Abstract
Introduction: The opioid crisis is an ongoing crisis in the United States. Postoperative patients who receive opioid prescriptions have a 3%-7% risk of developing a chronic opioid abuse problem. This study aims to describe on-target opioid prescribing and use of multimodal pain management strategies 2 y after the implementation of a multicomponent quality improvement initiative across our statewide collaborative. Methods: From July 2020 to September 2021, we prospectively collected data on opioid-prescribing and multimodal strategies for 10 targeted procedures in general, gynecologic, and orthopedic surgery at three hospitals. Prescribing was on-target if a patient was prescribed ≤50 daily morphine milligram equivalents. Multimodal strategies were defined as two or more nonopioid adjuncts used within 48 h of surgery. Results: One thousand and eleven targeted procedures were performed with prescription data available for 993 cases. The on-target prescribing rate was 79.6% (n = 790), with general surgery 92.5% (n = 285), gynecology 84.9% (n = 331), and orthopedic surgery 59.0% (n = 174). Patients who received multimodal pain approaches were associated with interventions such as patient education, transversus abdominus plane block, and prescriptions for nonopioid analgesics at discharge. There was no evidence to support a difference in the use of multimodal pain control approaches between patients whose opioid prescribing was on-target or not (73.8% versus 77.3%, P = 0.30). At the first postoperative visit, data on continued opioid use were missing in 57.3% of patients, number of pills used was missing in 93.8%, and adequate pain control was missing in 52.8%. Conclusions: On-target prescribing and multimodal strategies are common but vary by specialty. Additionally, postoperative pain control and opioid use are often not documented. To better match prescribing to patient needs, understanding patient-level and specialty-level opioid use is important.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 274-280 |
Number of pages | 7 |
Journal | Journal of Surgical Research |
Volume | 293 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 2024 |
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health (grant number R34DA044752 ) entitled “System-Level Implementation to Reduce Excess Opioid Prescribing in Surgery” and by Pacira Pharmaceuticals. Neither funder had involvement in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of this article; or in the decision to submit this article for publication. Author AJR is supported on a training grant by the National Cancer Institute. Surgical Multispecialty Access to Research in Residency Training training grant [R38 CA245095]
Keywords
- Opioid stewardship
- Quality improvement
- Surgical prescribing guidelines
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Surgery