Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.

The analgesic co-proxamol (paracetamol/dextropropoxyphene combination) has been widely involved in fatal poisoning. Concerns about its safety/effectiveness profile and widespread use for suicidal poisoning prompted its withdrawal in the UK in 2005, with partial withdrawal between 2005 and 2007, and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Keith Hawton, Helen Bergen, Sue Simkin, Claudia Wells, Navneet Kapur, David Gunnell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS Medicine
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3348153?pdf=render
id doaj-77833b219ee74089a2b3311167cc468e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-77833b219ee74089a2b3311167cc468e2020-11-25T02:31:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Medicine1549-12771549-16762012-01-0195e100121310.1371/journal.pmed.1001213Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.Keith HawtonHelen BergenSue SimkinClaudia WellsNavneet KapurDavid GunnellThe analgesic co-proxamol (paracetamol/dextropropoxyphene combination) has been widely involved in fatal poisoning. Concerns about its safety/effectiveness profile and widespread use for suicidal poisoning prompted its withdrawal in the UK in 2005, with partial withdrawal between 2005 and 2007, and full withdrawal in 2008. Our objective in this study was to assess the association between co-proxamol withdrawal and prescribing and deaths in England and Wales in 2005-2010 compared with 1998-2004, including estimation of possible substitution effects by other analgesics.We obtained prescribing data from the NHS Health and Social Care Information Centre (England) and Prescribing Services Partneriaeth Cydwasanaethau GIG Cymru (Wales), and mortality data from the Office for National Statistics. We carried out an interrupted time-series analysis of prescribing and deaths (suicide, open verdicts, accidental poisonings) involving single analgesics. The reduction in prescribing of co-proxamol following its withdrawal in 2005 was accompanied by increases in prescribing of several other analgesics (co-codamol, paracetamol, codeine, co-dydramol, tramadol, oxycodone, and morphine) during 2005-2010 compared with 1998-2004. These changes were associated with major reductions in deaths due to poisoning with co-proxamol receiving verdicts of suicide and undetermined cause of -21 deaths (95% CI -34 to -8) per quarter, equating to approximately 500 fewer suicide deaths (-61%) over the 6 years 2005-2010, and -25 deaths (95% CI -38 to -12) per quarter, equating to 600 fewer deaths (-62%) when accidental poisoning deaths were included. There was little observed change in deaths involving other analgesics, apart from an increase in oxycodone poisonings, but numbers were small. Limitations were that the study was based on deaths involving single drugs alone and changes in deaths involving prescribed morphine could not be assessed.During the 6 years following the withdrawal of co-proxamol in the UK, there was a major reduction in poisoning deaths involving this drug, without apparent significant increase in deaths involving other analgesics.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3348153?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keith Hawton
Helen Bergen
Sue Simkin
Claudia Wells
Navneet Kapur
David Gunnell
spellingShingle Keith Hawton
Helen Bergen
Sue Simkin
Claudia Wells
Navneet Kapur
David Gunnell
Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
PLoS Medicine
author_facet Keith Hawton
Helen Bergen
Sue Simkin
Claudia Wells
Navneet Kapur
David Gunnell
author_sort Keith Hawton
title Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
title_short Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
title_full Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
title_fullStr Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
title_full_unstemmed Six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in England and Wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
title_sort six-year follow-up of impact of co-proxamol withdrawal in england and wales on prescribing and deaths: time-series study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Medicine
issn 1549-1277
1549-1676
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The analgesic co-proxamol (paracetamol/dextropropoxyphene combination) has been widely involved in fatal poisoning. Concerns about its safety/effectiveness profile and widespread use for suicidal poisoning prompted its withdrawal in the UK in 2005, with partial withdrawal between 2005 and 2007, and full withdrawal in 2008. Our objective in this study was to assess the association between co-proxamol withdrawal and prescribing and deaths in England and Wales in 2005-2010 compared with 1998-2004, including estimation of possible substitution effects by other analgesics.We obtained prescribing data from the NHS Health and Social Care Information Centre (England) and Prescribing Services Partneriaeth Cydwasanaethau GIG Cymru (Wales), and mortality data from the Office for National Statistics. We carried out an interrupted time-series analysis of prescribing and deaths (suicide, open verdicts, accidental poisonings) involving single analgesics. The reduction in prescribing of co-proxamol following its withdrawal in 2005 was accompanied by increases in prescribing of several other analgesics (co-codamol, paracetamol, codeine, co-dydramol, tramadol, oxycodone, and morphine) during 2005-2010 compared with 1998-2004. These changes were associated with major reductions in deaths due to poisoning with co-proxamol receiving verdicts of suicide and undetermined cause of -21 deaths (95% CI -34 to -8) per quarter, equating to approximately 500 fewer suicide deaths (-61%) over the 6 years 2005-2010, and -25 deaths (95% CI -38 to -12) per quarter, equating to 600 fewer deaths (-62%) when accidental poisoning deaths were included. There was little observed change in deaths involving other analgesics, apart from an increase in oxycodone poisonings, but numbers were small. Limitations were that the study was based on deaths involving single drugs alone and changes in deaths involving prescribed morphine could not be assessed.During the 6 years following the withdrawal of co-proxamol in the UK, there was a major reduction in poisoning deaths involving this drug, without apparent significant increase in deaths involving other analgesics.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3348153?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT keithhawton sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
AT helenbergen sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
AT suesimkin sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
AT claudiawells sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
AT navneetkapur sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
AT davidgunnell sixyearfollowupofimpactofcoproxamolwithdrawalinenglandandwalesonprescribinganddeathstimeseriesstudy
_version_ 1724822113630552064