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Review
. 2025;20(2):158-167.
doi: 10.2174/0127724328327509240919102209.

Nonopioid Drugs for Postoperative Pain: A Selection Governed by Choices of the Authors of Academic Articles

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Review

Nonopioid Drugs for Postoperative Pain: A Selection Governed by Choices of the Authors of Academic Articles

Igor Kissin et al. Curr Rev Clin Exp Pharmacol. 2025.

Abstract

The opioid crisis has profoundly changed the interest in using nonopioid analgesics. This review identified nonopioid drugs receiving the most interest in the treatment of postoperative pain. Publication-based interest, which reflects the authors' choices of subjects for academic articles, was used to show the shifts in their interest. The authors' choices of a particular drug for an article's subject were regarded as reflective of the collective opinion of experts most knowledgeable on the subject. The frequency with which a drug was the topic of an article was measured with the use of specific bibliometric indices. They were employed to select nonopioid drugs for this review. These included acetaminophen, dexmedetomidine, dexamethasone, ketamine, gabapentin, ibuprofen, ketorolac, diclofenac, magnesium sulfate, clonidine, intravenous lidocaine, and meloxicam (in order of most to least bibliometric interest). Individual reviews on these agents described how the bibliometric indices characterized a drug. They also addressed the question of whether a nonopioid analgesic produced a marked opioid-sparing effect. Information relative to this question was presented via the results of meta-analyses with emphasis on the possible reduction of opioid-related side effects. Overall, nonopioid drugs demonstrating the largest popularity among authors and continuous interest growth in 2018-2022 include acetaminophen, dexmedetomidine, dexamethasone, and ibuprofen. The relevant meta-analyses show that nonopioids, administered as components of multimodal analgesia, provided the opioid-sparing effect; they also show that the most common change in the opioid-related side effects was a lower incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting.

Keywords: Nonopioid; academic articles; academic articles.; nonopioid analgesics; opioid crisis; postoperative pain.

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Conflict of interest statement

Dr. Igor Kissin is the Editorial Advisory Board member of the journal “Current Reviews in Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology.”

References

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