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. 2022 Nov 24:12:100185.
doi: 10.1016/j.xnsj.2022.100185. eCollection 2022 Dec.

Opioid use after elective spine surgery: Do spine surgery patients consume less than prescribed today?

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Opioid use after elective spine surgery: Do spine surgery patients consume less than prescribed today?

Lindsay D Orosz et al. N Am Spine Soc J. .

Abstract

Background: The opioid epidemic in the US has led prescribers to reevaluate postoperative pain control particularly in the field of spine surgery, where postoperative analgesia requirements and consumption have historically been high. There is a need to mitigate the quantity of unused pills after surgery by adjusting prescribing practices. Achieving the balance of pain control after surgery without overprescribing opioids may be accomplished by developing a modified approach to prescribing practices; however, there is a need to first understand the opioid requirements of the modern spine surgery patient with respect to their elective spine surgery. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to determine the percentage of opioids not utilized at 90-days after elective spine surgery. Secondary aims were to identify differences in the percentage of unused opioids between surgical subgroups and preoperative opioid status, to determine factors associated with opioid utilization, and to estimate the distribution of opioids consumed to control pain up to the 90th percentile in each surgical subgroup.

Methods: In this prospective, observational cohort study, adults undergoing elective spine surgery at a multi-surgeon, single center were prospectively enrolled and divided into subgroups: anterior cervical, lumbar decompression, and short-segment lumbar fusion. Prescribed MMEs were identified from prescriptions, consumed MMEs were obtained from pill counts, and the percent leftover was calculated. Distributions of MMEs consumed were analyzed to compare utilization between preoperative opioid users or non-users within each surgical subgroup.

Results: Of 117 patients, 41.9% were preoperative opioid users. The percentage of unused opioids by surgical subgroup was: 45.4% cervical, 57.3% lumbar decompression, and 37.4% lumbar fusion (p=0.066). The percentage of unused opioids by preoperative opioid exposure was greater in the opioid non-users (58.0%) than users (28.4%, p<0.001)). Regression analysis showed that surgical subgroup and preoperative opioid exposure were associated with leftover opioids.

Conclusions: At 90-days, the percentage of unused opioids was over 45% in this cohort of elective spine surgery patients and was nearly double in the group without preoperative opioid exposure. These results suggest the modern elective spine surgery patient is using less opioids than prescribed, supporting the conclusion that the number of MMEs prescribed can be reduced to minimize quantities of leftover pills available for diversion, without sacrificing the priority of appropriate postoperative pain control.

Keywords: ESR; Opioid; Overprescribing; Pain; Pain management; Spine surgery.

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Conflict of interest statement

None

Figures

Fig 1:
Fig. 1
Flow diagram of patient enrollment and categorization.
Fig 2:
Fig. 2
Bar graph demonstrating MME utilization within each surgical subgroup by preoperative opioid exposure.
Figure 3:
Fig. 3
Bar graph demonstrating distribution of MME utilization by subgroup and preoperative opioid exposure (a: opioid non-users, b: opioid users).
Fig 4:
Fig. 4
Bar graph demonstrating distribution of utilization of oxycodone 5mg tablets by subgroup and preoperative opioid exposure (a: opioid non-users, b: opioid users).

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