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1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration November 13, 2008 http://DAWNinfo.samhsa.gov

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Page 1: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

1

National Estimates from the

Drug Abuse Warning Network

CAPT Kathy PoneleitUnited States Public Health Service

Office of Applied StudiesSubstance Abuse & Mental Health Services

AdministrationNovember 13, 2008

http://DAWNinfo.samhsa.gov

Page 2: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

2

SAMHSA/OAS

Today's Agenda

No conflicts of interest

Overview of DAWN Key findings from 2007

– Nonmedical use of opiates/opioids– 2004-2007 comparisons– Extended- vs. immediate-release oxycodone– Extended- vs. immediate-release morphine

Page 3: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

3

SAMHSA/OAS

DAWN Survey Design

Stratified probability sample of hospitals– Short-term, general, non-Federal hospitals

with 24-hour emergency departments (EDs)

National estimates account for:– Sample design– Unit nonresponse– Partial nonresponse in responding hospital

Page 4: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

4

SAMHSA/OAS

National EstimatesOversample areas (urban) +Remainder area (urban & rural)

Page 5: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

5

SAMHSA/OAS

Source of DAWN Estimates, 2004-2007

2004 2005 2006 2007

Eligible hospitals 4,505 4,549 4,568 4,575

Sample of hospitals 556 562 544 542

Responding hospitals 220 224 205 207

Response rate 39.6 39.9 37.7 38.2

Drug-related ED visits 2,537,722 3,009,025 3,441,855 3,998,228

Drugs reports 4,047,135 4,624,455 5,384,817 6,247,718

Page 6: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

6

SAMHSA/OAS

DAWN Data Collection: Retrospective Review of Medical Records

Source: DAWN, 2007 data, 11/11/2008

National estimates

Charts reviewed 10,038,897

Cases found 375,031Drug-related

ED visits reviewed

ED visits not reviewed

Page 7: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

7

SAMHSA/OAS

Analysis Domains

Drug-relatedED visits

Medical use Nonmedical use

Pharmaceuticals

Illicit drugs

Alcohol

Pharmaceuticals

Page 8: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

8

SAMHSA/OAS

Definition: Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals

Based on retrospective chart review– Exceeded prescribed or recommended dose– Used drugs prescribed for another– Malicious poisoning– Substance abuse

– Excludes drug-related suicide attempts– Includes suicide ideation, plan, gesture

Page 9: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

9

SAMHSA/OAS

Drug-Related ED Visit Rates, 2004-2007

0

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

To

tal

Su

icid

e a

tte

mp

t

Se

ek

ing

de

tox

Alc

oh

ol

Illic

its

Ac

cid

en

tal

ing

es

tio

ns

Me

dic

al

us

e

No

me

dic

al

us

e

Mis

us

e/

ab

us

e

ED visits per 100K pop

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2004-2007

No significant change *Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

2006 vs. 2007

Page 10: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

10

SAMHSA/OAS

Oxycodone

Controlled and Immediate Release

Oxycodone

Controlled and Immediate Release

Page 11: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

11

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals, Selected Opiates/Opioids, 2007

16

66

30

77

58

8

49

9

95

51

83

23

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Fentanyl* Hydrocodone* Morphine* Oxycodone*

Visits (thousands)

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2007

* Single- & multi-ingredient formulations

CI lower bound

Estimate

CI upper bound

Page 12: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

12

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals, Selected Opiates/Opioids, 2007

53

7

54

38

3

40

70

11

66

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Opiates/opioidsnot specified

Buprenorphine*

Methadone

Visits (thousands)

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2007

* Single- & multi-ingredient formulations

CI lower bound

Estimate

CI upper bound

Page 13: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

13

SAMHSA/OAS

Classification of Oxycodone Reports

Controlled release (CR)– OxyContin (99%)

Alternate terms:– Generic OxyContin– Teva OxyContin– Impax OxyContin– Oxycodone CR– Oxycodone ER– Oxycodone SR

Immediate release (IR)– acetaminophen-oxy

e.g., Percocet (92%)

– aspirin-oxye.g., Percodan

– ibuprofen-oxye.g., Combunox

– oxycodonee.g., Roxicodone

Page 14: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

14

SAMHSA/OAS

Classification of Oxycodone Reports (cont'd)

Unknown release type (UK)– Oxycodone (95%)

alternate terms: – Free oxycodone– M-Oxy– Oxycodone hydrochloride– Oxycodone metabolites

Page 15: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

15

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals, Oxycodone, by Release Type, 2004-2007

21

25

141517

19

12

18

22

35

10

28

35

1922

24 26

18

2529

58

14

30

35

46

24

31 33

25

3337

8

11

19

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007

Visits (thousands)

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2004-2007

CI lower bound

Estimate

CI upper bound

ControlledControlled ImmediateImmediate

UnknownUnknown

Page 16: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

16

SAMHSA/OAS

Oxycodone, CR vs. IR – All Visits

40 39

9

41

51

16

43

62

29

51

41

78

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

No significant changeNo significant change

2004

2004 20

0520

05 2006

2006 20

0720

07

Page 17: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

17

SAMHSA/OAS

Oxycodone, CR vs. IR – Medical Use

3

13

26

19

56

23

99

16

31

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

No Significant changeNo Significant change

2004

2004

2005

2005

2006

2006

2007

2007

Page 18: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

18

SAMHSA/OAS

Oxycodone, CR vs. IR – Nonmedical Use

2218

5

24 25

8

2629

14

28

19

35

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

No significant changeNo significant change

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

2004

2004

2005

2005

2006

2006

2007

2007

Page 19: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

19

SAMHSA/OAS

Oxycodone, CR vs. IR

53%46% 40% 36%

16% 20% 18% 17%

44%48%

45%46%

72%66% 56%

15%22% 25%

13%30%

0%

66%

25%12% 17%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007

UK

CR

IR

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

% of visits Nonmedical use Medical use

Page 20: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

20

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Hydrocodone and Oxycodone by Release Type, 2004-2007

22 24 26 28

1825

29355

8

14

19

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

2004 2005 2006 2007

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2006

Hydrocodone

UK

ERIR

Oxycodone:

Page 21: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

21

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: All Opiates/Opioids, ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

25

50

75

100

125

150

175

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 22: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

22

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: All Hydrocodone, ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 23: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

23

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: All Oxycodone, ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 24: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

24

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Oxycodone CR,ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 25: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

25

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Oxycodone IR,ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 26: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

26

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Oxycodone UK,ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 27: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

27

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Disposition from ED,Oxycodone by Release Type, 2007

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

% of ED visits

Controlled UnknownImmediate

Some follow-up

No evidenceof follow-upcare

Page 28: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

28

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Number of Drugs,Oxycodone by Release Type, 2007

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

% of ED visits

Controlled UnknownImmediate

1 drug

Multipledrugs

Page 29: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

29

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use ED Visits: Conclusions

Opioid analgesics nearing 287,000 visits– ¼ Oxycodone ¼ Hydrocodone– in immediate and unknown release types

Highest visit rates in patients aged 21-54 Majority of patients treated and released Polydrug use was higher for immediate

versus controlled release

Page 30: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

30

SAMHSA/OAS

MorphineControlled and Immediate Release

MorphineControlled and Immediate Release

Page 31: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

31

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals, Selected Opiates/Opioids, 2007

16

66

30

77

58

8

49

9

95

51

83

23

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Fentanyl* Hydrocodone* Morphine* Oxycodone*

Visits (thousands)

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2007

* Single- & multi-ingredient formulations

CI lower bound

Estimate

CI upper bound

Page 32: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

32

SAMHSA/OAS

Classification of Morphine Reports

Controlled release (CR)– MS Contin (71%)

Alternate terms:– Avinza– Kadian– Morphine Sulfate SR– Oramorph SR– Morphine Extended

Release– Morphine Patches

Immediate release (IR)– Morphine Sulfate– Morphine Pill– Morphine IR– Morphine Rapi-Ject– Roxanol– Morphelan

Page 33: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

33

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use of Pharmaceuticals, Morphine, by Release Type, 2004-2007

5 56

9

1316

23

3

11

644323

3

44

2021

15

97

37

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007

Visits (thousands)

Source: National estimates from DAWN, 2004-2007

CI lower bound

Estimate

CI upper bound

ControlledControlled ImmediateImmediate

Page 34: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

34

SAMHSA/OAS

Morphine, CR vs. IR – All Visits

7

15

6

23

8

27

10

39

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

No significant changeNo significant change

2004

2004 20

0520

05 2006

2006 20

0720

07

Page 35: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

35

SAMHSA/OAS

Morphine, CR vs. IR – Medical Use

1 436

27

3

10

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

No Significant changeNo Significant change

Page 36: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

36

SAMHSA/OAS

Morphine, CR vs. IR – Nonmedical Use

59

3

13

5

16

6

23

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Controlled Immediate Unknown

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

*Significant change, 2004 vs. 2007

2005 vs. 2007

No significant changeNo significant change

2006 vs. 20072006 vs. 2007

Page 37: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

37

SAMHSA/OAS

Morphine, CR vs. IR

34%

16%23% 22%

30% 31%24% 22%

67%

83%77% 79%

71% 68%78% 79%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

2004 2005 2006 2007 2004 2005 2006 2007

UK

CR

IR

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2007

% of visits Nonmedical use Medical use

Page 38: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

38

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Hydrocodone and Morphine by Release Type, 2004-2007

5 3 5 69 13

1623

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

2004 2005 2006 2007

Thousands

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2004-2006

Hydrocodone

UK

CRIR

Morphine:

Page 39: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

39

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: All Morphine, ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 40: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

40

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Morphine CR,ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 41: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

41

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Morphine IR,ED Visit Rates, 2007

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Mal

e

Fem

ale .

12-1

7

18-2

0

21-2

4

25-2

9

30-3

4

35-4

4

45-5

4

55-6

4

65+

ED visits per 100K population

Age

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

Page 42: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

42

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Disposition from ED,Morphine by Release Type, 2007

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

% of ED visits

Controlled UnknownImmediate

Some follow-up

No evidenceof follow-upcare

Page 43: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

43

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use: Number of Drugs,Morphine by Release Type, 2007

Source: DAWN estimates for the U.S., 2007

% of ED visits

Controlled UnknownImmediate

1 drug

Multipledrugs

Page 44: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

44

SAMHSA/OAS

Nonmedical Use ED Visits: Conclusions

Morphine related ED visits nearing 30,000– Immediate release – Controlled release is similar 2004-2007

Highest visit rates in patients aged 21-54 Majority of patients treated and released Polydrug use is typical

Page 45: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

45

SAMHSA/OAS

Important Considerations:DAWN Depends on ED Medical Records

Link between ED visit and use of drug Dose levels and source of drug unavailable Nonspecific drug reports

– Opiates/opioids, unspecified (unnamed)– Unknown release-type

Unique names for immediate versus extended release enable better surveillance

Page 46: 1 National Estimates from the Drug Abuse Warning Network CAPT Kathy Poneleit United States Public Health Service Office of Applied Studies Substance Abuse

46

SAMHSA/OAS

Acknowledgements

Rong Cai, Statistician