Abstract
6621 Background: Over-prescription of opioids after surgery contributes to the opioid abuse epidemic. Optimum post-operative opioid dosing is not defined. We evaluated prescribing patterns among different surgical services and created a standardized practice to reduce dispensation of unnecessary opioids. Methods: Opioid-naïve patients over 18 who underwent urologic, gynecologic, or breast surgery between March 2018 and January 2019 were eligible. A 4-month pre-intervention evaluation of number of opioid pills prescribed, number of pills taken, additional refills, and pain-control was obtained by contacting patients 7-10 days post-operatively. Findings were used to standardize prescriptions. Following implementation, patients undergoing surgery for the following 4-months were contacted to assess the impact of standardized opioid prescriptions. Data was compared with the institution’s electronic prescription system. Results: Pre-intervention, 368 eligible urology and gynecology patients (75.6%) responded and were prescribed between 6 and 40 opioid pills. Urology patients received median 28 (20, 30) tablets and 33% reported taking none. Gynecology patients received a median 20 (19, 28) tablets and 41% took none. Of 238 mastectomy patients, 176 (74%) reported taking median 3 and 4.9 of 20 prescribed opioid pills and 39% or 61% took no opioid pills (without vs with reconstruction). Prescriptions were standardized to 8, 7, and 10 tablets for urology, gynecology, and breast services. Post-intervention surveys revealed opioid tablets taken to be unchanged with minimal increase in refill requests. Conclusions: Prior to standardization, a large variation in opioids prescribed was observed. Standardizing opioid prescriptions resulted in fewer opioids dispensed without impacting pain control or refill requests.
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