Use of pain drug Lyrica common among injecting drug users

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Australia; NSW
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Acdx / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)

Around one in four people who inject illicit drugs have also used the pain drug pregabalin in the last six months, and more than half of that was non-prescribed use, according to Australian research. Pregabalin, sold under the brand name Lyrica, is the most commonly prescribed subscription pain medication in Australia. Although it was marketed as having low abuse potential, there have been increasing reports of dependence since its release. The researchers found taking non-prescribed pregabalin was not linked to reporting pain or discomfort at the time of the study,  which they say suggests it may be being used for a range of reasons other than pain management, such as intoxication, or for its euphoric and dissociative effects.

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Pregabalin use found to be relatively common among people who regularly inject drugs

The use of pregabalin, a medicine for neuropathic pain, is relatively common among a sample of people who regularly inject drugs (PWID) in Australia, a new study by researchers at the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), UNSW Sydney has found.

In a sample of 905 participants from the 2018 Illicit Drug Reporting System, it was identified that 25 per cent of PWID reported using pregabalin in the previous six months.

Lead author, Dr Rachel Sutherland said; “10 per cent of the sample reported using pregabalin that was prescribed to them, while 15 per cent reported using pregabalin that was not prescribed to them.”

“Those using prescribed pregabalin reported daily use, whilst those using non-prescribed pregabalin reported infrequent use (i.e. less than once a month),” said Dr Sutherland.

Recent use of prescribed benzodiazepines and non-prescribed pharmaceutical opioids was associated with both prescribed and non-prescribed pregabalin use.

This is concerning in light of a recent study in Canada that found concomitant use of pregabalin and opioids almost doubled the odds of opioid-related death.

“It is therefore important that consumers are made aware of the potential risks of combining opioids and pregabalin or other central nervous system depressants.”

In this study, recent use of non-prescribed benzodiazepines and illicit stimulants were significantly associated with non-prescribed pregabalin use, as was past-year non-fatal overdose for any substance.

“It is possible that people reporting non-prescribed pregabalin use are engaging in riskier patterns of substance use, which may put them at greater overdose risk,” said Dr Sutherland.

“It is important to note that these findings are from a sentinel sample of PWID, and do not represent all people who inject drugs. However, our findings suggest that education campaigns targeting both health professionals and consumers regarding the risks of harm associated with concomitant use of pregabalin and other central nervous system depressants are warranted,” said Dr Sutherland.

ENDS

For reference: When reporting on drug and alcohol issues, we encourage the consultation of the Mindframe guidelines on ‘Communicating about alcohol and other drugs’, the ‘Language Matters’ guide published by the NSW Users and AIDS Association, and the guidelines on “Communicating about suicide”.

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Research Wiley-Blackwell, Web page Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends).
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Drug and Alcohol Review
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Organisation/s: National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre (NDARC), The University of New South Wales
Funder: AP, RS and SM have received an untied educational grant from Seqirus for a post-marketing study of tapentadol. AP and RB have received an untied educational grant from Mundipharma for a post-marketing study of oxycodone and PMD and RB have received an untied educational grant from Indivior for a study of buprenorphine depot. GC has received an untied educational grant from Indivior to examine attitudes to opioid agonist therapy treatment among people living with chronic pain. PMD has received investigatordriven funding from Gilead sciences for work related to hepatitis C.
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