4.4 Article

Development of a brief tool for monitoring aberrant behaviours among patients receiving long-term opioid therapy: The Opioid-Related Behaviours In Treatment (ORBIT) scale

期刊

DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
卷 159, 期 -, 页码 42-52

出版社

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.11.026

关键词

Chronic pain; Opioid analgesics; Opioid substitution therapy; Addiction; Medication non-adherence

资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [1073858, 1041472, 1013803, 1045318]
  2. Australian Government under the Substance Misuse Prevention and Service Improvements Grants Fund

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Background: Early identification of problems is essential in minimising the unintended consequences of opioid therapy. This study aimed to develop a brief scale that identifies and quantifies recent aberrant behaviour among diverse patient populations receiving long-term opioid treatment. Method: 40 scale items were generated via literature review and expert panel (N=19) and tested in surveys of: (i)N=41 key experts, and (ii)N=426 patients prescribed opioids >3 months (222 pain patients and 204 opioid substitution therapy (OST) patients). We employed item and scale psychometrics (exploratory factor analyses, confirmatory factor analyses and item-response theory statistics) to refine items to a brief scale. Results: Following removal of problematic items (poor retest-reliability or wording, semantic redundancy, differential item functioning, collinearity or rarity) iterative factor analytic procedures identified a 10-item unifactorial scale with good model fit in the total sample (N= 426; CFI=0.981, TLI=0.975, RMSEA=0.057), and among pain (CFI=0.969, TLI=0.960, RMSEA=0.062) and OST subgroups (CFI=0.989, TFI=0.986, RMSEA=0.051). The 10 items provided good discrimination between groups, demonstrated acceptable test-retest reliability (ICC 0.80, 95% CI 0.60-0.89; Cronbach's alpha = 0.89), were moderately correlated with related constructs, including opioid dependence (SDS), depression and stress (DASS sub-scales) and Social Relationships and Environment domains of the WHO-QoL, and had strong face validity among advising clinicians. Conclusions: The Opioid-Related Behaviours In Treatment (ORBIT) scale is brief, reliable and validated for use in diverse patient groups receiving opioids. The ORBIT has potential applications as a checklist to prompt clinical discussions and as a tool to quantify aberrant behaviour and assess change over time. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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