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Case . 55 yo AA male cc: Refill of chronic pain medsPMHxChronic back painHeadachesHead trauma/sz disorderCKDHep CHeroin abuse/relapse for >20 yrs. Medications:Methadone
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1. Urine Drug Testing in Chronic Opiate Management:Tips for Primary Care Physicians Analia Castiglioni, MD
GIM Noon Conference
February 2, 2010
3. Case UDS
Barbiturates NEGATIVE
Opiates POSTITIVE
Marijuana NEGATIVE
Cocaine NEGATIVE
BZD NEGATIVE Urine Opiate Panel
++++morphine
++ codeine
+ hydrocodone
+ hydromorphone
Methadone <50mg/L
4. Objectives Review utility of urine drug testing in chronic opiate management
Describe different testing methods and limitations
Enhance knowledge for correct interpretation of drug testing
Develop a testing strategy
5. Roadmap Background
Testing methods
Screening
Confirmatory
Interpretation of results
Drug testing in clinical practice
Why test
Whom to test
When to test
6. Prescription drug abuse Epidemic numbers (2004)
15 million (94% increase in a decade)
> combined cocaine/hallucinoges/inhalants/heroin
4th most abused < marijuana, alcohol and tobacco
Oxycontin, Ritalin, Valium
Concomitant illicit drug use
34% on controlled substances
15% w/o controlled substances
Psychotropic drugs taken non-medicallyPsychotropic drugs taken non-medically
7. Chronic Non-Malignant Pain (CNMP) Majority managed by PCP
Opiates accepted approach
Data supports efficacy
Long/short acting formulations
Risks
abuse and diversion
Use of other illicit substances
Random drug testing
Screening/Monitor adherence
8% Family Physicians use it
8. Drug “screening” in clinical practice Not real “screening”
Only limited number of drugs
Drugs detected depend on setting/test used
Urine preferred biologic sample
Parent drug or metabolite(s)
Longer detection time (1-3 days)
Easy to collect, low cost
Drugs in serum short ˝ life (4-6 hours)
9. Detection of drugs in biologic specimens
11. Urine Drug Screen (UDS) Screening
Antibody mediated: Qualitative (+ or -)
Advantages
Sensitive, inexpensive, rapid
1-many drugs
Point of Care/Lab
Disadvantages:
Cross-reactivity
Detection cut-offs vary
“Presumptive results” until confirmed
12. Chromatography Confirmatory Test
Gas (GC/MS) or liquid (HPLC)
Quantitative, drug-specific
Advantages:
Accurate, sensitive, reliable
Detect specific drugs
Disadvantages
Costly, insurance may not pay
lab-based, time consuming
13. Urine Drug Screen (UDS) VA and UAB lab:
Barbiturates
Opiates
Cannab (VA), Amph (UAB)
Cocaine
Benzodiazepines
+Urine is saved 5d (UAB) and 60d (VA)
Confirmatory test needed
r/o false +, cross reactivity
Determine specific drug detected in a class
14. Interpretation of UDS results Accurate interpretation requires
Detailed history of med used (sched/prn)
OTC/herbal products
Time of last use
Test Sensitivity vs Specificity
Limited for semi-synthetic/synthetic opioids
Cross-reactivity
High (amphetamines) vs low (cocaine) Sensitivity: ability to detect a class of drug
Specificity: ability to detect specific drug
Sensitivity: ability to detect a class of drug
Specificity: ability to detect specific drug
15. Going back to the case… UDS
Barbiturates NEGATIVE
Opiates POSTITIVE
Marijuana NEGATIVE
Cocaine NEGATIVE
BZD NEGATIVE Urine Opiate Panel
++++morphine
++ codeine
+ hydrocodone
+ hydromorphone
Methadone <50mg/L
16. UDS: Unexpected Positive Results What if you detect drugs you didn’t prescribe?
Metabolite of a prescribed drug or OTC
Pt may be using other drugs
Prescribed (second provider)
Illicit
False Positive (cross-reactivity)
18. UDS: Unexpected Negative Results What if the Prescribed drug is absent?
Check if drug is detected by UDS test
Dose below detection cutoff (prn use)
Pt not taking medication as prescribed
Not at all, run out early
Diversion, altered urine, wrong patient
Medical condition (lactic ac, osm diuresis)
False Negative
BZD, synthetic opiates
19. Opiates
20. UDS Interpretation: Opiates Prescribed or illicit use
Analgesic, antitussive, antidiarrheal
Not all opiates are detected by UDS
Sensitivity varies natural vs synthetic opioids
False - (pt on opiates but test -)
Cross reactivity
False + (pt not on opiates but test +)
Poppy Seeds, Rifampin, Fluoroquinolones
22. Opiate Metabolism Drug vs metabolite
Drug > metabolite concentrations
Different half-lives
23. Semi-synthetic/Synthetic Opiates Oxycodone
Opiate screen negative at dose <100mg/d
<10% excreted in urine
Opiate panel
Methadone
Opiate screen negative
Specific urine methadone level
Average dose >40mg/24hr
Verapamil metabolite can cause false+
Fentanyl
Opiate screen negative
Urine Fentanyl level
Trazodone can cause false +
24. Poppy Seeds
Screening cutoff for DHHS changed 1998
From 300ng/ml to 2000ng/ml
1 bagel 1.5mg Morphine and 0.1mg codeine
Results + in some pts up to 24hrs
Clinical UDS still use 300ng/ml
Rifampin
12% cross-reactivity, up to 18-24hrs
Quinolones Opiate Screen Cross Reactivity
25. UDS Interpretation: Opiates Opiate +
True positive
Morphine
Hydrocodone
Heroin
Codeine
False positive
Poppy seeds
Fluoroquinolones
Amitriptyline Opiate –
True negative
False negative
Methadone
Fentanyl
Oxycodone (<100mg/day)
27. UDS Interpretation + Cocaine
Deliberate use
Cross-reactivity minimal
+ Amphetamine/Methamphetamine
High cross-reactivity
OTC products (Vicks®), decongestants, diet products, selegiline
Benzodiazepines
Variable cross-reactivity
Clonazepam usually NOT detected
28. Going back to the case… UDS
Barbiturates NEGATIVE
Opiates POSTITIVE
Marijuana NEGATIVE
Cocaine NEGATIVE
BZD NEGATIVE Urine Opiate Panel
++++morphine
++ codeine
+ hydrocodone
+ hydromorphone
Methadone <50mg/L
29. Why test? UDS developed to detect illicit drugs in criminal, workplace and military setting
Chronic opiate treatment
Aid management of prescription drugs
Diagnose substance misuse/abuse/addiction
Monitor adherence
Guide treatment
Advocate for patients
30. Whom to test? Universal approach
All pts on chronic opiate regimen
New pt already on narcotics
Those that you “inherit”
Aberrant behavior: “Pseudo-addiction”
Pt resistant to full evaluation
Request a specific drug
Pts in recovery
31. When to test? Before starting controlled substances
Clear, well defined boundaries
Screening for substance abuse/misuse
Difficult to treat pain in setting of underlying addiction
Pain contract/treatment agreement
Initiation
Randomly (1-3/year)
Changes in regimen
h/o substance misuse does not preclude from appropriate treatment with ant medication when indicated, but deoes require rx plan with firmly defined boundaries
Need to document well, indication of treatment and treatment goals.h/o substance misuse does not preclude from appropriate treatment with ant medication when indicated, but deoes require rx plan with firmly defined boundaries
Need to document well, indication of treatment and treatment goals.
32. Key Points Urine is preferred biologic sample
“Universal” approach
Be familiar with tests you order
Anticipate results
Oxycodone typically not detected by UDS
Specific tests needed methadone/fentanyl
Use drug testing results in conjunction with other clinical information
33. References Urine Drug Screening: Practical Guide for Clinicians. KE Moeller et al. Mayo Clin. Proc. 2008;83(1)66-76
Urine Drug testing in clinical practice: Dispelling Myths and Designing Strategies. www.familydocs.org/files/UDTmonograph.pdf
2009 SGIM Workshop materials on chronic pain management. www.paineducation.vcu.org