Dangerous variation or patient-centered care? Palliative care and pain providers' comfort, experiences, and approaches when treating cancer pain with coexisting aberrant behaviors Journal Article


Authors: Hadler, R. A.; Klinedinst, R.; Jones, C. A.; Bao, Y.; Pathak, R.; Zarrabi, A. J.; Rosa, W. E.
Article Title: Dangerous variation or patient-centered care? Palliative care and pain providers' comfort, experiences, and approaches when treating cancer pain with coexisting aberrant behaviors
Abstract: Background Patients with cancer-related pain are at high risk for aberrant drug use behaviors (ADB), including self-escalation, diversion and concurrent illicit substance or opioid misuse; however, limited evidence is available to guide opioid prescribing for patients with life-limiting illness and concurrent or suspected ADB. We sought to characterize how specialists evaluate for and manage these high-risk behaviors in patients with cancer-related pain.Methods We conducted telephonic semi-structured interviews with palliative care and pain medicine providers. Participants discussed their own comfort and experience level with identifying and managing ADB in patients with life-limiting illness. They were subsequently presented with a series of standardized scenarios and asked to describe their concerns and management strategies.Results 95 interdisciplinary pain and palliative care specialists were contacted; 37 agreed to participate (38.9%). Analysis of interview contents revealed several central themes: (1) widespread discomfort and anxiety regarding safe and compassionate opioid prescribing for high-risk patients, (2) belief that widely used risk-mitigation tools such as opioid contracts and urine drug screens provided inadequate support for decision-making, and (3) lack of institutional and organizational support and guidance for safe prescribing strategies. Most clinicians reported self-education regarding addiction and alternative prescribing/pain management strategies. Providers varied widely in their willingness to discontinue opioid prescribing in a patient with aberrant behavior and pain associated with life-limiting illness.Conclusion Providers caring for patients demonstrating ADB and cancer-related pain struggle to balance safe prescribing with symptom management. Increased guidance is needed regarding opioid prescribing, monitoring, and discontinuation in high-risk patients.
Keywords: cancer pain; opioids; management; impact; risk-factors; practice patterns; opioid prescribing; opioid epidemic; opioid use disorder; substance use disorder; drug-related behavior
Journal Title: American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Medicine
Volume: 42
Issue: 5
ISSN: 1049-9091
Publisher: Sage Publications  
Date Published: 2025-05-01
Start Page: 489
End Page: 503
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001238160500001
DOI: 10.1177/10499091241259034
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC11612028
PUBMED: 38830349
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PubMed and PDF -- Source: Wos
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  1. William   Rosa
    199 Rosa