Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2733736 The Journal of Pain 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This study describes the validation of a compliance checklist for patients taking opioids for pain.•The 5-item Opioid Compliance Checklist (OCC) was found to be best in identifying future opioid misuse.•A 10-item OCC scale was also found to be clinically beneficial.•The OCC is brief and easy to administer.•The OCC can help monitor use of opioids in the clinic, but it requires additional research.

There has been a need for a brief assessment tool to determine compliance with use of prescribed opioids for pain. The purpose of this study was to develop and begin the validation of a brief and simple compliance checklist (Opioid Compliance Checklist [OCC]) for chronic pain patients prescribed long-term opioid therapy. A review of the literature of opioid therapy agreements led to a 12-item OCC that was repeatedly administered to 157 patients who were taking opioids for chronic pain and followed for 6 months. Validation of the OCC was conducted by identifying those patients exhibiting aberrant drug-related behavior as determined by any of the following: positive urine toxicology screen, a positive score on the Prescription Drug Use Questionnaire interview or Current Opioid Misuse Measure, and/or ratings by staff on the Addiction Behavior Checklist. Of the original 12 items, 5 OCC items appeared to best predict subsequent aberrant behaviors based on multivariate logistic regression analyses (cross-validated area under the receiver operating characteristic curve = .67). Although further testing is needed, these results suggest that the OCC is an easy-to-use, promising measure in monitoring opioid adherence among persons with chronic pain.PerspectiveThis study presents validation of a brief 5-item compliance checklist for use with chronic pain patients prescribed long-term opioid therapy. This measure asks patients about aberrant drug-related behavior over the past month, and any positive response indicates problems with adherence with opioids. Further cross-validation testing is needed.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neurology
Authors
, , , , , ,