Role of disability and pain in opioid overdose: mechanism and risk mitigation
Project Number5R01DA053243-04
Former Number1R01DA053243-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderRUDOLPH, KARA ELIZABETH
Awardee OrganizationCOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
Description
Abstract Text
Drug overdose deaths in the US have increased exponentially, driven by opioid overdoses. Concurrently,
US surveillance studies have documented increased disability prevalence among adults in midlife. People
with disabilities have higher rates of opioid use disorder (OUD) but are less likely to receive treatment for
it, putting them at higher risk for opioid overdose. Despite these established risks, people with disabilities
remain an understudied subpopulation in the context of the opioid crisis. Much of heightened risk among the
disabled population may be due to chronic pain. Many people with physical disability experience chronic pain
that either drives the disability, termed “high-impact chronic pain”, or that occurs concurrently. Chronic pain is
frequently managed with prescription opioids, sometimes via risky prescribing practices. In addition to chronic
pain, pathways through depression or through loss of economic opportunity and its accompanying stressors
may link physical disability to overdose risk. Opioid prescribing for chronic pain has been linked to increased
risk of opioid overdose, but any such risk conferred by having a physical disability, disentangled from chronic
pain, has not been estimated—nor has the risk associated with co-occurring physical disability and chronic
pain. Moreover, the mechanisms through which disability and chronic pain operate to affect overdose risk are
unknown. Availability of recommended treatments for substance use disorders (SUDs), including OUD, and
chronic pain may influence the relationships, mechanisms, and the associated disparities we propose to study,
but is highly variable across localities. The objectives of this project are: Aim 1) to estimate the unique and
joint contributions of physical disability and chronic pain conditions to opioid overdose risk and the extent to
which pain management practices mediate these relationships; Aim 2) to develop novel statistical methods to
transport mediated effects from one state to another, and to apply those methods in Aim 3) to identify SUD and
pain management treatment metrics that, if improved, may reduce both overall overdose risk associated with
physical disability and chronic pain and disparities in overdose risk by racial/ethnic-gender subgroup. We will
harness geographic variation in the delivery of SUD and pain management treatment and predict the effects
that realistic improvements in delivery would have on reducing opioid overdose in this vulnerable population.
The proposed research is expected to estimate the extent to which physical disability increases risk of opioid
overdose, the proportion of that increased risk attributable to chronic pain and attendant risky pain manage-
ment practices (versus non-chronic pain mechanisms), and the extent to which risk may be mitigated by
improvements in delivering appropriate chronic pain management and SUD (including OUD) treatment. This
will allow for future prevention strategies to be tailored to the particular needs and challenges faced by people
with physical disabilities, with the goal of ultimately making a significant contribution to improving prescribing
practices and provision of recommended treatments to reduce their risk of opioid overdose.
Public Health Relevance Statement
People with physical disabilities may be particularly vulnerable to opioid misuse and overdose, as they have a high prevalence of chronic pain due to musculoskeletal conditions and high exposure to opioid analgesics. However, disabled adults have been largely left out of research into the prevention and treatment of opioid use disorder and overdose. This project will improve understanding of the mechanisms that place low-income, disabled adults at increased risk of opioid overdose, as well as the potential for improved pain management practices and increased receipt of recommended treatments for substance use disorder and chronic pain to reduce overdose risk in this population.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AdultAffectAffordable Care ActAftercareBenzodiazepinesCessation of lifeChronicConfounding Factors (Epidemiology)CountyDeaths of despairDisabilities experienceDisabled PersonsDisease ManagementDisparityEconomicsEligibility DeterminationEthnic OriginEthnic PopulationExclusionExposure toFutureGenderGeographyGoalsHigh PrevalenceHospitalizationIndividuals with physical disabilitiesInjuryInsuranceInterventionJointsLeftLinkLiteratureLow incomeMachine LearningMediatingMediationMediatorMedicaidMental DepressionMethodsMusculoskeletalNational Institute of Drug AbuseOpioidOpioid AnalgesicsOutcomeOverdoseOverdose reductionPainPain managementPathway interactionsPharmaceutical PreparationsPopulationPractice ManagementPrevalencePreventionPrevention strategyProbabilityPropertyQualifyingRaceRecommendationResearchRiskRisk ReductionRoleStatistical MethodsStimulantSubgroupSubstance Use DisorderVulnerable Populationsattributable riskbeneficiarychronic painchronic pain managementchronic painful conditioncomorbiditydisabilitydisabledgeographic differencehigh riskimprovedindexingmiddle agemultimodalitynon-cancer painnovelopioid epidemicopioid misuseopioid overdoseopioid use disorderoverdose deathoverdose riskphysically handicappedprescription opioidrisk mitigationstressorsubstance usesubstance use treatmentsurveillance study
No Sub Projects information available for 5R01DA053243-04
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