Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal

Abstract Background In 2009, the European Medicines Agency recommended withdrawal of dextropropoxyphene (DXP); in March 2011 it was withdrawn from the market in France. Up until that time the combination dextropropoxyphene-paracetamol (DXP/PC) was widely used for analgesia. At withdrawal, French reg...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: E. Van Ganse, M. Belhassen, M. Ginoux, E. Chrétien, C. Cornu, C. Ecoffey, F. Aubrun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-04-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3058-1
id doaj-7aa646e1a05a4155ba277268fe9fe2d1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7aa646e1a05a4155ba277268fe9fe2d12020-11-25T00:02:43ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632018-04-011811510.1186/s12913-018-3058-1Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawalE. Van Ganse0M. Belhassen1M. Ginoux2E. Chrétien3C. Cornu4C. Ecoffey5F. Aubrun6HESPER 7425, Health Services and Performance Research, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1HESPER 7425, Health Services and Performance Research, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1HESPER 7425, Health Services and Performance Research, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care, Croix Rousse University Hospital, Claude Bernard Lyon 1 UniversityUMR 5558, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive, Claude Bernard UniversityDepartment of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, Ponchaillou University HospitalHESPER 7425, Health Services and Performance Research, University Claude Bernard Lyon 1Abstract Background In 2009, the European Medicines Agency recommended withdrawal of dextropropoxyphene (DXP); in March 2011 it was withdrawn from the market in France. Up until that time the combination dextropropoxyphene-paracetamol (DXP/PC) was widely used for analgesia. At withdrawal, French regulators recommended that DXP/PC be replaced by other step 2 analgesics, i.e. tramadol, codeine, or opium-containing drugs, or by PC for a weak level of pain. To investigate prescribing behaviours after DXP/PC withdrawal, dispensations of analgesics before and after withdrawal were analysed. Methods Aggregated dispensation data of analgesics prescribed between January 2009 and December 2012 in the Rhône-Alpes region were obtained from the general health insurance claims data; changes in analgesic dispensation over time were analysed with the ATC/DDD methodology. Pre (Jan-June 2009) and post-withdrawal (Jan-June 2012) changes of DDDs where computed for each analgesic step. Results The dispensations of DXP/PC experienced a two-step decrease until 2011. Over the withdrawal period 2009-2012, there was a 14% decrease in the overall use of analgesic (from 109 to 94 DDDs), while the use of step 2 analgesics declined by 46% (− 22 DDDs, from 47 to 25 DDDs). This latter decline included a cessation of use of DXP/PC (29 DDDs in 2009) that were only in part (+ 7 DDDs, from 18 to 25 DDDs) compensated by increased use of codeine, tramadol and opium, in monotherapy or combined with PC. For step 1 analgesics, use increased with 9%, mostly PC (+ 8 DDDs, from 31 to 39 DDDs). Step 3 analgesics dispensations remained largely unchanged over this period (around 3 DDDs). Conclusions In the Rhône-Alpes region, DXP/PC withdrawal was accompanied in part by an increased use of same level analgesics, and in part by an increased use of PC in monotherapy. The extent of DXP/PC use before withdrawal, and the increased use of PC after DXP withdrawal, underline the complexity of pain management.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3058-1Pain managementDrug withdrawalReal-life useAnalgesics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. Van Ganse
M. Belhassen
M. Ginoux
E. Chrétien
C. Cornu
C. Ecoffey
F. Aubrun
spellingShingle E. Van Ganse
M. Belhassen
M. Ginoux
E. Chrétien
C. Cornu
C. Ecoffey
F. Aubrun
Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
BMC Health Services Research
Pain management
Drug withdrawal
Real-life use
Analgesics
author_facet E. Van Ganse
M. Belhassen
M. Ginoux
E. Chrétien
C. Cornu
C. Ecoffey
F. Aubrun
author_sort E. Van Ganse
title Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
title_short Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
title_full Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
title_fullStr Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
title_full_unstemmed Use of analgesics in France, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
title_sort use of analgesics in france, following dextropropoxyphene withdrawal
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Abstract Background In 2009, the European Medicines Agency recommended withdrawal of dextropropoxyphene (DXP); in March 2011 it was withdrawn from the market in France. Up until that time the combination dextropropoxyphene-paracetamol (DXP/PC) was widely used for analgesia. At withdrawal, French regulators recommended that DXP/PC be replaced by other step 2 analgesics, i.e. tramadol, codeine, or opium-containing drugs, or by PC for a weak level of pain. To investigate prescribing behaviours after DXP/PC withdrawal, dispensations of analgesics before and after withdrawal were analysed. Methods Aggregated dispensation data of analgesics prescribed between January 2009 and December 2012 in the Rhône-Alpes region were obtained from the general health insurance claims data; changes in analgesic dispensation over time were analysed with the ATC/DDD methodology. Pre (Jan-June 2009) and post-withdrawal (Jan-June 2012) changes of DDDs where computed for each analgesic step. Results The dispensations of DXP/PC experienced a two-step decrease until 2011. Over the withdrawal period 2009-2012, there was a 14% decrease in the overall use of analgesic (from 109 to 94 DDDs), while the use of step 2 analgesics declined by 46% (− 22 DDDs, from 47 to 25 DDDs). This latter decline included a cessation of use of DXP/PC (29 DDDs in 2009) that were only in part (+ 7 DDDs, from 18 to 25 DDDs) compensated by increased use of codeine, tramadol and opium, in monotherapy or combined with PC. For step 1 analgesics, use increased with 9%, mostly PC (+ 8 DDDs, from 31 to 39 DDDs). Step 3 analgesics dispensations remained largely unchanged over this period (around 3 DDDs). Conclusions In the Rhône-Alpes region, DXP/PC withdrawal was accompanied in part by an increased use of same level analgesics, and in part by an increased use of PC in monotherapy. The extent of DXP/PC use before withdrawal, and the increased use of PC after DXP withdrawal, underline the complexity of pain management.
topic Pain management
Drug withdrawal
Real-life use
Analgesics
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3058-1
work_keys_str_mv AT evanganse useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT mbelhassen useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT mginoux useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT echretien useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT ccornu useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT cecoffey useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
AT faubrun useofanalgesicsinfrancefollowingdextropropoxyphenewithdrawal
_version_ 1725436930978480128