Elizabeth Amirault had never heard of a Narx Score. But she said she learned last year the tool had been used to track her medication use.
During an August 2022 visit to a hospital in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Amirault told a nurse practitioner she was in severe pain, she said. She received a puzzling response.
âYour Narx Score is so high, I canât give you any narcotics,â she recalled the man saying, as she waited for an MRI before a hip replacement.
Tools like Narx Scores are used to help medical providers review controlled substance prescriptions. They influence, and can limit, the prescribing of painkillers, similar to a credit score influencing the terms of a loan. Narx Scores and an algorithm-generated overdose risk rating are produced by health care technology company Bamboo Health (formerly Appriss Health) in its NarxCare platform.
Such systems are designed to fight the nationâs opioid epidemic, which has led to an alarming number of overdose deaths. The platforms draw on data about prescriptions for controlled substances that states collect to identify patterns of potential problems involving patients and physicians. State and federal health agencies, law enforcement officials, and health care providers have enlisted these tools, but the mechanics behind the formulas used are generally not shared with the public.
Artificial intelligence is working its way into more parts of American life. As AI spreads within the health care landscape, it brings familiar concerns of bias and accuracy and whether government regulation can keep up with rapidly advancing technology.
The use of systems to analyze opioid-prescribing data has sparked questions over whether they have undergone enough independent testing outside of the companies that developed them, making it hard to know how they work.
Lacking the ability to see inside these systems leaves only clues to their potential impact. Some patients say they have been cut off from needed care. Some doctors say their ability to practice medicine has been unfairly threatened. Researchers warn that such technology â despite its benefits â can have unforeseen consequences if it improperly flags patients or doctors.
âWe need to see what's going on to make sure we're not doing more harm than good,â said Jason Gibbons, a health economist at the Colorado School of Public Health at the University of Coloradoâs Anschutz Medical Campus. âWe're concerned that it's not working as intended, and it's harming patients.â
Amirault, 34, said she has dealt for years with chronic pain from health conditions such as sciatica, degenerative disc disease, and avascular necrosis, which results from restricted blood supply to the bones.
The opioid Percocet offers her some relief. Sheâd been denied the medication before, but never had been told anything about a Narx Score, she said.
In a chronic pain support group on Facebook, she found others posting about NarxCare, which scores patients based on their supposed risk of prescription drug misuse. Sheâs convinced her ratings negatively influenced her care.
âApparently being sick and having a bunch of surgeries and different doctors, all of that goes against me,â Amirault said.
Database-driven tracking has a decline in opioid prescriptions, but evidence is mixed on its impact on curbing the epidemic. Overdose deaths continue to plague the country, and patients like Amirault have said the leave them feeling stigmatized as well as cut off from pain relief.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention American adults suffered from chronic pain, and about 17 million people lived with pain so severe it limited their daily activities. To manage the pain, , which are tracked in nearly every state through electronic databases known as (PDMPs).
The last state to adopt a program, Missouri, is still getting it up and running.
More than 40 states and territories use the technology from Bamboo Health to run PDMPs. That data can be fed into NarxCare, a separate suite of tools to help medical professionals make decisions. Hundreds of health care facilities and five of the top six major pharmacy retailers also use NarxCare, the company said.
The platform generates three Narx Scores based on a patientâs prescription activity involving narcotics, sedatives, and stimulants. showed the âNarx Score metric could serve as a useful initial universal prescription opioid-risk screener.â
NarxCareâs algorithm-generated âOverdose Risk Scoreâ draws on a patientâs medication information from PDMPs â such as the number of doctors writing prescriptions, the number of pharmacies used, and drug dosage â to help medical providers assess a patientâs risk of opioid overdose.
Bamboo Health did not share the specific formula behind the algorithm or address questions about the accuracy of its Overdose Risk Score but said it continues to review and validate the algorithm behind it, based on current overdose trends.
advised clinicians to consult PDMP data before prescribing pain medications. But the agency warned that âspecial attention should be paid to ensure that PDMP information is not used in a way that is harmful to patients.â
This prescription-drug data has led patients to be dismissed from clinician practices, the CDC said, which could leave patients at risk of being untreated or undertreated for pain. The agency further warned that risk scores may be generated by âproprietary algorithms that are not publicly availableâ and could lead to biased results.
Bamboo Health said that NarxCare can show providers all of a patientâs scores on one screen, but that these tools should never replace decisions made by physicians.
Some patients say the tools have had an outsize impact on their treatment.
Bev Schechtman, 47, who lives in North Carolina, said she has occasionally used opioids to manage pain flare-ups from Crohnâs disease. As vice president of the Doctor Patient Forum, a chronic pain patient advocacy group, she said she has heard from others reporting medication access problems, many of which she worries are caused by red flags from databases.
âThereâs a lot of patients cut off without medication,â according to Schechtman, who said some have turned to illicit sources when they canât get their prescriptions. âSome patients say to us, âItâs either suicide or the streets.ââ
The stakes are high for pain patients. rapid dose changes can increase the risk of withdrawal, depression, anxiety, and even suicide.
Some doctors who treat chronic pain patients say they, too, have been flagged by data systems and then lost their license to practice and were prosecuted.
Lesly Pompy, a pain medicine and addiction specialist in Monroe, Michigan, believes such systems were involved in a legal case against him.
His medical office was raided by a mix of local and federal law enforcement agencies in 2016 because of his patterns in prescribing pain medicine. A year after the raid, Pompyâs medical license . In 2018, he was of illegally distributing opioid pain medication and health care fraud.
âI knew I was taking care of patients in good faith,â he said. A federal jury in January acquitted him of all charges. He said heâs working to have his license restored.
One firm, Qlarant, a Maryland-based technology company, said it has developed algorithms âto identify questionable behavior patterns and interactions for controlled substances, and for opioids in particular,â involving medical providers.
The company, in an , said its âextensive government workâ includes partnerships with state and federal enforcement entities such as the Department of Health and Human Servicesâ Office of Inspector General, the FBI, and the Drug Enforcement Administration.
In , the company said its algorithms can âanalyze a wide variety of data sources,â including court records, insurance claims, drug monitoring data, property records, and incarceration data to flag providers.
William Mapp, the companyâs chief technology officer, stressed the final decision about what to do with that information is left up to people â not the algorithms.
Mapp said that âQlarantâs algorithms are considered proprietary and our intellectual propertyâ and that they have not been independently peer-reviewed.
âWe do know that there's going to be some percentage of error, and we try to let our customers know,â Mapp said. âIt sucks when we get it wrong. But we're constantly trying to get to that point where there are fewer things that are wrong.â
Prosecutions against doctors through the use of prescribing data have attracted the attention of the American Medical Association.
âThese unknown and unreviewed algorithms have resulted in physicians having their prescribing privileges immediately suspended without due process or review by a state licensing board â often harming patients in pain because of delays and denials of care,â said Bobby Mukkamala, chair of the AMAâs Substance Use and Pain Care Task Force.
Even critics of drug-tracking systems and algorithms say there is a place for data and artificial intelligence systems in reducing the harms of the opioid crisis.
âIt's just a matter of making sure that the technology is working as intended,â said health economist Gibbons.
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