Yale Psychiatry Grand Rounds: "Reclaiming Psychiatry's Place in Treating Pain and Addiction: A Clinician-Educator's Story"
November 22, 2024November 22, 2024
"Reclaiming Psychiatry's Place in Treating Pain and Addiction: A Clinician-Educator's Story"
Ellen Edens, MD, MPE,
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- 12404
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- 00:00Absolutely an honor, so thank
- 00:02you all for being here.
- 00:03Today, I'm gonna be talking
- 00:04about something that is a
- 00:05passion of mine.
- 00:07Thank you.
- 00:08Which is
- 00:11we good?
- 00:15Trying to convince you that
- 00:17chronic pain management
- 00:19is actually something psychiatrists
- 00:20can and should be doing.
- 00:22And so that's what we're
- 00:23gonna be talking about today.
- 00:26I'm gonna tell this story
- 00:27through my lens as a
- 00:28clinician educator,
- 00:31and so let's get started.
- 00:32Let me see. There we
- 00:33go. I do have some
- 00:34disclosures. I'm I am on
- 00:35the advisory board of Aspire
- 00:37three sixty five, and I'm
- 00:38gonna be talking about off
- 00:39label uses of medications today.
- 00:42I always like to start
- 00:43my talk out with my
- 00:44gratitudes
- 00:45because why wait, honestly?
- 00:48And so the first person
- 00:50is kind of right back
- 00:51at you with Doctor. Petrakis.
- 00:53Here we are,
- 00:55training for the Closer to
- 00:56Free bike ride in honor
- 00:57of doctor Mike Cerniak this
- 00:59summer.
- 01:00This is doctor Petrakis, myself,
- 01:03and Jean Vining, who's Bob
- 01:04Malison's wife.
- 01:06And it was just an
- 01:06incredible experience, but doctor Petrakis
- 01:09is
- 01:10a friend
- 01:11and a one of a
- 01:11kind mentor, so,
- 01:14she's just a gift to
- 01:15me. My second gratitude is
- 01:17I turned fifty this year.
- 01:19Fifty. I'm not sure
- 01:22I am not sure if
- 01:23when you get too old
- 01:25to
- 01:26be excited about having your
- 01:27parents as cheerleaders,
- 01:29but my parents happen to
- 01:31be here in the audience.
- 01:32And I just want a
- 01:33huge
- 01:37a huge shout out to
- 01:38them. My father is a
- 01:40professor in the department of
- 01:41orthopedics at University of Tennessee
- 01:43Health Science Center. Here I
- 01:44am as a senior in
- 01:46high school visiting him in
- 01:47surgery.
- 01:48He started the first foot
- 01:50and ankle fellowship in orthopedics.
- 01:52So he is a foot
- 01:53and ankle doctor, and we
- 01:54had a skeleton always growing
- 01:56up, and it was always
- 01:57missing its feet because the
- 01:59feet were in his white
- 02:00coat. So he always had
- 02:02a prop whenever he needed
- 02:04to educate or teach someone.
- 02:06But he's the reason I'm
- 02:07a doctor, and he's the
- 02:08reason that that I wanted
- 02:09to be a medical educator.
- 02:10So huge gratitudes
- 02:12for my dad.
- 02:13But not to be outdone,
- 02:15my mother is after I
- 02:17finished college, she went back
- 02:19and got her master's of
- 02:20divinity and then her doctorate
- 02:21in ministry,
- 02:23and she became the first
- 02:25female pastor at the church
- 02:26that we both grew up
- 02:27in. It was a Baptist
- 02:29church, and that was kind
- 02:30of unheard of. She has
- 02:32all of her life been
- 02:33charting uncharted territory and is
- 02:35a role model for me.
- 02:36Here, she's
- 02:38baptizing
- 02:38my youngest daughter, Natalie.
- 02:41So that was this last
- 02:42September.
- 02:45This talk would not happen
- 02:46without my team, the clinical
- 02:48team, and I just really
- 02:49want a huge shout out
- 02:50to doctor Will Becker.
- 02:52We've been doing this from
- 02:54the beginning.
- 02:55Many of these slides are
- 02:56his. A lot of this
- 02:57research is stuff that's he
- 02:58has led,
- 03:00and he helps me kind
- 03:01of run through my thoughts
- 03:02here. So huge shout out
- 03:04to Will Becker, who's a
- 03:05colleague and friend. Of course,
- 03:07the rest of the team,
- 03:08doctor Edmond, is doing some
- 03:09really amazing research herself. We've
- 03:11got APRNs, clinical nurse practitioners,
- 03:14pharmacists,
- 03:14people are missing PAs, etcetera.
- 03:16We have a very interprofessional
- 03:18team.
- 03:19Thank you.
- 03:22And then this is my
- 03:23last one, and I'll move
- 03:24on.
- 03:25This is a huge win
- 03:26for us in the field.
- 03:27In September, this came out
- 03:29in NPR
- 03:30that there was,
- 03:31some signal that opioid overdose
- 03:33deaths were plummeting.
- 03:35And so that was published
- 03:36in September and on NPR.
- 03:38And then just last week,
- 03:39the CDC really confirmed that
- 03:42with a second four months
- 03:43of the year, and nationally,
- 03:45we've seen a sixteen point
- 03:47six percent drop in overdose
- 03:48deaths,
- 03:50this year.
- 03:51This is not the end.
- 03:53We can't really,
- 03:55let up at this point.
- 03:56We still probably are gonna
- 03:57reach a hundred thousand overdose
- 03:59deaths this year, but this
- 04:00is huge, huge progress and
- 04:02something I think we should
- 04:03be celebrating.
- 04:05Strong work for everybody who
- 04:06stepped up, to help make
- 04:08this change.
- 04:10Alright. Here are my objectives.
- 04:11I wanna talk about, psychiatry's
- 04:13unique skill set. This is
- 04:15something I'm very convinced of
- 04:16and why interprofessional
- 04:18training in this field is
- 04:19essential for psychiatrists.
- 04:21We're also gonna talk about
- 04:22a framework for managing opioid
- 04:24prescribing in this context of
- 04:25long term opioid therapy for
- 04:27chronic pain. And then at
- 04:29the end, we'll talk about
- 04:30a debate that's going on
- 04:32around really the clumsiness
- 04:34of the DSM-five opioid use
- 04:35disorder criteria
- 04:37for people when they are
- 04:37prescribed long term opioid therapy.
- 04:40But erase all of that,
- 04:41there really is one thing
- 04:43I want as a take
- 04:44home message.
- 04:45I hope you don't leave
- 04:46after this, but it's really
- 04:47the one thing I want
- 04:48everybody
- 04:49to to get to get,
- 04:51and that is that chronic
- 04:52pain is a condition of
- 04:54the central nervous system
- 04:56that has negative
- 04:58cognitive,
- 05:00behavioral, and emotional consequences.
- 05:02Let's say it one more
- 05:03time.
- 05:04Chronic pain is a condition
- 05:06of the central nervous system
- 05:07that has negative cognitive, behavioral,
- 05:10and emotional consequences.
- 05:12And so as such, I'm
- 05:14quite
- 05:15convinced
- 05:16that chronic pain is a
- 05:17neuropsychiatric
- 05:18condition and one that we
- 05:19need to be trained in.
- 05:22Just to tell you my
- 05:23context and how I got
- 05:24started,
- 05:26this was two thousand and
- 05:27eleven. I I was very
- 05:29clear from the beginning, I
- 05:30wanna come on faculty, I'll
- 05:32do as many fellowships as
- 05:33is needed in order to
- 05:35find a spot for me
- 05:36and I did,
- 05:37but at one point, it
- 05:38was late twenty ten, Doctor.
- 05:40Petrarcus said there is a
- 05:41job that's coming open and
- 05:43we'd welcome you to apply,
- 05:44see if you might be
- 05:45a good fit, but, Ellen,
- 05:46it's in chronic pain. What
- 05:48do you know about chronic
- 05:49pain?
- 05:50And I said, well, doctor
- 05:52Declan Berry gave me a
- 05:53lecture during fellowship,
- 05:55and I had the good
- 05:57sense to go and actually
- 05:58visit one of the groups
- 05:59that he was leading at
- 06:00the Abt Foundation because, of
- 06:02course, he was doing,
- 06:03some really
- 06:05innovative work in this field,
- 06:07but short of that, I
- 06:08had no training.
- 06:10Just to let you know
- 06:11kind of the clinical context
- 06:12and why she might have
- 06:13come to an addiction psychiatry
- 06:15trained
- 06:15person for this position or
- 06:17to apply,
- 06:19in two thousand ten, you
- 06:20have the Susan Oakey,
- 06:22article coming out in the
- 06:24New England Journal
- 06:25of Medicine that says a
- 06:26flood of opioids, a rising
- 06:27tide of deaths. You can
- 06:29see this just
- 06:30exponential rise in overdose deaths,
- 06:32and we're always are also
- 06:33seeing that it is,
- 06:35running parallel to a rise
- 06:37in opioid prescribing. Ten, twenty
- 06:38eleven. The next slide is
- 06:39the CDC confirming this a
- 06:41year later, that not only
- 06:41were opioid prescriptions going up,
- 06:42overdose deaths were going up,
- 06:42but also opioid treatment admissions
- 06:44were going up.
- 06:53So this myth that if
- 06:55you had chronic pain, you
- 06:57would not develop an opioid
- 06:58use disorder
- 06:59was clearly false. And so
- 07:01that is why I think
- 07:03she was looking for an
- 07:04addiction specialist to come and
- 07:05work in this space. But
- 07:07I would argue
- 07:09that chronic pain and mental
- 07:10health, the recognition of their
- 07:13overlap
- 07:14well predated any opioid crisis.
- 07:16And this is not a
- 07:18feat, something that only addiction
- 07:19specialists need to know about.
- 07:21But in truth,
- 07:24prevalence of mental health conditions
- 07:26in chronic pain for people
- 07:27who have chronic pain. Anxiety
- 07:29and depression is very high.
- 07:30PTSD
- 07:31and trauma is also high,
- 07:33as is ADHD and substance
- 07:35use disorders. And we know
- 07:36that the presence of these
- 07:37psychiatric conditions
- 07:38worsen chronic pain outcomes.
- 07:41We also have all probably
- 07:42all had the experience of
- 07:44sitting with somebody who has
- 07:45refractory depression who says I
- 07:47can't get better when I'm
- 07:48in this much pain. Right?
- 07:50So there it's a bidirectional,
- 07:52interaction, and this is just
- 07:54a a large study that
- 07:55came out this summer in
- 07:56pain,
- 07:57from the National Health Interview
- 07:59Survey of thirty two thousand
- 08:00adults. And what basically, what
- 08:02it shows is if you
- 08:03have chronic pain, and this
- 08:04is high impact chronic pain,
- 08:05you're having a lot of
- 08:06difficulty doing errands. I mean,
- 08:08simple things is doing errands
- 08:09on your own, participating in
- 08:09social activities. Your, work is
- 08:09limited due to your health
- 08:10problems. It's even worse if
- 08:12you have anxiety and depression,
- 08:13but it's much worse if
- 08:15you have both co occurring
- 08:22chronic, high impact chronic pain
- 08:24and, anxiety and depression.
- 08:27And so at this point,
- 08:28the question became for me
- 08:30back in two thousand and
- 08:31eleven,
- 08:32why did I know so
- 08:33little and what did I
- 08:34need to know to work
- 08:36in this space? I'm not
- 08:37going to spend much time
- 08:38talking about the why did
- 08:39I know so little? I
- 08:40think it has something to
- 08:41do with
- 08:43psychiatrists don't diagnose
- 08:44chronic pain conditions.
- 08:46And because we don't diagnose
- 08:48it, we don't really see
- 08:49it as ours, and we
- 08:50don't have ownership of it.
- 08:52But it doesn't mean that
- 08:53we don't have not only
- 08:55a right, but a responsibility
- 08:57to actually work within this
- 08:59space.
- 09:00But the next question was,
- 09:01what did I need to
- 09:02know? And over the last
- 09:04ten years, this I've come
- 09:05to think of it as
- 09:06in two buckets.
- 09:07So this is the way
- 09:08I think about it. We
- 09:09have to have a little
- 09:10bit of knowledge. That's true.
- 09:11And I think this has
- 09:12to happen in psychiatry residencies.
- 09:15And then we need a
- 09:15collaborative approach. If we're not
- 09:17gonna be the quarterbacks of
- 09:18the chronic pain care team,
- 09:20then we've got to know
- 09:21how to reach out. How
- 09:21do we collaborate? How do
- 09:23we provide a consultative role,
- 09:25in this field?
- 09:26So let's move on to
- 09:28a little bit of knowledge.
- 09:29I'm gonna tell you all
- 09:30this now, hopefully in the
- 09:31next twenty minutes.
- 09:33So what is chronic pain
- 09:34as distinct from acute pain?
- 09:37According to the ICD eleven,
- 09:38it is pain that lasts
- 09:39more than three months. That's
- 09:41it. That's really all it
- 09:42is. It is pain that
- 09:43lasts more than three months.
- 09:44It lasts beyond the normal
- 09:45time for healing. It's not
- 09:47acute pain, which is adaptive.
- 09:49So really, we think of
- 09:50it as a fire alarm
- 09:52going off when there is
- 09:53no fire.
- 09:54That's a signal and it's
- 09:56stressful,
- 09:57but it is not acute
- 09:58pain. It's not signaling impending
- 10:00tissue damage anymore. It is
- 10:02both a physical
- 10:05and a psychological phenomenon.
- 10:07Kind of get, a little
- 10:09bit more granular and explain
- 10:10it just to kind of
- 10:11juxtapose it. I think what
- 10:13chronic pain is, let's talk
- 10:14about acute pain.
- 10:15So you can see here,
- 10:17light touch is depicted by
- 10:18the feather here, and pain
- 10:21signals are traveling along the
- 10:22a beta fibers to the
- 10:23dorsal horn of the spinal
- 10:25cord. They're in black.
- 10:26Temperature and light touch are
- 10:28traveling sorry. Temperature and sharp
- 10:30touch are traveling via the
- 10:32c fibers
- 10:33also to the dorsal horn
- 10:35of the the spinal cord
- 10:36where then it synapses with
- 10:38the central nervous system and
- 10:40goes on up to the
- 10:41brain where it's perceived,
- 10:43modulated,
- 10:43and then there's actually inhibitory
- 10:46descending,
- 10:47pathways from the medulla
- 10:49back down.
- 10:51So that's how acute pain
- 10:52works.
- 10:54Pro tip, we think this
- 10:55is where tricyclics and SNRIs
- 10:57work is really in that
- 10:58inhibitory descending pathway, and you
- 11:01can think of pain intensity
- 11:02as the sum of the
- 11:04ascending stimulus minus the descending
- 11:06inhibit inhibition.
- 11:09So let's think about two
- 11:10models of chronic pain. One
- 11:11is chronic inflammatory pain. This
- 11:13might be your rheumatoid arthritis.
- 11:15This is where you have
- 11:16pro inflammatory chemokines that are
- 11:18really sending off signals to
- 11:20the c fibers,
- 11:21and then of course that
- 11:22becomes a tonic noxious impulse,
- 11:24so people are kind of
- 11:26chronically experiencing
- 11:27this pain.
- 11:28But another model that I
- 11:30think will be very familiar
- 11:31to us psychiatrists is one
- 11:32of neuronal plasticity
- 11:34that leads to central sensitization.
- 11:36And this is really where
- 11:37your c fibers, your a
- 11:39beta fibers, your, your peripheral
- 11:40fibers have sustained an injury.
- 11:42And then in kind of
- 11:44the healing process,
- 11:45there's,
- 11:47regeneration
- 11:48and, activated macrophages and glial
- 11:51cells are recruited and you
- 11:53really get a dysregulation
- 11:54of these, peripheral pain fibers
- 11:57that then,
- 11:58really change the what's happening
- 12:00in the dorsal horn of
- 12:01the spinal cord,
- 12:04and end up with, kind
- 12:05of chronic pain syndrome going
- 12:08up to the brain.
- 12:10All right. So that's two
- 12:12models.
- 12:13Let's talk about options for
- 12:14treating pain.
- 12:16When I think about pain
- 12:17treatments, I think about them
- 12:19in two buckets. The first
- 12:20one is non medication treatments,
- 12:22and the second is medication
- 12:24treatments. Let's talk about non
- 12:26medication treatments. And I'm gonna
- 12:27demonstrate this to y'all by
- 12:28the way, in a video
- 12:29in just a second. You'll
- 12:30see me talk to a
- 12:31patient about this. But the
- 12:32first thing is active treatments.
- 12:34So these are things the
- 12:35patient does, and this is
- 12:36first line.
- 12:37The second,
- 12:39category I think of is
- 12:40passive treatments
- 12:42that these are things that
- 12:43are done to the patient,
- 12:44but they don't include medications
- 12:46for the most part. I
- 12:46mean, I have a steroid
- 12:47injection, but a lot of
- 12:48times there's trigger point injections.
- 12:50We have,
- 12:51tens units, nerve block surgeries.
- 12:53I probably should have mentioned
- 12:54chiropractic and acupuncture first.
- 12:57And then when you go
- 12:58to your medication treatments, I
- 12:59think about it as non
- 13:00opioid analgesics. And if you
- 13:02look at these, we've got
- 13:03our NSAIDs, our antidepressants, our
- 13:04anti epileptics,
- 13:06muscle relaxants.
- 13:07Diazepam
- 13:08is often prescribed,
- 13:10as a muscle relaxant, by
- 13:12the way.
- 13:13And I think that's maybe
- 13:14where psychiatrists could actually be
- 13:15involved in that particular piece
- 13:17is in deprescribing,
- 13:18if anything, and then your
- 13:20topicals.
- 13:21And then, of course, there
- 13:22are opioid analgesics,
- 13:23both long and short acting.
- 13:25So if you look at
- 13:26this list and then I
- 13:27highlight everything that psychiatrists either
- 13:29know something about
- 13:31or,
- 13:31actively
- 13:32prescribe or do, you can
- 13:34see that there's a lot
- 13:35of yellow up on this
- 13:37screen.
- 13:38Right? And there's not much
- 13:39more, by the way. This
- 13:40is, this is really it.
- 13:41This is what we got
- 13:42for chronic pain.
- 13:44I'm sure there's some other
- 13:45things. Hopefully we're going to
- 13:46get more treatments, but this
- 13:48is it. And a large
- 13:49proportion
- 13:50is squarely in our,
- 13:52field.
- 13:54So how does all of
- 13:55this fit together? What I
- 13:56would say is, let's talk
- 13:58about what is our role
- 13:59and what is not, and
- 13:59I think this has to
- 14:00be very clearly explained to
- 14:02trainees if we're going to
- 14:03get traction as to why
- 14:04this is important. Again, we
- 14:05don't diagnose pain conditions, generally.
- 14:07We don't order diagnostic tests,
- 14:09generally, and we don't generally
- 14:11serve as the team quarterback,
- 14:13which we're used to doing.
- 14:14So that requires a little
- 14:15bit of a frame shift,
- 14:16I think. But we definitely
- 14:18can act as a consultant.
- 14:20We can diagnose and treat
- 14:21co occurring mental health conditions,
- 14:22including opioid use disorder. We
- 14:24can educate patients about multimodal
- 14:26treatment and I'll show you
- 14:27I'll demonstrate that in just
- 14:28a bit. You'll explain the
- 14:30inner interplay between mood, stress,
- 14:32anxiety, addiction and chronic pain.
- 14:34Primary care doctors don't have
- 14:35a lot of time to
- 14:36explain this, Right? We do.
- 14:38This would be a wonderful,
- 14:40wonderful
- 14:40benefit
- 14:41to our patients if we
- 14:42were able to do this.
- 14:44And of course we can
- 14:44deliver, oversee, and recommend evidence
- 14:46based treatments,
- 14:47in this area.
- 14:51As far as a functional
- 14:52pain assessment, I'm also going
- 14:54to demonstrate this in just
- 14:56a second.
- 14:58We, again, we're not diagnosing.
- 14:59So I don't it's not
- 15:00when you see me, you'll
- 15:01see that all of these
- 15:02questions
- 15:04feel very comfortable, I think,
- 15:06for psychiatrists. Psychologists often lead
- 15:08the field in pain assessments,
- 15:10health psychologists do, and so
- 15:11I'm gonna demonstrate a functional
- 15:13pain assessment. I thought,
- 15:17what I'm gonna do is
- 15:18first set the stage. This
- 15:19is miss Davis. We're gonna
- 15:20have two cases that are
- 15:21fairly similar. I presented this
- 15:23at the American Psychiatric Association
- 15:25meeting in May.
- 15:28There is a part in
- 15:29this video where she asks
- 15:31me how talk therapy will
- 15:33help her chronic pain, and
- 15:34I don't answer her. And
- 15:36the reason I didn't answer
- 15:37her is because we were
- 15:37gonna do that later in
- 15:38the workshop. So for our
- 15:40purposes, I'm gonna do it
- 15:41after this video is over.
- 15:42You're gonna have I'm gonna
- 15:43demonstrate how that's done, but
- 15:45just FYI. So miss Davis
- 15:47is a forty four year
- 15:47old female with major depression.
- 15:49She's coming into your office.
- 15:50She's on, you know, pretty
- 15:51high dose sertraline.
- 15:52That has helped some. Her,
- 15:54depression has
- 15:57it it it has gone
- 15:58down. It has improved, but
- 16:00not not remitted.
- 16:01She's very focused on her
- 16:03chronic pain. I'll always be
- 16:04in pain, so I'll always
- 16:05be depressed.
- 16:06She got started on opioids
- 16:07in the context of a
- 16:08cancer diagnosis and has remained
- 16:10on them, And her opioid
- 16:11prescriber is beginning to initiate
- 16:13a taper, and she's very
- 16:14anxious. And so you decide
- 16:15to find out more about
- 16:16her experience of chronic pain.
- 16:19And here we go.
- 16:22Hopefully, this will work.
- 16:24So tell me about your
- 16:25pain.
- 16:26So I have pain all
- 16:28over. The worst is in
- 16:29my chest when I get
- 16:30muscle spasms, but I have
- 16:32pain in my back and
- 16:33my neck. Even my legs
- 16:34ache all the time.
- 16:36Is there any burning or
- 16:37shooting pain?
- 16:39No.
- 16:40What about numbness or tingling?
- 16:42Not really.
- 16:43And what have you tried
- 16:44that makes the pain better?
- 16:46Well, the oxycodone makes it
- 16:48so that I can at
- 16:48least get grocery shopping done,
- 16:50but that's about it.
- 16:52Anything else?
- 16:54I have a good friend
- 16:55who calls me. That helps.
- 16:57And sometimes I get outside.
- 16:59I can't really go very
- 17:00far, though, but it does
- 17:02help.
- 17:04What what things make it
- 17:05worse?
- 17:07Standing for too long, typically,
- 17:09sitting for too long, and
- 17:11walking more than ten minutes.
- 17:14Tell me about a typical
- 17:15day.
- 17:17So I can't really sleep
- 17:18at all.
- 17:19I usually wake up around
- 17:21five in the morning,
- 17:22and I have some coffee
- 17:24breakfast before work.
- 17:25When I get home, I'm
- 17:27just exhausted.
- 17:28I usually just sit on
- 17:30the couch and watch television
- 17:31until bedtime.
- 17:32I go to bed around
- 17:33nine PM.
- 17:35On weekends,
- 17:36I just rest. I go
- 17:37to church on Sunday, but
- 17:38that's about it. Sometimes my
- 17:40daughter comes to visit.
- 17:41Oh, miss Davis, it's clear
- 17:43pain is really
- 17:45impacting your life in many
- 17:46ways.
- 17:47I'd like to ask now
- 17:48about specific areas that pain
- 17:50affects you. That'd be okay?
- 17:54Does pain impact your ability
- 17:55to do physical activity?
- 17:58Yes. I used to run
- 17:59and hike before my diagnosis.
- 18:02Now I can barely walk
- 18:03around the block.
- 18:05That's tough.
- 18:06Are you able to take
- 18:07care of your daily tasks
- 18:08such as dressing yourself, cooking,
- 18:10or preparing meals, or cleaning
- 18:11your house?
- 18:13Yeah. I do okay. Some
- 18:15nights, I'm so tired, though.
- 18:16All I can do is
- 18:17microwave a dinner, but I
- 18:19get along.
- 18:20And how does pain impact
- 18:22social relationships?
- 18:25I try and keep in
- 18:25touch with people, but I'm
- 18:27usually too tired.
- 18:29And who wants to be
- 18:29around someone like me anyway?
- 18:31I'm not really that bad
- 18:32anymore.
- 18:34And you mentioned that sleep
- 18:35is really hard for you
- 18:36and that you experience pain
- 18:37as the reason for sleepiness.
- 18:39Correct?
- 18:41Yeah.
- 18:42What about your mood? What
- 18:44connection do you see between
- 18:45your mood and pain?
- 18:47I feel like pain just
- 18:48makes me so grumpy. I'm
- 18:50just not really that fun
- 18:52anymore.
- 18:54Some people also know that
- 18:55when they're in a better
- 18:56mood or a worse mood,
- 18:58that impacts how much pain
- 18:59they experience.
- 19:00Do you ever notice that
- 19:02connection where your mood impacts
- 19:03your pain?
- 19:05Well, I like having my
- 19:07daughter around. That helps.
- 19:10And how would you describe
- 19:11your overall quality of life?
- 19:14Pretty pathetic.
- 19:16I don't really do anything
- 19:17but work and go to
- 19:18church once a week.
- 19:20Miss Davis, it's clear that
- 19:21pain is really impacting your
- 19:23overall health and life,
- 19:25and that's really hard. So
- 19:27how are you coping with
- 19:28all of this?
- 19:30I mean, I read the
- 19:31bible and pray, and like
- 19:33I said, my good friend
- 19:34and my daughter help.
- 19:36Let me ask you. If
- 19:37your pain were better managed,
- 19:39what would you be doing
- 19:41that you're not doing now?
- 19:43I mean, I'd love to
- 19:45complete a five k.
- 19:47Even walking, it would be
- 19:48good.
- 19:49We have a fun one
- 19:51in the fall that I
- 19:52haven't been able to join
- 19:53for, like, several years now,
- 19:55but that won't really happen.
- 19:56I can't even walk ten
- 19:57minutes now, and I like
- 19:59to sleep better.
- 20:01But those are some great
- 20:03goals, miss Davis, that I
- 20:04think we can work together
- 20:05to help you achieve.
- 20:08So now that I've heard
- 20:09about your pain experience and
- 20:11what your goals of pain
- 20:12care are, I'd like to
- 20:13explore some things that you've
- 20:14tried for your chronic pain.
- 20:16Have you ever tried physical
- 20:18therapy or pool therapy?
- 20:20No. But getting into a
- 20:22pool sounds really nice.
- 20:24What about paced or gentle
- 20:26exercise like yoga?
- 20:28What do you mean by
- 20:29paced? That's a great question.
- 20:31So by paced, I mean,
- 20:33where you exercise to just
- 20:35under the limit of where
- 20:36pain gets intense.
- 20:37So for instance, if you
- 20:38walk ten minutes and hurt
- 20:40bad, as you mentioned,
- 20:41then you would stop walking
- 20:43and take a quick break
- 20:44every eight minutes instead. And
- 20:46then once you've recovered, you'd
- 20:47keep going.
- 20:49Oh, I see. Okay.
- 20:52Have you ever seen a
- 20:53physiatrist or physical medicine and
- 20:54rehab specialist?
- 20:56This is a medical specialty
- 20:57that focuses on the musculoskeletal
- 20:59system and maximizing function.
- 21:02No. I've never even heard
- 21:04of them, but that sounds
- 21:06interesting.
- 21:07What about injections, such as
- 21:09steroid injections into joints or
- 21:11Botox to relax muscles?
- 21:13Oh, no. That sounds very
- 21:15interesting about Botox, but I
- 21:17don't really like needles.
- 21:19Have you ever seen a
- 21:20chiropractor?
- 21:22Yes. That helped a little
- 21:24at first, but then it
- 21:25stopped working.
- 21:27Ever received acupuncture?
- 21:29That sounds weird to me.
- 21:32What about massage?
- 21:35I've had a massage before.
- 21:37That does seem to help,
- 21:39but I can't afford it.
- 21:41Have you ever tried a
- 21:42TENS unit?
- 21:44That hurts. It made my
- 21:46pain a lot worse.
- 21:48Does applying heat or ice
- 21:49help?
- 21:51Sometimes a heating pad would
- 21:52help.
- 21:53Have you ever received talk
- 21:55or skill based therapy that
- 21:57specifically,
- 21:58targets your chronic pain?
- 22:00No. How will talk therapy
- 22:03help my pain? I haven't
- 22:04done that.
- 22:05Okay. I'd like to come
- 22:07back to your question about
- 22:08how this type of therapy
- 22:09might be useful.
- 22:10But for now, I'm gonna
- 22:11turn to medication treatments.
- 22:14Do you use any ibuprofen,
- 22:16naproxen,
- 22:17or other NSAIDs or Tylenol?
- 22:22Sometimes I take an Advil,
- 22:23but I don't know why.
- 22:24It doesn't really help much.
- 22:26I know they put Tylenol
- 22:28on Percocets,
- 22:29but for some reason, my
- 22:30doctor is only prescribing oxycodone
- 22:32without the Tylenol.
- 22:35K. And I know you're
- 22:36on sertraline.
- 22:37I'm gonna ask about other
- 22:38medications in that class that
- 22:40can really help with pain.
- 22:41Have you ever tried amitriptyline,
- 22:44nortriptyline,
- 22:45or what about venlafaxine
- 22:47or duloxetine?
- 22:49No. None of those sound
- 22:50familiar.
- 22:52What about gabapentin
- 22:53or pregabalin?
- 22:55Yeah. I hate that stuff.
- 22:58Okay.
- 22:59Have you ever used muscle
- 23:00relaxants like baclofen or cyclobenzaprine
- 23:03before?
- 23:04Those make me feel really
- 23:05goofy.
- 23:07I don't really like to
- 23:08take those much, but sometimes
- 23:09I do when the spasms
- 23:10get really bad.
- 23:12And last but not least,
- 23:13what about topicals,
- 23:15like lidocaine patch or capsaicin
- 23:17cream or a diclofenac gel?
- 23:20I used a lidocaine patch
- 23:21for a while, but it
- 23:22didn't really do anything.
- 23:24And then anything else that
- 23:26you've tried for pain that
- 23:27I haven't asked about?
- 23:29No.
- 23:33Okay.
- 23:34So I told you that
- 23:35I would demonstrate how how
- 23:37when she asked, how would
- 23:38talk therapy impact my my
- 23:40pain? And I've learned from
- 23:41my health psychology colleagues that
- 23:43sometimes it's better to talk
- 23:44about skills based therapy,
- 23:46but what happens over time
- 23:47with chronic pain is people
- 23:49start to have thoughts like,
- 23:50I'm no good. My life
- 23:52will never be the same.
- 23:53And then they begin to
- 23:55stop going places and doing
- 23:57things. And over time,
- 23:59pain is absolutely,
- 24:00the pain is central. And
- 24:02so what I talk to
- 24:03patients about is, you know,
- 24:04pain has really taken control
- 24:06of your life. And sometimes
- 24:08if you meet with somebody
- 24:09or we talk and we
- 24:10really examine what's going on,
- 24:12what those triggers are, what
- 24:14your behaviors are around your
- 24:15pain,
- 24:16sometimes we can figure out,
- 24:18we can tweak some things
- 24:19that will ultimately put you
- 24:21back in control.
- 24:22That is the goal of
- 24:23talk or skills based therapy
- 24:25is to find small wins
- 24:27that ultimately give our patients
- 24:28more agency.
- 24:30And many times they'll buy
- 24:31into that because they don't
- 24:32really have anything else to
- 24:34lose. And if we're able
- 24:35to talk to our patients
- 24:37about the benefit of skills
- 24:38based therapy, it would be
- 24:40huge for our patients.
- 24:43Okay. The other thing I
- 24:44think we as psychiatrists can
- 24:46do is pitch a multimodal
- 24:47treatment plan.
- 24:49The main thing here is
- 24:50people will often say, oh,
- 24:51I did physical therapy and
- 24:53it hurt and made things
- 24:54worse. And so our job
- 24:56is to really try and
- 24:57convince patients, okay, you know,
- 24:59we're not gonna force them
- 25:00to do something that they
- 25:01don't wanna do, but what
- 25:02might be the benefit of
- 25:04bringing back things that didn't
- 25:05work in the past? And
- 25:07so I'm gonna just
- 25:09demonstrate how I talk to
- 25:10patients about,
- 25:12putting together a multimodal care
- 25:14plan.
- 25:16Thanks for going through all
- 25:17of that, miss Davis.
- 25:19I have a few ideas
- 25:20already about what might be
- 25:21helpful for you.
- 25:22Might I tell you about
- 25:24how we think about best
- 25:25practice pain care and how
- 25:27we're gonna help you find
- 25:28the right treatments that work
- 25:29for you?
- 25:31Oh, yeah.
- 25:32Yes.
- 25:34So we now know that
- 25:35chronic pain isn't just about
- 25:37the site of injury.
- 25:38Tissue there has healed.
- 25:40But what's happened is that
- 25:42nerve cells all along that
- 25:44pain pathway to your spinal
- 25:45cord and up to your
- 25:46brain and back down again
- 25:48have changed. And those are
- 25:50keeping that pain signal going
- 25:52even when there's no acute
- 25:53injury or danger anymore.
- 25:55We sometimes like in chronic
- 25:57pain to a fire alarm
- 25:58going off when there isn't
- 25:59actually a fire.
- 26:01Over the past few decades,
- 26:02we've learned a lot about
- 26:03chronic pain. So for instance,
- 26:05it's clearer now that chronic
- 26:06pain is more complex than
- 26:07we ever imagined.
- 26:09And while perhaps one day,
- 26:10we'll have a cure for
- 26:11it, right now, we only
- 26:13have a certain number of
- 26:14treatments that we know work.
- 26:16I call this our ingredient
- 26:17list for chronic pain treatments.
- 26:20And the highest quality care,
- 26:22which is what we want
- 26:23you to get,
- 26:24is like finding the right
- 26:26recipe for you from that
- 26:27list of ingredients.
- 26:29So let's use an example,
- 26:31like baking a blueberry pie.
- 26:33Blueberries are delicious, and I
- 26:35can eat them by the
- 26:36handful. But by themselves, they're
- 26:38just not gonna make a
- 26:38blueberry pie. Right? Rather, you
- 26:40need lots of ingredients, sugar,
- 26:42flour, salt, butter,
- 26:44maybe some lemon juice or
- 26:46eggs. And bear with me.
- 26:47You know, you can't have
- 26:48all of these ingredients on
- 26:50different days. You can't have
- 26:51flour on Monday and eggs
- 26:52on Tuesday.
- 26:54Rather, you really have to
- 26:55mix them all together and
- 26:56put them in the oven
- 26:57and bake them into something
- 26:58new.
- 26:59Well, that's how we think
- 27:00about pain care now. While
- 27:02opioids may seem to be
- 27:04working for you, we probably
- 27:06can't get the best overall
- 27:07effect without adding more ingredients.
- 27:10So maybe we add some
- 27:11ingredients that you've never used,
- 27:13things that I asked about
- 27:14that you didn't hear hadn't
- 27:15heard about before.
- 27:17But maybe we also add
- 27:18back in things that you've
- 27:19already tried.
- 27:20And by themselves, maybe they
- 27:22don't reduce your pain noticeably.
- 27:24But what if, for instance,
- 27:25Tylenol can reduce your pain
- 27:27from an eight, say a
- 27:28seven point six? And then
- 27:30getting in the pool, which
- 27:31you seemed interested in, might
- 27:33reduce that score to a
- 27:34seven point two.
- 27:36Maybe some stretching or yoga
- 27:38could get you down to
- 27:39a six point eight,
- 27:41and adding some pleasurable activities
- 27:43or coping skills might reduce
- 27:44it all the way down
- 27:45to a six.
- 27:46And then, of course, the
- 27:47opioids may reduce you to
- 27:49a five. And suddenly, things
- 27:51that didn't seem like they
- 27:52were working on their own
- 27:53when put altogether
- 27:55can actually make a pretty
- 27:56great recipe.
- 27:57What are your thoughts about
- 27:58that?
- 28:00I mean, I guess that
- 28:01makes sense.
- 28:02So what's next then?
- 28:05Well, of those things that
- 28:06I mentioned, what are you
- 28:07most interested in?
- 28:10I guess the pool therapy
- 28:12is most interesting to me
- 28:13and maybe restarting with a
- 28:15chiropractor
- 28:16and getting out my heating
- 28:17pad.
- 28:19Also, you have told me
- 28:20that I'm at the highest
- 28:22dose of my antidepressant,
- 28:23so maybe it's time to
- 28:24think about something different.
- 28:27And I'd be open to
- 28:28seeing the what was it
- 28:29called again? The rehab
- 28:31person, maybe?
- 28:33Miss Davis, I think that
- 28:34sounds like a wonderful start.
- 28:36So now let's talk about
- 28:37your options for an antidepressant.
- 28:41Okay. So in about thirty
- 28:43minutes, I have taught you
- 28:45chronic pain one zero one
- 28:46for psychiatrists.
- 28:49And that's really kind of
- 28:50the nuts and bolts that
- 28:51we have our trainees learn
- 28:53or we hope and I'm
- 28:53gonna go into a little
- 28:54bit more of our goals
- 28:55and our objectives in our
- 28:56clinic, but that's kind of
- 28:58the basics that I've distilled
- 28:59over the last decade.
- 29:01The other thing that I
- 29:02said we really needed to
- 29:03have as psychiatrists was a
- 29:05collaborative or interprofessional approach. Now
- 29:07if you're a primary care
- 29:08doc or if you're in
- 29:09private practice, obviously, you're not
- 29:11gonna be able to do
- 29:12a lot of care coordination
- 29:13other than maybe saying, you
- 29:15know, they expressed interest. Go
- 29:16and talk to your primary
- 29:17care doctor. You can call
- 29:18the primary care doctor just
- 29:19to make sure that y'all
- 29:20are working synergistically together or
- 29:22the pain team. But now
- 29:24I am gonna talk about
- 29:25a pretty innovative clinic that
- 29:27we have developed over at
- 29:28the VA that's now been
- 29:30disseminated nationally.
- 29:32And,
- 29:33we're we're looking at taking
- 29:35it outside of the VA
- 29:36as well.
- 29:37This is the chronic pain
- 29:39management clinic, opioid safety, also
- 29:41known as the or formerly
- 29:42known as the opioid assessment
- 29:43clinic. We just changed our
- 29:44name two months ago, I
- 29:45think. But we were the
- 29:47ORC up until just recently.
- 29:49We were started in two
- 29:50thousand twelve. As I've already
- 29:51mentioned, pain at the VA
- 29:53was moving or opioid prescribing
- 29:54was moving from anesthesiology
- 29:56down to primary care. Primary
- 29:57care doctors were saying, oh
- 29:59my gosh, what do we
- 30:00do? We need help. We
- 30:01had this huge systems redesign
- 30:03meeting.
- 30:04Doctor Declan, sorry, doctor Will
- 30:06Becker was, coming over. He
- 30:08had a career development award.
- 30:10He's an internist. He's got
- 30:12addiction training.
- 30:13And, we kind of put
- 30:15our heads together and we
- 30:16we started the opioid reassessment
- 30:18clinic. From the beginning, it
- 30:20was multidisciplinary.
- 30:21We have both internal medicine
- 30:23psychiatry, health psychology, and our
- 30:24nurse practitioner was psych trained.
- 30:26We've added well, I'll show
- 30:28you who all we've added.
- 30:29Again, we all had addiction
- 30:30or psychiatry training, and we
- 30:32took over opioid prescribing. So
- 30:33this was not a one
- 30:35time consultation, which was key.
- 30:37Right? We took over opioid
- 30:38prescribing to figure out the
- 30:39plan. So this is how
- 30:40the ORC or the opioid
- 30:41safety clinic
- 30:43works. Primary care doctors put
- 30:45in a referral, and then,
- 30:47it's reviewed. The appointment is
- 30:50scheduled and a structured chart
- 30:51review is done before the
- 30:52patient comes. I really wanna
- 30:54note number six.
- 30:56This initial visit is
- 30:58co led by a psychologist
- 31:00and a prescriber.
- 31:02For the first seven years,
- 31:03this was not the case.
- 31:05I would lead the initial
- 31:06ones or some other prescriber.
- 31:08Usually at the time, we
- 31:09were pretty, we were small
- 31:10back then. And then the
- 31:12psychologist, the health psychologist would
- 31:14meet with them and follow-up.
- 31:16It was a trainee. It
- 31:17was a psychology post doc
- 31:18around two thousand nineteen, two
- 31:20thousand twenty that said we
- 31:21can do this better than,
- 31:22you know, we can do
- 31:23it better than this, Ellen,
- 31:24and really led us through
- 31:26an entire year quality improvement
- 31:28project. This was her idea
- 31:30to really get buy in
- 31:31because she's basically saying, Ellen,
- 31:32you're gonna have to share.
- 31:34And we did we did
- 31:36this. We figured it out,
- 31:37and I will never ever
- 31:38go back. And I think
- 31:39seeing these co led visits
- 31:41and psychology is right there.
- 31:42In fact, they start the
- 31:44interview.
- 31:45There is never a sense
- 31:46that psychology
- 31:47or that skills based therapy
- 31:48or that medic you know,
- 31:50that medications are somehow supreme
- 31:51over anything else from the
- 31:52get go. Our patients are
- 31:53seeing that this is a
- 31:54team based approach,
- 31:56and that's just been really
- 31:57incredible. And I still keep
- 31:59in touch with the postdoc
- 32:00who did this, because I
- 32:01think it changed our clinic.
- 32:03After that, we talk with
- 32:04the team, we come up
- 32:05with a plan, and then,
- 32:07we do have follow ups.
- 32:08And our patients do get
- 32:09health psychology
- 32:10as well as med management
- 32:11in our clinic, and we
- 32:12do care coordination as well,
- 32:14which we can do at
- 32:14the VA being the largest
- 32:16national health care system in
- 32:17the country.
- 32:19Alright. Really, I taught I
- 32:21keep mentioning interprofessionalism.
- 32:23I will say Rome was
- 32:24not built in a day.
- 32:26We started out pretty interprofessional,
- 32:28but over the years, we
- 32:29have expanded and expanded and
- 32:30expanded. We now have clinical
- 32:31pharmacists.
- 32:32We have a physician assistant
- 32:34who works up in our
- 32:34Newington site. So we have
- 32:36two clinics going on at
- 32:37one time. We have a
- 32:39peer specialist, somebody who's lived
- 32:40with opioids, with chronic pain,
- 32:42who's been on opioids, who
- 32:43switched to buprenorphine so they
- 32:45can talk to other Veterans.
- 32:46And just this year, we've
- 32:47also added chiropractic care and
- 32:49physical therapy.
- 32:52I wanna tell you about
- 32:53the flow of our clinic
- 32:54by using the case of
- 32:55miss Morris. So miss Morris
- 32:56has chronic chest, neck, and
- 32:58back pain. She's fifty nine
- 32:59years old. She's on a
- 33:00hundred and eighty milligrams oxycodone
- 33:02daily. That's a high dose.
- 33:03Anything above ninety morphine equivalents,
- 33:06and this is two hundred
- 33:06and seventy morphine equivalents. So
- 33:08very high dose. She had
- 33:09she also, like miss Davis,
- 33:11was put on it for
- 33:11breast cancer, and this is
- 33:13a comes from an actual
- 33:15case of
- 33:16de identified everything, but, this
- 33:18is a veteran. So she
- 33:19has breast cancer in remission,
- 33:21bilateral mastectomy, and continues to
- 33:23have a lot of muscle
- 33:24spasms as well as neck
- 33:24and back pain. She also
- 33:26has depression and anxiety and
- 33:27PTSD that's all been untreated.
- 33:30From an opioid state safety
- 33:31standpoint there's no evidence of
- 33:33loss of control on initial,
- 33:34when we initially see her,
- 33:37we look at the state
- 33:38PMP, we don't see any
- 33:39early refills or anything like
- 33:40that and she doesn't report
- 33:41anything either. No history of
- 33:42substance use, current alcohol, nicotine
- 33:44or cannabis use, but she
- 33:45does have sleep apnea which
- 33:47increases the risk given that
- 33:48high dose opioid.
- 33:50She's actually quite functional. She
- 33:51gardens, she socializes, she even
- 33:53practices yoga. I mean, we
- 33:55don't have that many veterans
- 33:56who are gung ho on
- 33:57yoga. So that's pretty cool.
- 33:59I mean, she's pretty active.
- 34:00Non medication treatment, she's open.
- 34:03She, besides her own self
- 34:05management, her active treatment.
- 34:10She's open to pain, focused,
- 34:13psychotherapies and a referral for
- 34:15mental health treatment. Sorry. For
- 34:16medication treatments, she's exquisitely sensitive.
- 34:19She can tolerate
- 34:20a low dose of Venlafaxine
- 34:21but otherwise really can't tolerate
- 34:23NSAIDs, gabapentinoids.
- 34:25The only muscle relaxant she
- 34:26can tolerate is diazepam and
- 34:28she did have a prescription
- 34:29for that in the past.
- 34:30As far as opioids, she
- 34:32is terrified coming into our
- 34:33clinic. She's not happy about
- 34:35being there. She lost her
- 34:36out her non VA prescriber,
- 34:38which is why she was
- 34:38referred to us.
- 34:41And she's very anxious about
- 34:43tapering. Why fix what isn't
- 34:45broken?
- 34:46She's experienced withdrawal before,
- 34:49which is heightens her anxiety
- 34:51about all of this. She
- 34:52knows how horrible opioid withdrawal
- 34:54is, but it wasn't because
- 34:55she overused. It was really
- 34:57that a refill arrived late,
- 34:58and she's very opposed to
- 35:00switching a buprenorphine, which isn't
- 35:02entirely uncommon in our clinic.
- 35:04So this is the framework
- 35:05and this is what we
- 35:06teach all of our students.
- 35:08First, whenever a patient comes
- 35:09in, we we're wondering, is
- 35:11this opioid use disorder? And
- 35:13if it is,
- 35:15then we refer them to
- 35:17methadone or to I'm naltrexone,
- 35:18or we start buprenorphine. In
- 35:20our clinic, we go ahead
- 35:21and get that done.
- 35:23If it is not opioid
- 35:25use disorder
- 35:26or we are not clear,
- 35:27we are not sure, then
- 35:28we move to the bottom
- 35:29part of this frame. And
- 35:31that's where we move to
- 35:32a risk benefit analysis. Do
- 35:34the benefits outweigh the harm?
- 35:35And if no, the harms
- 35:36outweigh the benefits,
- 35:37then we offer the patient
- 35:39a patient centered tapering. And
- 35:40that means we are going
- 35:42to add multimodal treatment. We're
- 35:43gonna be at your side.
- 35:44We are not gonna let
- 35:45you go, but we are
- 35:46gonna move in the direction
- 35:47of safety,
- 35:48or we will offer pay
- 35:49people, an optional rotation of
- 35:51buprenorphine.
- 35:52If the benefit is outweighing
- 35:54the harm,
- 35:56meaning, you know, we think
- 35:57that there's substantial benefit, but
- 35:59the dose is high, we
- 36:00think equal benefit and less
- 36:02harm could be achieved at
- 36:03a lower dose. So we
- 36:04offer that patient a patient
- 36:05centered tapering,
- 36:06protocol or option, including an
- 36:08optional rotation to buprenorphine.
- 36:10If the benefit seems to
- 36:12be present and the dose
- 36:13is low, we sometimes will
- 36:15just monitor and reassess. But
- 36:17I'll tell you, we almost
- 36:17always offer that person the
- 36:19option of switching to buprenorphine
- 36:20as well.
- 36:21Alright. So why would we
- 36:22use buprenorphine in these these
- 36:24patients? Well, first of all,
- 36:25there's a potential for a
- 36:26quick taper off of full
- 36:27agonist. So people are often
- 36:29on high doses and they
- 36:29say it's not really working
- 36:31well. What else do you
- 36:31have? I need to go
- 36:32up. I've developed tolerance. How
- 36:34is switching coming down gonna
- 36:36help me? And so they're
- 36:37happy to switch to something
- 36:38else and immediately we can
- 36:40get them off of a
- 36:41full opioid, a full agonist
- 36:42opioid. It will rapidly re
- 36:44relieve withdrawal symptoms if that's
- 36:46present. These days, we really
- 36:47use the low dose protocol
- 36:49where we start buprenorphine super
- 36:50low. We keep them on
- 36:51the high dose opioids. And
- 36:53then once we get to,
- 36:53like, day five and a
- 36:54reasonable dose of buprenorphine, we
- 36:56just stop the stop the,
- 36:58oxycodone or the full agonist.
- 36:59Most people, many people don't
- 37:01experience any withdrawal. They feel
- 37:02a little funny in the
- 37:03transition, but that's kind of
- 37:04what they'll describe.
- 37:06It's quite well tolerated. This
- 37:08addresses the neurobiologic
- 37:09adaptation that occurs when anybody's
- 37:12been on long term opioids
- 37:13for many years as these
- 37:14patients have. Observational data suggests
- 37:16chronic pain efficacy, there's demonstrated
- 37:19improved function and effectiveness, and
- 37:20discontinuing full agonist, this is
- 37:22mostly from the OUD literature,
- 37:24and then the two thousand
- 37:25and twenty two VADOD guidelines
- 37:27recommend it. And I will
- 37:28say this is something that
- 37:29I'm happy about. I really
- 37:31advocated for this when I
- 37:32was part of this group.
- 37:34We got it was controversial,
- 37:37because the there was concern
- 37:38that buprenorphine would it would,
- 37:39like, open up the floodgates.
- 37:41But we thought that we
- 37:42were very clear
- 37:43that for people who already
- 37:45are receiving daily opioids,
- 37:48consider a switch to Buprenorphine,
- 37:50that that would be preferred
- 37:51basically simply because of the
- 37:52safety, not because of effectiveness,
- 37:55there weren't there aren't any
- 37:56trials comparing a partial agonist
- 37:57and a full agonist necessarily
- 37:59head to head. So it
- 38:00was a week four,
- 38:02recommendation,
- 38:03but because the safety data
- 38:05on buprenorphine
- 38:06is so strong,
- 38:08the committee or or the
- 38:09work group ultimately thought that
- 38:10this was an important recommendation
- 38:12to include.
- 38:14Alright. So we have two
- 38:15studies of this clinic that
- 38:17I'm gonna, show you. This
- 38:18is the first one. Both
- 38:19were published in two thousand
- 38:21and eighteen, but this is
- 38:22of the first two years
- 38:23of our clinic. And the
- 38:24first question we were asking
- 38:25is, were we recruiting the
- 38:26right people? Were we targeting
- 38:27the right people?
- 38:29This retrospective chart review of
- 38:30eighty seven patients. You can
- 38:32see that the majority have
- 38:33substance use disorders. The majority
- 38:35have other psychiatric disorders.
- 38:37The majority had a current
- 38:38opioid misuse,
- 38:40significant safety concerns, And about
- 38:42a third were saying it's
- 38:44not even working. Right.
- 38:46So we concluded that we
- 38:47were actually treating, we were
- 38:50reaching and treating our target
- 38:52audience
- 38:53because we are all addiction
- 38:54trained. Almost a quarter of
- 38:56these patients were diagnosed with
- 38:58a new substance use disorder.
- 38:59So we really were able
- 39:00to, you know, just a
- 39:01new set of eyes looking
- 39:02for these, conditions.
- 39:04These patients had opioid, alcohol,
- 39:06cannabis, cocaine, and tobacco
- 39:08use disorder.
- 39:09Of the nine with opioid
- 39:10use disorder, three transition to
- 39:12methadone and six to buprenorphine.
- 39:14We overall were able to
- 39:15decrease their morphine equivalent daily
- 39:17dose by thirty three,
- 39:19milligrams.
- 39:20Patient satisfaction was pretty high,
- 39:22I think, given that nobody
- 39:24wants to come to our
- 39:25clinic. Right? They're terrified to
- 39:26come to our clinic. And
- 39:28so the fact that by
- 39:29the end, they felt, you
- 39:30know, the satisfaction was this
- 39:32high, I think patients feel
- 39:33pretty supported
- 39:34and are ultimately fairly satisfied
- 39:37with the care that they
- 39:38receive.
- 39:39Fifty percent of our primary
- 39:41care doctors were referring to
- 39:42us, which was great. And
- 39:43then in that first two
- 39:44years, we had thirty one
- 39:45trainees. And so this is
- 39:46really what I wanna highlight
- 39:47next.
- 39:48The majority were coming for
- 39:50their addiction rotation experience.
- 39:52And so this really led
- 39:53me to think because here
- 39:55I was the associate fellowship
- 39:56director now for addiction psychiatry,
- 39:58like what okay. If my
- 39:59fellows if these fellows are
- 40:00gonna be coming through, what
- 40:02is it that they need
- 40:02to be learning? I mean,
- 40:03they can see patients, but
- 40:04I needed clinical goals and
- 40:06objectives.
- 40:07And so,
- 40:09I reached out to John
- 40:09and Candela at the School
- 40:10of Teaching and Learning. Imbal
- 40:12Gaffney was a fellow at
- 40:13the time, and,
- 40:14we put together a focus
- 40:15group of,
- 40:17fellowship
- 40:18directors
- 40:19from five geographically
- 40:21varied programs
- 40:22to ask this very question
- 40:23like what it did should
- 40:24we be training in this
- 40:25area? And if so, what
- 40:26should we learn? And I
- 40:28think there was definite consensus
- 40:30from this qualitative,
- 40:32study that curriculum was needed.
- 40:34And then there were three
- 40:35major barriers that were identified.
- 40:36And one was that there
- 40:37were lack of clear goals
- 40:38and objectives.
- 40:40Some was just, you know,
- 40:42is this our mission? Like,
- 40:43people are dying. Should we
- 40:44be like is it is
- 40:45it mission creep in a
- 40:46way to go into chronic
- 40:47pain?
- 40:48And then there was also
- 40:49some resource barriers. I don't
- 40:51wanna send my addiction psychiatry
- 40:52fellows
- 40:53into an interventional pain clinic
- 40:54where they're just prescribed and
- 40:56this is again, you know,
- 40:57back in twenty fourteen where
- 40:58they're prescribing high dose opioids
- 40:59and they're doing a lot
- 41:00of interventions. Like, that's not
- 41:01gonna be a great site
- 41:02of training. So that was
- 41:03not everybody had the kind
- 41:04of clinic that we had.
- 41:06So from that, needing real
- 41:08recognizing that we needed clear
- 41:09goals and objectives, we decided
- 41:11to develop them. They've been
- 41:13tweaked over the, ten years
- 41:15since,
- 41:16but this is generally what
- 41:17we think all of our
- 41:18trainees should know by the
- 41:19time they finish their rotation
- 41:20with us. First of all,
- 41:21we want them to know
- 41:22how to do the pain
- 41:23assessment that I really just
- 41:24demonstrated for you. We want
- 41:26them to be able to
- 41:27analyze the risk benefit,
- 41:29ratio
- 41:30and,
- 41:32really think through that in
- 41:33order to develop a treatment
- 41:35plan. We want them to
- 41:36think about a multimodal treatment
- 41:37plan and we want them
- 41:39to be able to consult,
- 41:40interprofessionally.
- 41:41We also, you know, we're
- 41:43gonna be monitoring. Psychiatrists can
- 41:45order your own drug screens.
- 41:47We can check PMP, even
- 41:48if we're not prescribing the
- 41:50medication. We can help in
- 41:51some of these ways, even
- 41:52if we're not overseeing the
- 41:54opioids.
- 41:56And last but not least,
- 41:57we want our trainees
- 41:59to be able to talk
- 42:00to patients about the difference
- 42:02between acute and chronic pain.
- 42:03Why non pharmacologic management is
- 42:05so important? Why non opioid
- 42:08management is so important? And
- 42:10ultimately, why, what is the
- 42:12rationale for optimizing mental health
- 42:13treatment when somebody also has
- 42:13chronic pain? Mental health treatment
- 42:15when somebody also has chronic
- 42:16pain? This is all of
- 42:16the trainees that we've had
- 42:17since twenty twenty when we
- 42:18really started collecting good data.
- 42:19Huge shout out to Sarah
- 42:21Edmond and Kelly Coleman for
- 42:23keeping this data.
- 42:28But you can see since
- 42:29twenty twenty, we've had two
- 42:31hundred sixteen trainees.
- 42:33It looks like a predominance
- 42:34of physicians, which it is,
- 42:36but our physician trainees off
- 42:37often are just coming in
- 42:39for much shorter periods of
- 42:42of time, like a one
- 42:42or two week just kind
- 42:42of observation,
- 42:43whereas a lot of our
- 42:44non physician trainees are staying
- 42:45for months.
- 42:46Our health psychologists are often
- 42:48with us for an entire
- 42:49year.
- 42:50So if you break the
- 42:51physicians down, you'll see here
- 42:53that,
- 42:54forty percent
- 42:55are
- 42:56psychiatrists.
- 42:57And I just want to
- 42:58note that we have psychiatry
- 42:59residents from the PGY one,
- 43:01two, three, and four year,
- 43:04and Julio Nunez is here,
- 43:05and he's our inaugural PGY
- 43:07three outpatient placement, and he's
- 43:09in the OR, sorry, the
- 43:10opioid safety clinic for the
- 43:12entire year. And Marcus Moreno
- 43:13is our fourth year who's
- 43:14also in our clinic. And
- 43:16it's just been invaluable having
- 43:17them.
- 43:18We gained so much more
- 43:19from trainees, but I think
- 43:20it's it's an awesome, educational
- 43:23experience for them. Our addiction
- 43:24psychiatry fellows,
- 43:26all rotate through,
- 43:27as well as our CL
- 43:29fellows. Addiction psychiatry for one
- 43:30to two months and CL
- 43:32fellows for three months each.
- 43:33And so that's been just
- 43:34a real gift to our
- 43:35clinic.
- 43:37Alright. Moving back, we did
- 43:38another study. This is,
- 43:41study two. Again, remember how
- 43:43we give that constrained choice.
- 43:44You can either tape her
- 43:45down or you can switch
- 43:46to bup. We wondered how
- 43:48that went. Like, what were
- 43:50what was how was that
- 43:51being received? And so this
- 43:53is also a retrospective chart
- 43:54review
- 43:55of seventy one patients that
- 43:57we had given this choice.
- 43:58And when given the choice
- 44:00of either a taper down
- 44:01or switch to buprenorphine,
- 44:03two thirds chose to switch
- 44:05to buprenorphine.
- 44:06So people liked this option.
- 44:08I don't know if they
- 44:09liked it, but they chose
- 44:09it. So something was driving
- 44:11that. Overall, we were able
- 44:13to decrease these, the morphine
- 44:14equivalent daily dose by thirty
- 44:16milligrams
- 44:17and,
- 44:18almost half engaged in non
- 44:20pharmacologic
- 44:21pain care. That's pretty cool
- 44:22and I think speaks to
- 44:23the interprofessional clinic that we
- 44:25have.
- 44:26Just to go as a
- 44:27comparison, we did have thirty
- 44:28nine, people who were referred
- 44:30to us, but did not
- 44:31ever engage. Either they declined
- 44:32or didn't show or something
- 44:34happened. And you can see
- 44:35that very few were tapered,
- 44:37very few received buprenorphine if
- 44:39they weren't referred to our
- 44:40clinic.
- 44:41Alright. So let's go back
- 44:42to miss Morris and continue
- 44:44working through because now I'm
- 44:45gonna kinda switch to this
- 44:47new space of long term
- 44:48opioid therapy
- 44:49and what what happens,
- 44:51when people are having real
- 44:53difficulty in tapering.
- 44:54So again, just to remind
- 44:56you, Ms. Morris is on
- 44:58a high dose.
- 44:59She has untreated mental health,
- 45:02sleep apnea, but otherwise, you
- 45:04know, no loss of control.
- 45:05She's functioning okay.
- 45:07She's exquisitely sensitive to medication,
- 45:09so there's probably some room
- 45:11for non medication treatments and
- 45:12medication treatments, and she really
- 45:14wants her opioids.
- 45:15So if we look at
- 45:16this frame,
- 45:17given all of this, we
- 45:18did not think she had
- 45:19opioid use disorder. We said,
- 45:21no, she doesn't, or it's
- 45:22unclear, but we did not
- 45:24give her an opioid use
- 45:25disorder diagnosis. I think most
- 45:26people would agree with that.
- 45:28So we moved down to
- 45:29this bottom frame.
- 45:31Now
- 45:32to say, well, do the
- 45:33benefits outweigh the harms? Like,
- 45:34that's a hard thing to
- 45:36kind of consider. And so
- 45:37what we give to our
- 45:38medical students and our trainees
- 45:40are some questions to help
- 45:41guide this. And these are
- 45:43the questions that we work
- 45:43through. So first, is it
- 45:44opioid use disorder? I already
- 45:46said no. No. What's the
- 45:47dose? It's high. What's her
- 45:49functional status? Well, it's okay,
- 45:52but she has some anxiety.
- 45:53She has untreated PTSD.
- 45:55What's the harm? Obviously, she
- 45:57has sleep apnea. She's on
- 45:58high dose opioids. So harms
- 46:00are really gonna mount over
- 46:01time. She has this depression
- 46:03and anxiety.
- 46:04As far as adjuvant treatment,
- 46:05she's very active. She's on
- 46:06Venlafaxine
- 46:07low dose. She's not on
- 46:09any other adjuvants at this
- 46:10time and her preference is
- 46:12strong
- 46:13for not changing.
- 46:14K. So we work through
- 46:15those things, and then ultimately,
- 46:17we use that information
- 46:19to decide where we think
- 46:20she falls.
- 46:22What we ultimately decided is
- 46:24that given the high dose,
- 46:25given the opioid,
- 46:26the obstructive sleep apnea, given
- 46:28the untreated mental health, we
- 46:30felt like the harms were
- 46:30really outweighing the benefit.
- 46:32But guess what? If you
- 46:33decided that the benefit was
- 46:35outweighing harm, but the high
- 46:36dose was high, you still
- 46:37do the same thing. So
- 46:39it's okay,
- 46:40to to, you know, kind
- 46:42of think about these things,
- 46:44with her. So that's what
- 46:45we did. We offered her
- 46:46a patient centered tapering, including
- 46:48an optional rotation of buprenorphine,
- 46:49which she promptly declined. She
- 46:51was very clear she was
- 46:52not gonna switch to buprenorphine.
- 46:53So what we did was
- 46:55we gave her the choice
- 46:55then, do you wanna stop
- 46:56your immediate release or your
- 46:58slow release?
- 46:59She wanted that immediate release.
- 47:01We took her from a
- 47:02hundred and eighty milligrams to
- 47:02a hundred and sixty milligrams,
- 47:04so that was an eleven
- 47:05percent drop. And it was
- 47:06tough. It was really tough.
- 47:08Lots of calls, frequently crying.
- 47:10I can't function. I'm not
- 47:11doing anything. You've gotta give
- 47:12me some Valium for this.
- 47:14Really can't tolerate other muscle
- 47:16relaxants.
- 47:17We saw her back at
- 47:18we, you know, kind of
- 47:18coached her through that. Got
- 47:19her back to month one.
- 47:20She was very angry. She
- 47:21felt like she wasn't being
- 47:22considered her unique case. And
- 47:25her plan was really, at
- 47:26that point was just we're
- 47:27gonna hold the line. Like,
- 47:28no point in reducing this
- 47:30any further. This isn't going
- 47:31super well.
- 47:32The next month, she came
- 47:33back still in a lot
- 47:34of pain, still not functioning,
- 47:35still on the couch, very
- 47:37frustrated.
- 47:38She's gonna, you know, has
- 47:39has gotten in touch with
- 47:40patient advocate, which is what
- 47:42we have we it's a
- 47:43service we have at the
- 47:44VA. She was gonna call
- 47:45her congressperson,
- 47:47Rosa DeLauro. She was gonna
- 47:49call the hospital director.
- 47:50So we said we'll continue
- 47:51to stall. Like, this is
- 47:52this is tough. And she
- 47:53took a ten percent reduction
- 47:54and we were happy with
- 47:55that. So, again, we will
- 47:57stall. We will but we
- 47:58ultimately wanna keep moving in
- 47:59the direction of of safety.
- 48:02So before the the next
- 48:04follow-up, the third follow-up, she
- 48:05called and she said, I've
- 48:06dropped my medications in the
- 48:07sink. What am I gonna
- 48:09do? She's very tearful, very
- 48:10anxious. We offered her buprenorphine
- 48:12to get her through to
- 48:12the next appointment,
- 48:14but she declined. And we
- 48:15told her we don't refill
- 48:16early.
- 48:18So she did come back.
- 48:19She did get her oxycodone
- 48:21again for another month, and
- 48:22at this point we kept
- 48:23it the same again, but
- 48:24we said at month four
- 48:25we're gonna reduce again. Like,
- 48:27it's time after four months
- 48:28to take a and we
- 48:29can go real slow. We'll
- 48:30take a very low dose,
- 48:31but that's what we're gonna
- 48:32do.
- 48:33And that is what we
- 48:34did. We decreased seven and
- 48:35a half percent from one
- 48:37sixty to one fifty, and
- 48:38she was very upset by
- 48:39this. About twenty days later
- 48:41or so, she called. She
- 48:43had thrown her medication away
- 48:44in frustration. She does not
- 48:45like being controlled. She's super
- 48:47tearful and scared, and she
- 48:49was offered buprenorphine as her
- 48:50only option at that point.
- 48:53So at this point, this
- 48:55is where we get into
- 48:56this bind.
- 48:57Is this opioid use disorder
- 48:59or is this something different?
- 49:01We've prescribed her these medications.
- 49:03We're kind of,
- 49:04if you will, forcing a
- 49:06taper and she's not doing
- 49:08well. What is this? What's
- 49:09going on? We have a
- 49:10lot of patients like this,
- 49:11right? For two decades we've
- 49:12put patients on
- 49:14opioids and so this is
- 49:15kind of what we're dealing
- 49:16with in a lot of
- 49:17people who were prescribed opioids.
- 49:19Well, one way to kind
- 49:21of think through this is
- 49:22to go through the DSM
- 49:23five criteria.
- 49:25These are the eleven criteria.
- 49:27As most of you know,
- 49:29when prescribed under a doctor's
- 49:30supervision, you cannot count tolerance
- 49:32and withdrawal.
- 49:34And I have learned,
- 49:35that this wasn't excluded because
- 49:38of evidence,
- 49:39this was excluded really because
- 49:41a champion on the work
- 49:42group really felt like it
- 49:43was important that we not
- 49:46call tolerance and withdrawal
- 49:48as an opioid use disorder.
- 49:50Two thousand thirteen when the
- 49:51DSM five came out, remember
- 49:53two thousand twelve if it
- 49:55was really the height of
- 49:56opioid prescribing. Right? Millions and
- 49:58millions of scripts were being,
- 50:00you know, prescribed,
- 50:02and now we have the
- 50:03DSM
- 50:04five coming out. And if
- 50:05we count tolerance and withdrawal,
- 50:07we're gonna have a huge
- 50:08abundance of opioid use disorder.
- 50:10The prevalence is gonna increase.
- 50:12Another thing that I've really
- 50:14learned is that withdrawal and
- 50:15tolerance
- 50:16are very,
- 50:18well validated criteria for substance
- 50:20use disorders.
- 50:21And yet,
- 50:22in large part pushed by
- 50:24pharmaceutical
- 50:24companies, they really started to
- 50:26make a pitch that tolerance
- 50:28and withdrawal, when they
- 50:30occur in the context of
- 50:32prescription,
- 50:34it's normal.
- 50:35Well,
- 50:36what does that mean? Is
- 50:38it really normal just because
- 50:39it's coming from a particular
- 50:41setting or not? But this
- 50:43is what we were told.
- 50:45If it's being prescribed to
- 50:47you and you develop tolerance
- 50:48and withdrawal,
- 50:49that can't count because it's
- 50:50expected because it's quote unquote
- 50:52normal. And I think that's
- 50:54really what we have to
- 50:55rethink here.
- 50:56Alright. So if we go
- 50:57through the rest of them,
- 50:58is she using more than
- 50:59intended? Yeah. Who knows? I
- 51:01mean, she says she threw
- 51:02them away, so I believe
- 51:03my patience.
- 51:06Unsuccessful effort to cut down.
- 51:08Yes. It's unsuccessful, but it's
- 51:10my effort to cut down.
- 51:11Right? I'm kind of imposing
- 51:12this upon her.
- 51:14Great deal of time. More
- 51:15time now that we're kind
- 51:16of taking it away. She's
- 51:17calling. She's tearful, all of
- 51:19this.
- 51:20Cravings,
- 51:20maybe.
- 51:22You know, she's not necessarily
- 51:24endorsing that, but she certainly
- 51:26is, you know, counting the
- 51:27hours to the next dose.
- 51:29She really denies any negative
- 51:30consequences of it use and
- 51:32this continuing despite,
- 51:34physical or psychological
- 51:36harm, again,
- 51:37on my benefit risk ratio,
- 51:40I'm definitely seeing that she's
- 51:41continuing despite
- 51:43significant harm.
- 51:44She doesn't think about it
- 51:45in the same way. And
- 51:46so one of the things
- 51:47that we are increasingly thinking
- 51:49about is that this is
- 51:50is this is an issue
- 51:51of incentive salience. Right? That
- 51:53opioid has really taken center
- 51:56stage in huge prominence
- 51:58and importance in people who've
- 52:00been receiving long term opioid
- 52:01therapy.
- 52:02That's not a criteria for
- 52:04a substance use disorder, but
- 52:05it does seem, you know,
- 52:06it's very glaring in this
- 52:07case. And so all of
- 52:09this we get to, I
- 52:10am mindful of time, maybe.
- 52:12Maybe she has an opioid
- 52:13use disorder. And so what
- 52:14are we gonna do?
- 52:16The truth is is I
- 52:17could give her an opioid
- 52:18use disorder if I wanted
- 52:19to, but
- 52:21it's hard. It's hard. She
- 52:23doesn't want that that diagnosis.
- 52:25The other thing is,
- 52:27you know, we we really
- 52:30are required to kind of
- 52:31make a distinction between chronic
- 52:32pain and opioid use disorder,
- 52:35Not because there is a
- 52:36distinction,
- 52:37but because diagnostic codes, US
- 52:40regulations and clinical practice require
- 52:42that we differentiate
- 52:44when something isn't black and
- 52:45white. And yet we've got
- 52:47to decide if it's black
- 52:48or if it's white.
- 52:50Also different formulations
- 52:51are available for different diagnoses.
- 52:54So Miss Morris has been
- 52:55on a high dose of
- 52:55opioid, she is going to
- 52:56need a high dose buprenorphine.
- 52:58Absolutely.
- 52:59But there is no high
- 53:00dose buprenorphine formulation that's FDA
- 53:02approved for chronic pain. There
- 53:03are only low dose formulations
- 53:05for chronic pain and that
- 53:06is not gonna be enough
- 53:07for her. So I am
- 53:08already know if I'm gonna
- 53:09get her on to buprenorphine,
- 53:10I'm gonna have to use
- 53:11off label buprenorphine.
- 53:12Right? She's just not gonna
- 53:14tolerate a low dose of
- 53:14buprenorphine.
- 53:16And many
- 53:17plate practice settings
- 53:19won't treat one or the
- 53:20other. I'm a pain clinic.
- 53:21I don't do opiate addiction.
- 53:23I'm in substance clinic. I
- 53:25don't do pain. And so
- 53:27miss Morris would never walk
- 53:28into a substance use specialty
- 53:29care That's not where she
- 53:31sees herself being. It's not
- 53:32the diagnosis that she feels
- 53:34is right. And so why
- 53:35are we having to force
- 53:36people into these,
- 53:38categories?
- 53:41All right.
- 53:42Ultimately,
- 53:43I believe it's largely because
- 53:45of stigma. And I will
- 53:46say, you know, if you
- 53:47look at our regulations in
- 53:48this country, we have very,
- 53:50very weak evidence for opioids
- 53:52when prescribed for chronic pain,
- 53:54and yet we have very
- 53:55limited
- 53:57regulations around it. You know,
- 53:57it's just a schedule two
- 53:58medication, so it's treated like
- 54:00every other schedule two medication.
- 54:02When used for opioid use
- 54:03disorder, which has very high
- 54:05strength of evidence and saves
- 54:07lives,
- 54:07you're not going to find
- 54:08any more regulated medications in
- 54:10the country. Right? This is
- 54:11an ethical issue,
- 54:13and it's it's a problem
- 54:15in how we see,
- 54:16patients who have opioid use
- 54:18disorder versus chronic pain.
- 54:20Alright. So we knew that
- 54:21this was gonna continue to
- 54:23be a problem, and I'm
- 54:23gonna just wrap up quickly.
- 54:25In twenty nineteen there was
- 54:26a state of the art
- 54:27conference
- 54:28where we worked strategies to
- 54:29improve opioid safety, and it
- 54:31was clear that there was
- 54:32going to be deprescribing of
- 54:33opioids across the country, and
- 54:34this was going to continue
- 54:35to be an issue.
- 54:36And so we have definitional
- 54:38problems that I've already explained,
- 54:39and there really wasn't consensus
- 54:41on how to handle these
- 54:42problems.
- 54:43And so we needed an
- 54:44approach to work towards consensus.
- 54:46I wasn't,
- 54:48familiar with Delphi methodology, but
- 54:50I've learned since. It really
- 54:51is you get experts and
- 54:53then kind of in an
- 54:54iterative fashion,
- 54:55you begin to develop consensus
- 54:57over time. So you ask
- 54:58questions and it's,
- 55:00a way to to,
- 55:01you know, kind of answer
- 55:02a question.
- 55:04Alright. So this was the
- 55:06paper that was published and
- 55:07this is really being, spearheaded
- 55:08by my colleague Sarah Edmond
- 55:10and, of course, Will Becker
- 55:11and Anne Black who's also
- 55:12in our department.
- 55:14And I'm gonna go through
- 55:15this,
- 55:16the the Delphi study and
- 55:17its results. So seventy participants
- 55:20from this SOTA con conference
- 55:21were asked, do you think
- 55:22a new diagnostic entity is
- 55:24needed on top of long
- 55:25term opioid therapy for pain
- 55:27that is related to but
- 55:27distinct from DSM five opioid
- 55:29use disorder?
- 55:30Fifty one percent, fifty one
- 55:32people responded.
- 55:33Seventy five percent said, yes,
- 55:34we need a new diagnosis.
- 55:35The current system isn't working
- 55:37for us. And twenty five
- 55:38percent of us, and I
- 55:39was in this group, full
- 55:40disclosure, said no, we don't
- 55:41need a new diagnosis.
- 55:45And here were the arguments
- 55:46for the really these are
- 55:48unique patients. They're a different
- 55:49clinical pathway. It will address
- 55:51the problems that have been
- 55:52created by DSM five opioid
- 55:53use disorder exclusions
- 55:55with tolerance and withdrawal. It'll
- 55:57facilitate treatment and research with
- 55:58it, which I think is
- 55:59a huge
- 56:00reason to trial to do
- 56:02this, and it would reduce
- 56:03stigma and mitigate unite unique
- 56:05social consequences for people on
- 56:06long term opioid therapy.
- 56:09Those of us who thought
- 56:10we shouldn't create a new
- 56:11diagnosis
- 56:12really said it's neurobiologically
- 56:14indistinct.
- 56:15I mean, these, you know,
- 56:16the brain doesn't know where
- 56:17it's getting its opioids from.
- 56:19That d s n five
- 56:20allows for a continuum, and
- 56:22so it would be better
- 56:23to rethink the DSM five
- 56:25criteria
- 56:26rather than to go outside
- 56:27of it and create or
- 56:28it might be included ultimately,
- 56:30but to create a new
- 56:31diagnosis.
- 56:32And really thought that we
- 56:33would it would worsen stigma
- 56:34for patients with opioid use
- 56:35disorder. We've worked so hard
- 56:37to decrease stigma
- 56:38for patients with opioid use
- 56:39disorder and this has, we've
- 56:41had some gains and now
- 56:42if all of a sudden
- 56:43a group of people can
- 56:44opt out of that diagnosis,
- 56:46we just wondered to what
- 56:47extent that would reinforce stigma
- 56:49for people who have more
- 56:49moderate to severe opioid use
- 56:51disorder.
- 56:52This was published,
- 56:54in Addiction in January.
- 56:58As you can see, people
- 56:59who are in favor of
- 57:00it were really coming from
- 57:01medicine, addiction medicine. They were
- 57:02internists or a pain psychologist,
- 57:04and those the the authors,
- 57:07we were addictions, you know,
- 57:08we were psychiatry or addiction
- 57:10trained. Right? So I'm wondering
- 57:11if it's we're seeing things
- 57:13somewhat differently. Not that it
- 57:15may it may or may
- 57:16not be different, but it
- 57:17that was just a curiosity
- 57:18to me. Talking about what
- 57:19we've cut the conclusions that
- 57:21the group has come from
- 57:22come to in round two
- 57:23and three as far as
- 57:24building a consensus for new
- 57:25criteria,
- 57:26to what extent you agree
- 57:27that each of the following
- 57:28features should be included. There
- 57:30have been nineteen proposed criteria.
- 57:31There's been a post hoc
- 57:32group, work group that recommended
- 57:34the finalist, and this is
- 57:35what is being proposed. So
- 57:37that the harms outweigh the
- 57:38benefits of long term opioid
- 57:39therapy. Somebody is displaying difficulty
- 57:41tapering,
- 57:42and there is absence of
- 57:44a pattern of loss of
- 57:45control.
- 57:45And I think that this
- 57:46is going to be demonstrated
- 57:48very objectively, like there's no
- 57:50early refills, they're not using
- 57:52multiple doctors, they're not tampering
- 57:54with the formulations.
- 57:55And so if there's no
- 57:56evidence of loss of control
- 57:57then that then this would
- 57:58be the diagnosis.
- 58:00And doctor Becker and doctor
- 58:01Edmond have received funding to
- 58:03really study this over the
- 58:04next couple of years, and
- 58:05I think that's a huge
- 58:06win for our field.
- 58:08It's gonna be called prescription
- 58:10opioid dependent syndrome.
- 58:12I'm gonna skip this, slide,
- 58:14but I do really think,
- 58:15you know, we'll see. We'll
- 58:16see if it is something
- 58:18different or if it's not
- 58:19something different, but I think
- 58:20kind of our our settings
- 58:21really,
- 58:23are determining that. So alright.
- 58:26Last slide, and then I'm
- 58:27done.
- 58:27To conclude,
- 58:28psychiatrists are essential teammates in
- 58:31treating chronic pain and we
- 58:32should receive training. And if
- 58:33there's any take home message,
- 58:33that's it. I think our
- 58:34residents need to be receiving
- 58:35training and I'm really happy
- 58:36that so many residents and
- 58:37fellows come through our
- 58:39clinic.
- 58:40That's
- 58:41the best part of my
- 58:42job anyway.
- 58:46There is a false regulatory
- 58:48and clinical line between chronic
- 58:49pain and long term opioid
- 58:51therapy. So I really think
- 58:53it's time for psychiatrists
- 58:55to step up and to
- 58:57advocate for changes in buprenorphine
- 58:59prescribing when the benefits don't
- 59:00outweigh the harm.
- 59:02More flexibility in buprenorphine prescribing.
- 59:04We need to advocate, like,
- 59:06with FDA.
- 59:07We we've gotta figure out
- 59:08the the regulations. We need
- 59:10some formulations
- 59:11that that, maybe manage pain
- 59:14too. And we need to
- 59:15eliminate this black and white
- 59:16thinking. We need to move,
- 59:18to a risk benefit approach.
- 59:20And, ultimately, I do think
- 59:22we need to to rethink
- 59:23the DSM five opioid use
- 59:25disorder criteria. I mean, I
- 59:26think both groups
- 59:27would agree that it's clumsy
- 59:29and it's not working and
- 59:30it's problematic.
- 59:31And so with doctor Becker
- 59:33and doctor Edmonds' research, I
- 59:34think we will have some
- 59:35data and they will compare
- 59:36it to the DSM five,
- 59:38and we will see what
- 59:39comes from that. So stay
- 59:41tuned.
- 59:42That, I'm done.