-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Steven D. Passik, Kenneth L. Kirsh, David Casper, Addiction-Related Assessment Tools and Pain Management: Instruments for Screening, Treatment Planning, and Monitoring Compliance, Pain Medicine, Volume 9, Issue suppl_2, July 2008, Pages S145–S166, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1526-4637.2008.00486.x
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
Objective. To review and critique the various assessment tools currently available to pain clinicians for assessing opioid use and abuse in patients with chronic noncancer pain to allow pain clinicians to make informed selections for their practices.
Methods. A literature search on PubMed was conducted in June 2006 using the search terms opioid plus screening or assessment with or without the additional term risk, and opioid-related disorders/prevention and control in order to identify clinical studies published in English over the previous 10 years. Additional studies were identified using the PubMed link feature and Google. When abstracts described or referred to a tool for opioid abuse screening, the corresponding publication was acquired and reviewed for relevance to the pain treatment setting.
Results. Forty-three publications were selected for review from the abstracts identified, and 19 were rejected because they did not describe a specific tool or provide adequate information regarding the screening tool used. The remaining 24 publications described relevant screening tools for opioid abuse risk and were reviewed.
Conclusions. A variety of self-administered and physician-administered tools differing in their psychometrics and intended uses have been developed, but not all have been validated for use in chronic pain patients seen in a clinical practice setting. Some tools assess abuse potential in patients being considered for opioid therapy, whereas other tools screen for the presence of substance abuse. By recognizing the psychometrics of each tool, clinicians can select the ones most appropriate for their patient population and screening needs.