Understanding the characteristics and comorbidities of primary care patients with risky opioid use: Baseline data from the multi-site "Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention" (STOP) Trial
06/2025
Journal Article
Authors:
Rostam-Abadi, Y.;
Liebschutz, J. M.;
Subramaniam, G.;
Stone, R.;
Appleton, N.;
Mazel, S.;
Alexander, K.;
Brill, S. B.;
Case, A.;
Gelberg, L.;
Gordon, A. J.;
Hong, H.;
Incze, M. A.;
Kawasaki, S. S.;
Kim, T.;
Kline, M.;
Lovejoy, T. I.;
McCormack, J.;
Zhang, S.;
McNeely, J.
Journal:
J Gen Intern Med
PMID:
40457116
URL:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/40457116
DOI:
10.1007/s11606-025-09613-4
Keywords:
Collaborative care Opioid-related disorders Pain Prevention Primary care Risky opioid use Substance use disorder
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: A majority of the 8.9 million Americans with opioid misuse have mild or no symptoms of opioid use disorder (OUD), but they may be at elevated risk of developing more severe OUD, overdose, or other health consequences of opioid use. The "Subthreshold Opioid Use Disorder Prevention"(STOP) Trial is evaluating a collaborative care intervention for risky opioid use in primary care. Here, we describe baseline characteristics of participants to understand their needs and assess the generalizability of the sample. METHODS: Recruitment at five primary care sites spanned March 2021-May 2023. Adult patients who screened positive for subthreshold OUD (current illicit or non-medical opioid use without meeting DSM-5 criteria for moderate-severe OUD) were eligible. Baseline assessments measured self-reported demographic characteristics, other substance use, pain, and physical and mental health symptoms. Descriptive statistics summarize characteristics of the enrolled sample across sites. RESULTS: Among the 202 participants, the majority identified as female (63.4%), white (70.8%), and non-Hispanic (96.5%), with mean age 55.7 (SD: 12.7) years. Nearly half (49.0%) had problem or high-risk use of prescription opioids, and most received a prescription for opioid medication in the past six months (74.8%). Many participants reported current problem use or high-risk use of alcohol (47.0%) or cannabis (31.2%). Approximately one-third endorsed mental health symptoms, including moderate-severe anxiety (35.6%), depression (31.2%), or sleep disturbance (29.7%), and 20.3% reported a past suicide attempt. In the prior six months, 14.7% had experienced a nonfatal overdose. Moderate-severe pain was reported by 63.4%, and 60.4% rated their general health as fair or poor. CONCLUSIONS: Patients with subthreshold OUD had high rates of polysubstance use and comorbidities that may present challenges to reducing risky opioid use. The STOP trial presents an opportunity to detect and address subthreshold OUD in a cohort with considerable medical and social needs, within primary care settings. CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04218201.