OpiCalc Logo

OpiCalc

--- Clinical Tools

Logo
OpiCalc
BPI (Brief)COMMCPOTDIRE ScoreFLACC / NIPSMME/MED CalcORT-RPAINADPEG ScoreVAS/NRS ScaleWidespread Pain Index

Clinical Evidence and Methodology

EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS

Clinical Reference Hub

Curated insights • How it Works • Practical Pearls • Evidence Base

CLINICAL INSIGHT

When to Use

When to Use

  • Used continuously to monitor patients already actively receiving extended opioid therapy for non-cancer pain.
  • Unlike the ORT (which predicts future risk before prescribing), the COMM detects concurrent misuse, abuse, or psychological distress resulting from therapy.
CLINICAL INSIGHT

How it Works

Core Assessment Domains

  • Signs and Symptoms of Intoxication (e.g., trouble thinking clearly).
  • Emotional Volatility (e.g., arguments, anger).
  • Evidence of Prescription Violation (e.g., early clinic visits, taking medications belonging to others).
  • Healthcare Provider/Social Stress (e.g., others worried about handling medication, failing responsibilities).
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Practical Pearls

False Positive Potential

  • A high COMM score may simply indicate severe, poorly controlled pain driving desperation (pseudoadaddiction) or underlying poorly managed psychosocial comorbidities, rather than outright substance use disorder.
  • Do NOT use the COMM as punitive evidence to abruptly terminate a patient. It is a trigger for deeper clinical conversation.
CLINICAL INSIGHT

Next Steps

Management

  • < 9: Current aberrant behaviors are unlikely. Continue protocol.
  • ≥ 9: High risk for current misuse. Action needed: Order a urine drug screen (UDT), check the state Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP), request a pill count, and evaluate for hyperalgesia or psychological crisis.

COMM

Please answer each question honestly based on how you have been feeling over the past 30 days.

Total COMM Score

0/ 68

Low Risk for Current Misuse

A cutoff of ≥ 9 suggests aberrant behavior.