The journal of pain : official journal of the American Pain Society
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Prescription Opioid Taper Support for Outpatients with Chronic Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Patients receiving long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain and interested in tapering their opioid dose were randomly assigned to a 22-week taper support intervention (psychiatric consultation, opioid dose tapering, and 18 weekly meetings with a physician assistant to explore motivation for tapering and learn pain self-management skills) or usual care (N = 35). Assessments were conducted at baseline and 22 and 34 weeks after randomization. Using an intention to treat approach, we constructed linear regression models to compare groups at each follow-up. ⋯ Pain severity ratings (0-10 numeric rating scale) decreased in both groups at 22 weeks, with no significant difference between groups (adjusted mean difference = -.68; 95% confidence interval, -2.01 to .64; P = .30). The taper support group improved significantly more than the usual care group in self-reported pain interference, pain self-efficacy, and prescription opioid problems at 22 weeks (all P-values < .05). This taper support intervention is feasible and shows promise in reducing opioid dose while not increasing pain severity or interference.