Variations in Long-Term Opioid Therapy Definitions: A Systematic Review
of Observational Studies Using Routinely Collected Data (2000–2019)
Abstract
Routinely collected data has been increasingly used to evaluate and
monitor long-term opioid therapy (LTOT) patterns, with very little
guidance on how to measure LTOT from these data sources. We conducted a
systematic review of studies published between Jan 2000 and Jul 2019 to
catalogue LTOT definitions, the rationale for definitions, and LTOT
rates in observational research using routinely collected data in
non-surgical settings. We screened 4,056 abstracts, 209 full-text
manuscripts and included 126 studies; mostly from the US (82%) and
published between 2015 and 2019 (68%). We identified 78 definitions of
LTOT, commonly operationalised as 90 days of use within a year (21%).
Studies often used multiple criteria to derive definitions (63%),
mostly based on measures of duration, such as supply days/days of use
(67%), episode length (21%), or prescription fills within specified
time periods (9%). Definitions were based on previous publications
(63%), clinical judgment (17%), or empirical data (3%); 10% of
studies applied more than one definition. LTOT definition was not
provided with enough details for replication in 14 studies and 37
studies did not specify the opioids evaluated. Rates of LTOT ranged from
0.2% to 57% according to study design, population and definition used.
We observed a substantial rise in studies evaluating LTOT with large
variability in the definitions used and poor reporting of the rationale
and implementation of the definitions. This variation impacts on
research reproducibility, comparability of findings and the development
of strategies aiming to curb therapy that is not guideline-recommended.