The CDC's New Opioid Prescribing Advice Still Invites the 'Misapplication' It Blames for Harming Patients
The damage done by the original guidelines, including undertreatment and abrupt dose reductions, could have been avoided if the CDC had not presumed to advise doctors on how to treat pain.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) yesterday published the final version of its newly revised advice about prescribing opioids for pain, which aims to ameliorate the damage done by the guidelines it issued in 2016. The new guidelines, which are similar to the draft that the CDC published in February, emphasize individualized treatment and include warnings against "rigid standards," "rapid tapers," "abrupt opioid discontinuation," and "patient abandonment," which give you a sense of the disastrous impact that the 2016 version had on patient care.
The CDC blames that fiasco on "misapplication" of its advice by clinicians, pharmacists, insurers, regulators, and legislators. Because all those people misunderstood what the CDC was recommending, it says, patients across the country experienced "untreated and undertreated pain, serious withdrawal symptoms, worsening pain outcomes, psychological distress, overdose, and suicidal ideation and behavior."
When patients respond to CDC-inspired medical practices by killing themselves, it might be time to concede that the agency issued its advice without sufficiently considering the potential for unintended but foreseeable consequences. The CDC never quite admits that, and its new guidance has similarly malignant potential.
One of the chief complaints about the 2016 guidelines, which were aimed at clinicians who prescribe opioids for chronic pain, was their implication that daily doses above specified levels were inherently suspect. "When opioids are started, clinicians should prescribe the lowest effective dosage," the CDC said in the fifth of its 12 main recommendations. "Clinicians should use caution when prescribing opioids at any dosage, should carefully reassess evidence of individual benefits and risks when considering increasing dosage to ≥50 morphine milligram equivalents (MME)/day, and should avoid increasing dosage to ≥90 MME/day or carefully justify a decision to titrate dosage to ≥90 MME/day."
That recommendation was widely interpreted to mean that crossing those thresholds was reckless, if not prima facie evidence of malpractice. Clinicians, pharmacists, insurers, regulators, and legislators responded accordingly, imposing MME-based limits on prescriptions. Worse, many doctors were so anxious to avoid accusations of overprescribing that they imposed abrupt, precipitous reductions on patients who already exceeded the CDC's arbitrary cutoffs, even when they had been functioning well at those doses for years. Some physicians dropped pain patients or refused to prescribe opioids at all, even when it was medically appropriate. They surmised that it was best, for the sake of their licenses and livelihoods, to avoid that class of medication altogether.
These problems were severe and widespread enough to prompt warnings from the American Medical Association and the Food and Drug Administration. How did the CDC respond? The new guidelines, which are aimed at clinicians who prescribe opioids for acute pain (lasting less than a month) and subacute pain (lasting one to three months) as well as chronic pain (lasting more than three months), do not emphasize the 90 MME/day cutoff. But they still tell doctors to beware of doses exceeding 50 MME per day.
"Before increasing total opioid dosage to ≥50 MME/day, clinicians should pause, considering that dosage increases to >50 MME/day are unlikely to provide substantially improved pain control for most patients while overdose risk increases with dosage, and carefully reassess evidence of benefits and risks," the CDC says. "Additional dosage increases beyond 50 MME/day are progressively more likely to yield diminishing returns in benefits for pain and function relative to risks to patients. Clinicians should carefully evaluate a decision to increase dosage after an individualized assessment of benefits and risks and weighing factors such as diagnosis, incremental benefits for pain and function relative to risks with previous dosage increases, other treatments and effectiveness, and patient values and preferences."
The CDC's continued emphasis on a specific dose threshold belies its avowed commitment to "individualized assessment." It ignores wide variation in how patients metabolize and respond to pain medication as well as the fundamental dubiousness of converting different drugs into "morphine milligram equivalents."
Unlike the 2016 guidelines, the new version does not mention the 50 MME/day threshold in its 12 main recommendations, which are presented in bold type. The warnings about exceeding that specific level are instead relegated to the discussion following the fourth recommendation, which says: "When opioids are initiated for opioid-naïve patients with acute, subacute, or chronic pain, clinicians should prescribe the lowest effective dosage. If opioids are continued for subacute or chronic pain, clinicians should use caution when prescribing opioids at any dosage, should carefully evaluate individual benefits and risks when considering increasing dosage, and should avoid increasing dosage above levels likely to yield diminishing returns in benefits relative to risks to patients."
That does not seem like much of an improvement, unless you assume that clinicians won't read past the part in bold. Surely they will wonder which doses the CDC thinks are "likely to yield diminishing returns in benefits relative to risks to patients." They will find the answer a few paragraphs down.
"The recommendations related to opioid dosages are not intended to be used as an inflexible, rigid standard of care," the CDC says. "Rather, they are intended to be guideposts to help inform clinician-patient decision-making."
Is this presentation less likely than the 2016 version to encourage the "rigid application of opioid dosage thresholds" that the CDC officially eschews? Probably not, especially given six years of adaptation to the agency's original advice.
"I fear that it's a bit like closing the barn door after the horse has escaped," Bob Twillman, former executive director of the Academy of Integrative Pain Management, told me after the draft version of the guidelines was published. "There is a lot of work that needs to be done to modify or eliminate policies that were tied to the specific numbers in the 2016 guideline, and I'd like to see CDC play a role in that work."
Even while retaining the warnings about crossing the 50 MME/day line, the CDC tries to limit the harm that advice might cause. "Payers, health systems, and state medical boards," it says, "should ensure that policies based on cautionary dosage thresholds do not result in rapid tapers or abrupt discontinuation of opioids."
When patients are already receiving opioids, the CDC adds, "clinicians should carefully weigh benefits and risks and exercise care when changing opioid dosage. If benefits outweigh risks of continued opioid therapy, clinicians should work closely with patients to optimize nonopioid therapies while continuing opioid therapy. If benefits do not outweigh risks of continued opioid therapy, clinicians should optimize other therapies and work closely with patients to gradually taper to lower dosages or, if warranted based on the individual circumstances of the patient, appropriately taper and discontinue opioids. Unless there are indications of a life-threatening issue such as warning signs of impending overdose (e.g., confusion, sedation, or slurred speech), opioid therapy should not be discontinued abruptly, and clinicians should not rapidly reduce opioid dosages from higher dosages."
While these warnings are welcome (if overdue), it is not clear what "work[ing] closely with patients" means. "Although some experts indicated there should be more consideration of obtaining informed consent before tapering opioids," the CDC says, "others believed that informed discussion is more appropriate than informed consent when considering tapering opioids because of clinicians' overriding responsibility to avoid providing treatment that harms patients. Some experts were concerned that overemphasizing risks of tapering could increase harm from continued high-dosage opioid use."
In other words, the CDC is not saying that doses should be reduced only with the patient's consent. In the CDC's view, "informed discussion," possibly followed by a unilateral decision to which the patient objects, might be good enough.
Although the 2016 guidelines ostensibly were limited to chronic pain treatment, they included a recommendation regarding opioid prescriptions for acute pain. "Three days or less will often be sufficient," the CDC said. "More than seven days will rarely be needed." Like the warnings about exceeding specified daily doses, that advice predictably resulted in arbitrary limits on prescriptions, including statutory restrictions.
The new guidelines do not include a specific recommendation regarding the length of prescriptions for acute pain. "When opioids are needed for acute pain," the bolded recommendation says, "clinicians should prescribe no greater quantity than needed for the expected duration of pain severe enough to require opioids." The discussion below that recommendation cites research suggesting that "in most cases, clinicians considered an initial opioid prescription of 4–7 days' duration sufficient." But the CDC also notes that "longer durations of opioid therapy are more likely to be needed when the mechanism of injury is expected to result in prolonged severe pain (e.g., severe traumatic injuries)."
This new advice is less likely to be read as supporting arbitrary limits on the length of prescriptions. But as with the MME thresholds, the damage already has been done, and reversing it will not be easy. Since 2016, according to a tally by the National Conference of State Legislatures, at least 20 states have imposed restrictions on initial prescriptions for acute pain, typically ranging from three to seven days.
All of these problems could have been avoided, of course, if the CDC had not presumed to advise doctors on how to treat pain in the first place. That function "should be left to professional organizations," says Lynn Webster, a former president of the American Academy of Pain Medicine. "Several experts in the field predicted the outcome of the 2016 CDC guidelines before they were issued.…The debacle with the 2016 CDC guidelines [illustrates] the reason the CDC should not be imposing their views on how pain medicine should be practiced."
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There is only one real way to treat most pain long term: drugs.
'Pain' is often subjective, so expect pain management to be hit or miss with some people abusing it due to addiction and other's relying on it to survive their day.
Until government can accept the idea that there are going to be negative end results in pain management, they will continue to take decisions out of the hands of the people who are actually dealing with these people individually.
So, basically, never.
Pain is always subjective, being a percept.
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Because a bunch of idiots in government interfered with pharmaceutical pain manag,ent, we ended up with a heroin epidemic in response. A crackdown on the heroin epidemic has lead to a fentanyl epidemic.
Just let people have their hydros and oxys. Things would be a lot better.
The CDC is kinda right in a way,after 3 days,the body starts neutralizing the sh1t and continued treatment is useless.
“The CDC is kinda right in a way,after 3 days,the body starts neutralizing the sh1t and continued treatment is useless.”
Posting as someone who has dealt with debilitating back pain several times in my life and was provided pretty much unlimited access to opiates at those times (well over a month in one episode), and still not addicted, I’m going to state, simply:
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Need for pain relief, and response to opiate pain relief, are both extremely individualist and subjective. Doctors who themselves have never experienced unrelenting pain cannot even remotely pass judgment on what dose is appropriate , when to prescribe what dose, and especially how to taper any individual from any dose down to either a maintenance dose or to getting off entirely.
The doc who originally put me on opioid meds decided that I could be weaned off morphine by cutting my take by 25 percent every 4 days. Hello !! Morphine withdrawal is 14 days! Fortunately I have the ability now to do my own withdrawal, which I am doing by reducing my dose by 7.5 mg every two weeks. And I am not telling my doc I am doing it, or he would take over and cut my prescription too fast. They do not know what they are doing.
Ricbee,
That is the stupidest thing I have ever heard.
The body down not “neutralize” the effect of opioids.
Tolerance develops.
That takes much longer that 3 days
And it can be overcome by increasing the dose.
That's not so bad.
The CDC's new advice for whether or not to receive the flu vaccine during a pregnancy removed the word 'woman' and replaced it with 'pregnant people'.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11373395/Fury-CDC-quietly-removes-word-women-flu-vaccine-advice-pregnant-people.html
Well what did you expect?
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Yeah, um, CDC and "guidelines" have dipped in popularity lately, like so much Milli Vanilli after someone knocked over the turntable.
Unfortunately FOLLOWING the CDC’s “guidelines” are still in vogue in the fiefdoms permeating the American basin.
The CDC is merely offering free 'advice,' worth roughly what a doctor pays for it. CDC has lost some credibility with the pandemic debacle, but many doctors still trust them implicitly. Fearing them is not something I've seen because thankfully, they can't throw you in prison (yet!)
Federal enforcement agencies like DEA and their state counterparts can upend your entire life and practice and so are what the doctors and pharmacists I know fear most. Meticulous, unimpeachable records must be kept and considerable time and money spent CYA are wasted by patients and doctors, alike. Easily-circumvented obedience rituals like too-frequent, costly urine tests which are not based on any suspicion of abuse, for example, or more frequent office visits and all the costs that entails. Even A/V surveillance systems! Anytime there is any question of potential blowback, it's safer to err on the side of caution, typically to the patient's detriment. Better a patient suffers through pain or WDs so a drug warrior can sleep that little bit more soundly at night!
That said, the enforcers aren't the sole problem. Many doctors either believe iatrogenic addiction is commonplace or still view every patient as potential doctor shoppers/probable scam artists, failing to realize that its usually much cheaper and easier to score black market drugs on the street. There is a 'fentanyl crisis,' after all.
Speaking of 'crises,' you'd think that as long as we're burning billions and casting the Constitution aside to fight the Drug War, enforcers would focus on that. Problem is, doctors are easy targets and make for good headlines. Cartel guys are a dime a dozen and often dangerous, not afraid to shoot back! And then there's the issue of no matter how much they seize, drugs keep flooding in while prices remain low. The Iron Law of Prohibition strikes again!
Ultimately it comes down to individual freedom and personal responsibility. Doctors have a role to play in educating their patients, but adults should have the final say in what they ingest, and deal with the outcome of their choices.
patients, but adults should have the final say in what they ingest, and deal with the outcome of their choices.
That kind of went out the window in 2020-2022.
Vincet, you have this 100% backwards. Behind every law enforcement action has been the justifications of the CDC.
Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs were databases in each state requiring doctors to register their prescriptions "for analytics", only to later be used for enforcement. Ever since authorities arrested Rush Limbaugh and his doctor back in 2006 for daring to prescribe too many pain pills to the man, the word was out to doctors: violate CDC guidelines at your peril.
CDC research and guidelines were used to justify ACA (Obamacare) regulations that incentivized insurance programs to push people off long-running pain treatment and into rehab. They were used to sue Purdue Pharma for the use of OxyCottin, which then led to the creation of other "less abusive" drugs.
When pushing people off of Oxy led to increases in black market Heroine overdoses, CDC analyzed the "Epidemic" again, and ultimately released the 2016 "guidelines" for doctors. All this did was lead to doctors pushing people into the black market even further, and SHOCKER, now everyone is dying on black market fen.
This is all attributable to CDC departing from its mission and treating drug use as a disease, just as they are trying to do with guns.
CDC is absolutely part of this mess, and must be stopped.
To be fair to Vincet, it doesn't take a lot of arm twisting to get the DEA to fuck with someone.
Exactly how this covid jab will be added to the child schedule. Schools will just point at 'CDC Guidance' and the CDC will say "it's up to schools".
+22 Catches
Legalization would still any controversy,let the chips fall where they may-take the crime out of the way and save a lot of OD's.
Let's be clear 90+% of the misapplication was driven by the DEA.
Exactly why is an agency that was created to prevent the spread of contagious diseases offering advice on pain medication?
Hell, that’s like asking why an agency that was created to prevent the spread of contagious diseases is offering advice on excessive alcohol consumption and, believe it or not, avoiding lightning strikes.
Pshaw. Fentanyl is the most contagious contagion anywhere. It can live on candy, 20-dollar bills, and oranges. It's worse than E Coli.
In other words the CDC is mirroring Marie Antoinette for people in severe pain like me. “Let them take Tylenol.”
OK, that gets a standing O.
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Despite the CDC and DEA's advice to not abandon patients, I've just lost my doctor to a DEA raid.
I'd love to see the methodology behind studies claiming OD risk increases with dosages. Tolerance to respiratory depression increases faster than tolerance to pain relief/euphoria, so they must be looking at shit like 'If a patient starts abusing it recreationally with polydrug intoxication'. Because in a medical context absent abuse, it's absolutely false that risk increases with dosage. They've studied dosages exceeding 1000MME and not found any serious risk. Some patients taking far more than that. The highest dosage in medical literature was over 5000MME with no serious issues. All of the danger is in the context of abuse.
Also it's shockingly naive to think doctors and the DEA aren't going to interpret this as imposing a 50MME standard and make shit even worse. They're flat out making up bullshit saying "more than 50MME isn't effective". It's a fucking lie. It seems to be based on fear of prescribing higher doses and mistakenly thinking it's 100% linear. So someone is on 50MME, you increase them to 60... not much benefit. Well no shit. They were already at 50, you'd need ~70 to get a benefit. Which isn't dangerous. 50MME isn't even 2x30mg oxycodone pills per day. That's nothing for long term chronic pain.
Once again they're applying standards for short term mild to moderate pain universally to long term severe pain.
Everyone has already been cut off, so the benefits of these new guidelines are zero. Everyone in severe chronic pain is still *fucked* and will be dying on street drugs filled with random doses of random fentanyl analogs just trying to get relief still not possible thanks to the CDC, who is still operating as a mouthpiece for the DEA, laundering what drug cops think the standard should be.
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