Predicting whether surgery patients will continue to refill opioid 'scripts

Although opioids play a key role in reducing pain when recovering from surgery, some patients transition to chronic users and become dependent on them. In order to find out what situations result in patients continuing to refill their opioid prescriptions after a surgery, Johns Hopkins researchers scoured a database of more than 900,000 people who had a surgery scheduled and were prescribed opioids for the first time.

Although some procedures and specialties are more inherently painful or leave a person with , in their study, published online April 15 in The American Journal of Surgery, the researchers say physicians could be doing more to prevent patients from continuing to take opioids.

"Based on our data, there are some easy changes that we can suggest to reduce the chance that patients will continue on opioids beyond the time needed for surgical healing, such as asking surgeons to prescribe opioids on the day of surgery rather than in advance," says Mark Bicket, M.D., assistant professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "We also recommend prescribing the smallest amount of opioids to treat a patient's pain at a time, as this seems to curb long-term use."

The researchers found that colorectal surgery patients were 35% more likely to continue to fill , cardiovascular surgery patients were 30% more likely and thoracic surgery patients were 26% more likely compared to urology patients, who had a lower likelihood of continuation.

Bicket's team also found that patients who underwent surgeries outside of an were 60% more likely to continue on opioids compared to those who had procedures in operating rooms. These trends continued at six months and at a year after surgery. Bicket says that physicians in an outpatient care setting should consider using anesthesia or working with a physician anesthesiologist to help minimize pain during surgeries, which could result in less opioids needed for long-term recovery.

The team also found that increased access to and greater numbers of pills made people more likely to continue on them. For example, each extra day of medication that the patient was prescribed increased the likelihood that they'd continue taking opioids by 5%. Also, having the prescription up to 30 days before the increased in the likelihood that they would continue on opioids by 2%. And, compared to filling one prescription, filling two or more increased the odds of continuing by 40%. For any prescription for more than 375 morphine equivalents, or about 50 oxycodone pills, were 5% more likely to refill another prescription than those on the lowest doses.

More information: Mark C. Bicket et al, Association of new opioid continuation with surgical specialty and type in the United States, The American Journal of Surgery (2019). DOI: 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2019.04.010

Citation: Predicting whether surgery patients will continue to refill opioid 'scripts (2019, May 6) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-05-surgery-patients-refill-opioid-scripts.html
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