyses were performed
using SAS (SAS Institute, Cary, NC).
The study population comprised New Hampshire residents
aged 18–99 years, enrolled in a health plan in 2013 and 2014,
and with at least two clinical office visits within 90 days for a
primary diagnosis of low-back pain in 2013. (Subjects with
more than one such 90-day period and those with more than
two office visits per period were not excluded. Thus, the
population included subjects with multiple office visits for
low-back pain.) The authors excluded subjects with a diagnosis
of cancer in 2013 or 2014. Among those included in the
study population as defined above, they identified two cohorts
of subjects:
(1) recipients of services provided by doctors of
chiropractic (recipients) were defined as subjects with at least
two office visits for a primary diagnosis of low-back pain, for
which the provider was a doctor of chiropractic.
(2) Nonrecipients
were defined as subjects who received no services
provided by a doctor of chiropractic.
Following establishment of the cohorts with claims for
low-back pain in 2013 data, the authors first compared the
cohorts with regard to rates of prescription fills for opioids
and associated charges in both 2013 and 2014. Next, they
modeled for likelihood of opioid prescription fill in 2014
only to maintain the temporal relationship between inclusion
in the cohort and measuring the outcomes. To reduce the
potential for selection bias because the cohorts may have
differed with regard to their disposition toward use of
prescription medications, they used weighted propensity
scoring to create equivalent cohorts for comparison. [26] The
authors used multiple logistic regression to calculate the
estimated probability of each subject to be in each cohort
using sociodemographic measures (age, sex, and county of
residence). After inversely weighting each subject by the
propensity to be in the cohort, they used logistic regression
to compare recipients to nonrecipients with regard to likelihood
of opioid prescription fill in 2014. They controlled
for patient demographics and health status through Charlson
comorbidity scoring. Both univariate and multivariate logistic
models were developed.
Results
Subject characteristics are tabulated in Table 1. The population
was almost equally divided between recipients and nonrecipients
of services provided by doctors of chiropractic. The
cohorts did not differ by sex. Recipients included a larger proportion
of young adults and a smaller proportion of middle-aged
adults, compared with nonrecipients. The recipients’ cohort was
healthier, as measured by Charlson comorbidity score.
The study population comprised 13,384 subjects,with roughly
equivalent distribution between cohorts (Table 1). Among 6,868
recipients, 19% of subjects filled a prescription for a prescription
opioid, compared with 35% of 6,516 nonrecipients. Figure 1
illustrates comparative proportions of subjects who filled
prescriptions for opioid analgesics, by specific formulation.
All categories of charges were significantly lower for recipients
compared with nonrecipients (Table 2). In 2013,
average annual charges per person for filling opioid prescriptions
were 74% lower among recipients compared with
nonrecipients. For clinical services provided at office visits
for low-back pain, average annual charges per person in
2013 were 78% lower among recipients compared with
nonrecipients. The authors found similar between-cohort
differences in charges in 2014: annual charges per person
were 78% lower for opioid prescriptions and 71% lower
for clinical services among recipients compared with nonrecipients.
The adjusted likelihood of filling a prescription for an
opioid analgesic in 2014 was 55% lower among recipients
compared with nonrecipients (odds ratio 0.45; 95% confidence
interval 0.40–0.47; p < 0.0001). The authors evaluated
both univariate and multivariate logistic models. In models
without the propensities and/or Charlson adjustment, they found
only small changes in effect, suggesting that the strength of the
association between exposure and outcome was independent of
case mix.
Discussion
With regard to the use of prescription opioids as well as
charges for both opioid prescriptions and clinical services for
low-back pain, they found impressive between-cohort differences.
However, they were only able to evaluate the correlation
between the utilization of services provided by
doctors of chiropractic and use of prescription opioids. It was
not possible from the available data to infer whether or not
utilization of services provided by doctors of chiropractic
actually caused a reduction in the likelihood of filling an
opioid prescription. The underlying cause of the negative
correlation between utilization of chiropractic services and
likelihood of opioid prescription fill is unknown.
Despite the use of propensity scoring to create equivalent
cohorts for comparison, part of the reported effect upon likelihood
of prescription fills may have resulted from the cohorts
being drawn from different populations, that is, subject characteristics
may have differed by cohort due to an unknown
factor or factors that confounded the reported correlation.
Recipients of services provided by doctors of chiropractic may
differ from nonrecipients with regard to beliefs, attitudes, and
predisposition to use prescription medications. In a recent national
poll, 78% of U.S. adults indicated a preference for alternatives
to prescription pain medication, and adults who had
never seen a chiropractor were among those most likely to
prefer pharmacologic pain treatments. [27] The underlying reasons
for such patient preferences are unknown, and further
evaluation of differences between patients who do and do not
choose pharmacologic therapies for pain may point toward
solutions to the opioids crisis. The preponderance of health
outcomes result not from clinical interventions, but from personal
health behaviors, as well as social and environmental
determinants of health. Finally, it is unknown to what extent the
effect of exposure to utilization of services provided by doctors
of chiropractic may be modified by various aspects of care,
including spinal manipulation and other treatments, the chiropractor’s
recommendations regarding diet and exercise and
other influences associated with chiropractic care.
Certain limitations of the research dataset must also be
acknowledged. In general, only a limited number of exposure
variables were available. No fill dates or diagnoses
were available in the pharmacy data. Finally, the authors
emphasize that the safety of services provided by doctors of
chiropractic was not assessed in this study.
Conclusion
Among New Hampshire adults with office visits for noncancer
low-back pain, the adjusted likelihood of filling a prescription
for an opioid analgesic was 55% lower for recipients
of services provided by doctors of chiropractic compared with
nonrecipients. The underlying cause of this correlation is unknown.
Average charges per person for chiropractic users — for
both opioids and office visits for low-back pain — were also
significantly lower compared with nonusers over a 2-year
period. Further investigation of these associations should be
conducted through analysis of longitudinal data from multiple
U.S. states to ascertain the generalizability of these
findings and should use rigorous methods to minimize risk of
bias.
Acknowledgments
This project was funded by the Council on Chiropractic
Guidelines and Practice Parameters/Clinical Compass. Data
for this research were supplied by The NH Insurance Department
and NH Department of Health and Human Services.
All the conclusions and recommendations of this publication
are solely those of the authors.
Author Disclosure Statement
No competing financial interests exist.
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