Abstract

To determine the correlation between preoperative and postoperative opioid use in patients undergoing arthroscopic shoulder labral repair, as well as patient risk factors associated with increased postoperative opioid use after the procedure. A retrospective review of all patients undergoing arthroscopic shoulder labral surgery at a single institution between August 2013 and November 2017 was performed. Patients were stratified as opioid nonusers, acute users, or chronic users based on preoperative consumption. Patient demographic characteristics, injury characteristics, surgical interventions, and postoperative opioid use for the first 12 months after surgery were then analyzed. A total of 340 patients were included in this study. The average age was 26.3 years (range, 13-68 years), and the average body mass index was 27.5 (range, 18.4-45.0). Preoperative opioid users (acute and chronic) were found to continue to receive opioid medications at extended time points beyond 2 months postoperatively compared with nonusers (P < .001). Patients with intraoperatively identified SLAP tears experienced more preoperative pain and required more postoperative opioid prescriptions (P = .018). On stratification for other common shoulder instability injury patterns, no differences were found between the number of postoperative opioid prescriptions filled and the presence of Bankart lesion, Hill-Sachs lesion, reverse Hill-Sachs lesion, anterior labroligamentous periosteal sleeve avulsion, glenolabral articular disruption, or humeral avulsion of the glenohumeral ligament (P > .05). In patients undergoing arthroscopic labral surgery, the chronicity of preoperative opioid use, number of concomitant procedures at the time of initial surgery, and presence of biceps tenodesis were found to significantly increase postoperative opioid demand. Orthopaedic surgeons should recognize risk factors for increased opioid use postoperatively and adapt treatment strategies and patient counseling accordingly. Level III, retrospective cohort study.

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