Abstract

BACKGROUND CONTEXT Amidst a current US opioid epidemic, it is important to understand factors that contribute to long-term or sustained opioid use after elective spine surgery. Recent reports have reported up to 25% of opioid-naive patients are taking opioids at 2-year follow-up after adult spinal deformity (ASD) surgery. This suggests ASD surgery, or at least the postoperative course, could be a significant factor contributing to long-term or sustained opioid use. ln Asian countries, opioids are rarely prescribed for postoperative pain. Potentially, there is a significant cultural difference that can play a role in patient expectations in the postoperative period leading to long-term opioid use. PURPOSE To compare long-term or sustained (2-years) opioid use after ASD surgery between American and Japanese Cohorts STUDY DESIGN/SETTING Propensity-matched comparison of American and Japanese ASD patients PATIENT SAMPLE Patients from two (United States vs Japanese) prospective, multicenter ASD databases were compared OUTCOME MEASURES Baseline and 2-year opioid use and SRS-22 domains were compared METHODS We propensity matched 127 JPN to 619 US ASD patients based on age, sex, BMI, 3-column osteotomy, pelvic fixation, number of levels fused and preoperative SVA. Pre-op and 2-year postoperative opioid use was determined using responses to SRS22R Q11 and grouped into 3 categories (none, weekly, or daily). We have previously validated the use of SRS22R Q11 as an accurate measure for opioid use by comparing to a prospective study specifically designed to study opioid use and postoperative outcomes in ASD. RESULTS From each cohort, 34 cases were successfully matched, with no difference in baseline parameters, including baseline opioid use (p=0.095), between the cohorts. The relatively low numbers in each cohort arise from difficulty matching a lower BMI and lower baseline opioid use in the JPN cohort. At 2-years postop, 22 US (65%) vs 31 JPN (91%) reported no opioid use, 1 US (3%) vs 0 JPN (0%) reported weekly use, and 11 US (32%) vs 3 JPN (9%) reported daily use (p=0.009). There was no difference in 2-year SRS-22 Self-image and Mental Health between the two groups while US patients had better Satisfaction (4.29 vs 3.84, p=0.032) but lower Function scores (3.52 vs 3.90, p=0.029). CONCLUSIONS In propensity-matched ASD cohorts, 35% of US patients were still using opioids 2 years after surgery compared to 9% of JPN patients, with the most taking opioids daily. Further studies are needed to identify sources of this variability. FDA DEVICE/DRUG STATUS This abstract does not discuss or include any applicable devices or drugs.

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