Abstract

BackgroundOpioids and multimodal analgesia are widely administered to manage postoperative pain. However, little is known on how improvements in inpatient pain control are correlated with high-risk (> 90 daily OME) discharge opioid prescriptions for opioid naïve surgical patients.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective observational study of adult opioid-naïve patients undergoing surgery from June 2012 through December 2018 at a large academic medical center. We used multivariate logistic regression to assess whether multimodal analgesic drugs consumed in the 24 h prior to discharge was associated with a reduction in high-risk opioid discharge prescriptions. We identified other risk factors for receiving a high-risk discharge opioid prescription.ResultsAmong the 32,511 patients, 83% of patients were discharged with an opioid prescription. In 2013, 34.1% of patients with a discharge opioid prescription received a high-risk prescription and this declined to 17.7% by 2018. Use of multimodal analgesic agents during the final 24 h of hospitalization increased each year, with over 80% receiving at least one multimodal analgesic agent by 2018. The median OME consumed in the 24 h prior to discharge peaked in 2013 at 31 and steadily decreased to 19.8 by 2018. There was a significant association between the use of acetaminophen in the 24 h prior to discharge and a high-risk prescription at discharge (p < 0.01). OMEs consumed in the 24 h prior to discharge was a significant predictor of receiving a high-risk discharge prescription, even at low doses. Other factors associated with receipt of a high-risk discharge opioid prescription included male gender, race, history of anxiety disorder, and discharge service.DiscussionUse of multimodal analgesia regimens in hospitalized surgical patients in the 24 h prior to hospital discharge increased between 2012 and 2018. Simultaneously, opioid use prior to hospital discharge decreased. Despite these gains, approximately one in five discharge prescriptions was high-risk (> 90 daily OME). In addition, we found that prescribing of discharge opioids above inpatient opioid requirements remains common in opioid naive surgical patients.ConclusionProviders should account for pre-discharge opioid consumption and use of multimodal analgesia when considering the total and daily OME’s that may be appropriate for an individual surgical patient on the discharge opioid prescription.

Highlights

  • In 2018, 15% of the US population filled at least one opioid prescription and about one-third of prescription opioids were obtained from surgeons (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2019; Levy et al, 2015)

  • Providers should account for pre-discharge opioid consumption and use of multimodal analgesia when considering the total and daily oral morphine equivalents (OME)’s that may be appropriate for an individual surgical patient on the discharge opioid prescription

  • It remains unclear if the opioid-sparing effects of multimodal analgesia in surgical patients are reflected in the opioid prescriptions provided at discharge

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Summary

Introduction

In 2018, 15% of the US population filled at least one opioid prescription and about one-third of prescription opioids were obtained from surgeons (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2019; Levy et al, 2015). Significant variation in opioid discharge prescribing occurs after surgery, leading to opioid prescriptions filled but left unused (Hill et al, 2017; Thiels et al, 2018). These wide variations in opioid prescribing suggest that efforts to reduce inpatient opioid consumption do not always translate into reductions in opioids prescribed at discharge (Bates et al, 2011). Current pain management guidelines recommend the use of multimodal analgesic approaches in surgical patients whenever possible (Anesthesiology, 2012). It remains unclear if the opioid-sparing effects of multimodal analgesia in surgical patients are reflected in the opioid prescriptions provided at discharge. Little is known on how improvements in inpatient pain control are correlated with high-risk (> 90 daily OME) discharge opioid prescriptions for opioid naïve surgical patients

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