Literature DB >> 27830448

Estimating the Effect of Intravenous Acetaminophen for Postoperative Pain Management on Length of Stay and Inpatient Hospital Costs.

E Eve Shaffer1, An Pham2, Robert L Woldman1, Andrew Spiegelman1, Scott A Strassels3, George J Wan4, Thomas Zimmerman5.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The provision of safe, effective, cost-efficient perioperative inpatient acute pain management is an important concern among clinicians and administrators within healthcare institutions. Overreliance on opioid monotherapy in this setting continues to present health risks for patients and increase healthcare costs resulting from preventable adverse events. The goal of this study was to model length of stay (LOS), potential opioid-related complications, and costs for patients reducing opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) for management of postoperative pain.
METHODS: Data for this study were de-identified inpatient encounters from The Advisory Board Company across 297 hospitals from 2012-2014, containing 2,238,433 encounters (IV APAP used in 12.1%). Encounters for adults ≥18 years of age admitted for cardiovascular, colorectal, general, obstetrics and gynecology, orthopedics, or spine surgery were included. The effects of reducing opioids and adding IV APAP were estimated using hierarchical statistical models. Costs were estimated by multiplying modeled reductions in LOS or complication rates by observed average volumes for medium-sized facilities, and by average cost per day or per complication (LOS: US$2383/day; complications: derived from observed charges).
RESULTS: Across all surgery types, LOS showed an average reduction of 18.5% (10.7-32.0%) for the modeled scenario of reducing opioids by one level (high to medium, medium to low, or low to none) and adding IV APAP, with an associated total LOS-related cost savings of $4.5 M. Modeled opioid-related complication rates showed similar improvements, averaging a reduction of 28.7% (5.4-44.0%) with associated cost savings of $0.2 M. In aggregate, costs decreased by an estimated $4.7 M for a medium-sized hospital. The study design demonstrates associations only and cannot establish causal relationships. The cost impact of LOS is modeled based on observed data.
CONCLUSIONS: This investigation indicates that reducing opioid use and including IV APAP for postoperative pain management has the potential to decrease LOS, opioid-related complication rates, and costs from a hospital perspective. FUNDING: Mallinckrodt Pharmaceuticals.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cost; IV APAP; Intravenous acetaminophen; Length of stay; ORADE; Opioid; Opioid-related adverse drug events; Pain; Pharmacoeconomic; Postoperative

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27830448      PMCID: PMC5126194          DOI: 10.1007/s12325-016-0438-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Adv Ther        ISSN: 0741-238X            Impact factor:   3.845


Introduction

The provision of safe, effective, cost-efficient perioperative inpatient acute pain management is an important concern among clinicians and administrators within healthcare institutions. Across a variety of surgeries, 20–55% of patients report at least moderate pain and up to 75% report severe pain during the immediate postoperative period, for a mean duration ranging from 1 to 8 days [1-5]. While readmission rates after a surgical discharge may be low, pain is a common reason for readmission among those returning to the hospital [6]. Additionally, untreated or inadequately treated acute postoperative pain can lead to chronic postsurgical pain [7]. Furthermore, adverse drug events (ADEs) frequently are associated with postoperative pain management regimens. In general, ADEs have long been associated with increased mortality, longer hospital length of stay (LOS), and higher costs of hospitalization [8, 9]. In 2000, the United States (US) Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO), now referred to as the Joint Commission (JC), introduced pain management standards aimed at upholding a patient's right to effective assessment and treatment of pain from admission to discharge [10]. However, the American Medical Association (AMA) has recommended that pain be removed as a “fifth vital sign” due to concerns about opioid over-prescribing, which critics contend could make it more difficult for those in pain to have their pain properly diagnosed and treated. Importantly, pain is a key input into the JC hospital accreditation score and the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) CAHPS® Hospital Survey, and can impact overall hospital reimbursement by the government.

Acute Pain Management Using Opioids

In the US, intravenous (IV) opioid agonists such as morphine, hydromorphone, and fentanyl have traditionally been important analgesics in the treatment of pain in the immediate perioperative and critical care settings [11-13]. In the first half of 2015, over 70% of surgical inpatients and outpatients in the US received opioid monotherapy for acute pain management [14]. Overreliance on opioid monotherapy in the inpatient healthcare setting raises health risks for patients and increases healthcare costs resulting from preventable adverse events. Opioid monotherapy can significantly increase a variety of opioid-related adverse drug events (ORADEs), most commonly nausea, vomiting, urinary retention, fatigue, pruritus, sleep impairment, dizziness, sedation, somnolence, and headache [15]. Less commonly, opioid monotherapy has been associated with ileus [16], respiratory depression [17], falls, and delirium, and in some extreme cases even death [18]. Numerous studies have demonstrated that managing these ORADEs is costly and they are associated with increased LOS [19-22].

Multimodal Analgesia

As an alternative to opioid monotherapy, multimodal analgesia (MMA) captures the effectiveness of individual agents in optimal dosages that maximize efficacy and attempts to minimize side effects from one analgesic [7]. This important concept employs the theory that agents with different mechanisms of analgesia, such as nonopioids (acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs [NSAIDs]), opioids, local anesthetics, and anticonvulsants, may have synergistic effects in preventing or treating acute pain when used in combination [7]. The efficacy of multimodal analgesic regimens continues to improve, with opioid analgesics increasingly taking on the role of rescue analgesics for acute pain [23]. Multimodal analgesia has been shown to reduce ADEs, LOS, readmissions, and costs associated with the use of opioids in multiple surgical populations [24, 25]. Intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) has been used as a component of an MMA strategy to help contribute to reduced costs and improved outcomes. Although not all studies of perioperative use of IV APAP have demonstrated reductions in opioid use and LOS, recent economic impact studies have shown reduced costs associated with IV APAP [26, 27]. These findings are supported by a pharmacoeconomic review of IV APAP, which concluded the body of evidence shows the drug has the potential to improve outcomes and hospital efficiency [28]. Up to an estimated 7% of patients who receive prescription opioids following surgery end up using these medications long-term [29-33], which can result in tolerance, dependence, and addiction [34]. It remains to be demonstrated whether reductions in postoperative opioid consumption associated with IV APAP reduce the risk of inappropriate extended use of opioids. The goal of the current study was to estimate, through the use of statistical modeling, LOS, potential opioid-related complications, and costs for patients reducing opioid use and adding IV APAP for management of postoperative pain.

Methods

Data Source

Data for this retrospective cohort study were derived from de-identified hospital billing and administrative data from the Advisory Board Company. This comprised 2,238,433 inpatient encounters across 297 hospitals from 1 January 2012 through 31 December 2014, with IV APAP identified in 271,394 encounters (12.1%). Hospitals were not segmented by size to derive parameter estimates; however, only medium-sized hospitals (100–399 beds) [35] were selected to determine the number of cases used to model cost impact. Drug utilization (see Table 1 for a list of opioid and non-opioid generic drug names for which data were collected in this study) was identified using hospital charge data for the encounter and is subject to the typical limitations of this approach, such as the potential for coding errors, and charges may not equate to amount of drug administered.
Table 1

Opioid and non-opioid drugs used in study

OpioidsNSAIDsOther non-opioids
AlfentanilAspirinAcetaminophen, injectable
BuprenorphineCelecoxibAcetaminophen, non-injectable
BuorphanolCholine magnesium trisalicylateAlpha-2 agonists (clonidine, dexmedetomidine)
CodeineDiclofenacGapabentinoids (gabapentin, pregabalin)
DihydrocodeineDiflunisalLocal anesthetics, non-topical only (bupivacaine, lidocaine, liposomal bupivacaine, ropivacaine)
FentanylEtodolac
HydrocodoneFenoprofen N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists (ketamine, memantine)
HydromorphoneFlurbiprofen
LevorphanolIbuprofen
MeperidineIndomethacin
MethadoneKetoprofen
MorphineKetorolac
NalbuphineMagnesium salicylate/magnesium salicylate tetrahydrate
Opium
OxymorphoneMeclofenamate sodium
ParegoricMefenamic acid
PentazocineMeloxicam
PropoxypheneNabumetone
RemifentanilNaproxen/naproxen sodium
SufentanilOxaprozin
TapentadolPiroxicam
TramadolSalsalate
Sulindac
Tolmetin

Opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and other non-opioids used in this study are shown by generic name. Combination product names are not shown. Only data on intravenous acetaminophen are presented in this analysis

Opioid and non-opioid drugs used in study Opioids, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and other non-opioids used in this study are shown by generic name. Combination product names are not shown. Only data on intravenous acetaminophen are presented in this analysis

Patient Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria

Encounters for adults ≥18 years of age admitted for cardiovascular, colorectal, general, obstetrics and gynecology (OBGYN), orthopedics, or spine surgery based on the encounters’ All Patient Refined Diagnosis-Related Group (APR-DRG) assignment (Table 2) were included. These six surgical categories represent high-volume procedures that were considered broadly applicable for the purpose of analysis.
Table 2

APR-DRGs used in study

CategoryIncluded APR-DRGs and APR-DRG codes
Cardiovascular

Other vascular procedures (173)

Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with AMI (174)

Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without AMI (175)

ColorectalMajor small and large bowel procedures (221)
General

Appendectomy (225)

Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (263)

OBGYN

Uterine and adnexa procedures for non-malignancy except leiomyoma (513)

Cesarean delivery (540)

Vaginal delivery (560)

Orthopedic

Hip joint replacement(301)

Knee joint replacement (302)

Hip and femur procedures for trauma except joint replacement (308)

Knee and lower leg procedures except foot (313)

Shoulder, upper arm and forearm procedures (315)

SpineDorsal and lumbar fusion procedure except for curvature of back (304), intervertebral disc excision and decompression (310), cervical spinal fusion and other back/neck procedures excluding disc excision and decompression (321)

All Patients Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (APR-DRGs) by category and code used in this study are shown

AMI Acute myocardial infarction

APR-DRGs used in study Other vascular procedures (173) Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures with AMI (174) Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without AMI (175) Appendectomy (225) Laparoscopic cholecystectomy (263) Uterine and adnexa procedures for non-malignancy except leiomyoma (513) Cesarean delivery (540) Vaginal delivery (560) Hip joint replacement(301) Knee joint replacement (302) Hip and femur procedures for trauma except joint replacement (308) Knee and lower leg procedures except foot (313) Shoulder, upper arm and forearm procedures (315) All Patients Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (APR-DRGs) by category and code used in this study are shown AMI Acute myocardial infarction Only data from acute care facilities with data available throughout the study period and having sufficient data quality to identify drugs were included. Encounters with invalid age, gender, or severity, without diagnoses, without drug utilization, with mortalities or with discharge to hospice were excluded. LOS outliers were not removed from the analysis.

Definition of Complications

Potential ORADEs related to respiratory, gastrointestinal, central nervous system, urinary, and other events were defined using International Classification of Disease-9th Revision-Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes [20].

Modeling and Analytical Approach

There were two phases of modeling conducted in the study. The first phase was to determine parameter estimates, which describe the impact to LOS or complication rate based on drug utilization. The second was to employ those parameter estimates to model a specific treatment change and the downstream impact of that treatment change on LOS, complication rate, and costs. Because the data in this study were modeled, measures of central tendency and statistical tests of differences are not available. The effects of reducing opioid use and adding IV APAP were estimated using hierarchical statistical models in Statistical Analysis Software (SAS®) 9.4. Independent variables analyzed were opioid use [none (no use)/low (1–3 estimated doses for 1 or 2 days)/medium (4–8 estimated doses or 3 days’ use)/high (more than 8 estimated doses or greater than 3 days’ use)], non-opioid use (none/low/medium/high) and IV APAP use (none/used). Covariates were age, gender, Elixhauser comorbidity index, APR-DRG severity level, and admission type. Stratified cluster sampling was conducted within each APR-DRG (sample size ~15,000, with sample weights used to adjust for percent of each hospital encounter selected), and multiple replication studies were conducted to ensure robust results. Statistical modeling was used to determine parameter estimates for LOS and complications. Observed average LOS plus cost and charge data were used along with the parameter estimates to develop per-episode and per-facility cost impact estimates. Cost impact estimates were generated by multiplying modeled reductions in LOS or complication rates by observed average volumes [facilities designated American Hospital Association (AHA) 100–399 beds], and by average cost per day of LOS or per complication [LOS: US$2383/day (national benchmark from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project, HCUP, 2013), complications: derived from observed charges] (Tables 3, 4).
Table 3

Sample calculations: LOS results (reducing one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP)

Variables
 CNT = Observed average annual number of cases for medium-sized facilities (AHA, 100–399 beds)
 cCNT = Observed average annual number of cases for medium-sized facilities (AHA, 100–399 beds) for all APR-DRG in the category
 ALOS = Observed average length of stay in days for the APR-DRG
 cALOS = Calculated average length of stay in days for the category
 ALOSop = Calculated average length of stay for reducing one level of Opioid use
 ALOSiv = Calculated average length of stay for reducing one level of Opioid use and adding IV APAP
 cALOSiv = Calculated average length of stay for reducing one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP for the category
 Bop = Opioid regression parameter
 Biv = IV APAP regression parameter
 Cost per day of LOS (2013 HCUP): $2383
APR-DRG level
 ALOSop = ALOS − (Bop × ALOS) and ALOSiv = ALOSop + (Biv × ALOSop)
 Calculated LOS reduction = ALOS − ALOSiv
 % change of LOS reduction = (ALOS − ALOSiv)/ALOS
 Calculated per episode LOS cost savings = (ALOS − ALOSiv) × $2383
 Calculated annual LOS cost savings (average medium-sized facility) = (ALOS − ALOSiv) × $2383 × CNT
Category level
 cCNT = S(CNT) and cALOS = S(ALOS × CNT)/cCNT
 ALOSop = ALOS − (Bop × ALOS) and ALOSiv = ALOSop + (Biv × ALOSop)
 cALOSiv = S(ALOSiv × CNT)/cCNT
 Calculated LOS reduction for the category, rounded = cALOS − cALOSiv
 % change of LOS reduction for the category, rounded = (cALOS − cALOSvi)/cALOS
 Calculated annual LOS cost savings (average medium-sized facility), rounded = (cALOS − cALOSiv) × $2383 × cCNT

Sample calculation methods used to model length of stay (LOS) results by reducing one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown

Table 4

Sample calculations: complications results (reducing one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP)

Variables
 CNT = Observed average annual number of cases for medium-sized facilities (AHA, 100–399 beds)
 cCNT = Observed average annual number of cases for medium-sized facilities (AHA, 100–399 beds) for all APR-DRG in the category
 ACR = Observed average complication rate
 cACR = Calculated average complication rate for the category
 ACRop = Calculated average complication rate for reducing one level of Opioid use
 ACRiv = Calculated average complication rate for reducing one level of Opioid use and adding IV APAP
 cACRiv = Calculated average complication rate for reducing one level of Opioid use and adding IV APAP for the category
 Bop = Opioid regression parameter Biv = IV APAP regression parameter
 CCR = Typical cost-to-charge-ratio = 0.2
 CPC = Observed average charge increase per complication
 cCPC = Observed average charge increase per complication for the category
 CST = Charge-derived cost increase per complication c
 CST = Charge-derived cost increase per complication for the category
APR-DRG level
 ACRop = ACR − (Bop × ACR) and ACRiv = ACRop + (Biv × ACRop)
 Calculated complication rate reduction = ACR − ACRiv
 % change of complication rate reduction = (ACR − ACRiv)/ACR
 CST = CPC × CCR
 Reduction in complications = (ACR − ACRiv) × CNT
 Calculated annual complication reduction cost savings (average medium-sized facility) = (ACR − ACRiv) × CNT × CST
Category level
 cCNT = S(CNT) and cACR = S(ACR × CNT)/cCNT
 ACRop = ACR − (Bop × ACR) and ACRiv = ACRop + (Biv × ACRop)
 cACRiv = S(ACRiv × CNT)/cCNT
 Calculated complication rate reduction = cACR − cACRiv
 % change of complication rate reduction = (cACR − cACRiv)/cACR
 CST = CPC × CCR
 cCPC = S(CPC × CNT)/cCNT
 cCST = S(CST × CNT)/cCNT
 Reduction in complications = (cACR − cACRiv) × cCNT
 Calculated annual complication reduction cost savings (average medium-sized facility) = (cACR − cACRiv) × cCNT × cCST

Sample calculation methods used to model complication results by reducing one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown

Sample calculations: LOS results (reducing one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP) Sample calculation methods used to model length of stay (LOS) results by reducing one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown Sample calculations: complications results (reducing one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP) Sample calculation methods used to model complication results by reducing one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown

Details of the Regression Modeling

Hierarchical regressions were performed on random samples of n = 15,000 from the full sample (n = 2,238,443). Specifically, separate regressions were performed for each APR-DRG (17 total) and each of those regressions had a random sample of n = 15,000 from the given APR-DRG. These regressions were replicated with additional n = 15,000 samples to verify robustness of results and mitigate concerns about multiple comparisons. The levels used in hierarchical modeling were “facility” and “attending physician,” with individual hospitalizations within those two levels. The first outcome of interest was LOS in days, which was modeled using hierarchical linear regression on its natural logarithm. The second outcome of interest was complications, which were grouped into six binary variables based on the ICD-9-coded categories (respiratory, urinary, central nervous system, GI, general, and related) and modeled each using hierarchical logistic regression. As predictors, the following were included: Opioids (ordinal, 0/1/2/3), non-opioids (ordinal, 0/1/2/3), IV APAP (binary, 0/1), patient gender, Elixhauser comorbidity score (continuous, 1–15, although it can theoretically be as high as 31), patient age, APR-DRG severity level (ordinal, 1–4), ICD-9-coded complications (binary, 0/1), admission type (categorical: “emergency,” “urgent,” “elective,” “other”), and interactions between Elixhauser and each of (age, admission type, APR-DRG severity, and complications). Note that complications were predictors only in the LOS outcome models, and not in the complications outcome models. This article does not contain any new studies with human or animal subjects performed by any of the authors.

Results

Overall

To put the impact of the LOS and complication rate reductions in context, the potential impact was modeled for a hypothetical medium-sized hospital. In aggregate, including both LOS- and complications-related reductions, annual costs for a medium-sized hospital were modeled to decrease by an estimated $4.7 M by reducing opioid use and adding IV APAP for postoperative pain management in patients undergoing cardiovascular, colorectal, general, OBGYN, orthopedic, or spine surgery. Cost savings were driven by reductions in LOS and complication rates; the cost of IV APAP was not included in the analyses. A subgroup analysis was performed on outlier LOS, which demonstrated no overall impact on results.

Length of Stay

Across all surgery types, LOS showed an average of 18.5%/1898.85 cumulative total days reduction at the category level (categories ranging from 10.7%/456.17 total days to 32.0%/161.12 total days) for the modeled scenario of reducing opioid use by one level (high to medium, medium to low, or low to none) and replacing it with IV APAP, with an associated total LOS-related annual cost savings of $4.5 M (Table 5). For example, the calculated annual impact for a medium-sized facility (admissions × LOS reductions × HCUP 2013 $2383 cost per day of LOS) for the cardiovascular category overall (see first row in Table 5) is 276 × 1.01 × 2383 = $660,000 (rounded). Of note, the absence of P values and confidence intervals in Table 5 and Table 6 was due to derivation of cost savings estimates from a mix of nationally published reference costs and admission volumes, in addition to the parameter estimates from analysis of the observed data.
Table 5

LOS and annual LOS-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP

CategoryAPR-DRG descriptionEstimated avg. admissions for a medium-sized facilityObserved avg. LOSa Calculated LOS after dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAPCalculated LOS reduction for dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP% change in LOSCalculated annual impact for a medium-sized facilityb
CardiovascularTotal2764.013.001.0125.2$660,000
Other vascular735.573.961.6128.9$280,000
Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures w/o AMI853.392.800.5917.4$120,000
Percutaneous cardiovascular w/AMI1183.492.550.9426.9$260,000
ColorectalTotal1098.346.461.8822.5$480,000
Bowel procedures1098.346.461.8822.5$480,000
GeneralTotal1523.312.251.0632.0$380,000
Appendectomy542.681.960.7226.9$100,000
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy983.672.411.2634.3$300,000
OBGYNTotal15732.702.410.2910.7$1080.000
Cesarean delivery5283.553.070.4813.5$600,000
Uterine and adnexa procedures for non-malignancy except leiomyoma592.231.670.5625.1$80,000
Vaginal delivery9862.272.100.177.5$400,000
SpineTotal2463.132.170.9630.7$560,000c
Cervical spinal fusion and other back/neck proc exc disc excis/decomp802.431.860.5723.5$100,000
Dorsal and lumbar fusion proc except for curvature of back1083.682.411.2734.5$320,000
Intervertebral disc excision and decompression583.072.140.9330.3$120,000
OrthopedicTotal6043.512.580.9326.5$1,340,000c
Hip and femur procedures for trauma except joint replacement745.374.351.0219.0$180,000
Hip joint replacement1743.482.580.9025.9$380,000
Knee and lower leg procedures504.312.631.6839.0$200,000
Knee replacement2562.952.180.7726.1$460,000
Shoulder upper arm and forearm procedures502.892.010.8830.4$100,000

Modeled results for length of stay (LOS) and annual LOS-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown. P values and confidence intervals were not calculated

aMean of all cases

bValues are rounded to the nearest $20,000

cAPR-DRG values for this category just miss the rounding cut-off, causing a $20,000 gap between their sum and the category-level value

Table 6

Complication reductions and annual complications-related cost savings after dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP

CategoryAPR-DRG descriptionEstimated avg. admissions for a medium-sized facilityObserved avg. complication rateCalculated complication rateCalculated complication rate reduction% change in complication rateReduction in complications (N)Observed avg. charge per complicationCharge-derived costs per complicationCalculated annual impact for a medium-sized facilitya
CardiovascularTotal2760.0560.0530.0035.40.83$59,932$11,986$10,000
Other vascular730.0820.0590.02328.01.68$64,502$12,900$20,000
Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures w/o AMI850.0460.066−0.020−43.5−1.70$68,407$13,681$(20,000)
Percutaneous cardiovascular w/AMI1180.0460.0400.00613.00.71$50,988$10,198$10,000
ColorectalTotal1090.2670.2140.05319.95.78$55,130$11,026$60,000
Bowel procedures1090.2670.2140.05319.95.78$55,130$11,026$60,000
GeneralTotal1520.0830.0570.02631.33.95$28,446$5689$20,000
Appendectomy540.0950.0640.03132.61.67$25,046$5009$10,000
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy980.0770.0530.02431.22.35$30,325$6065$10,000
OBGYNTotal15730.0080.0050.00337.54.72$12,877$2575$10,000
Cesarean delivery5280.0130.0070.00646.23.17$22,085$4417$10,000
Uterine and adnexa procedures for non-malignancy except leiomyoma590.0600.0330.02745.01.59$20,571$4114$<10,000
Vaginal delivery9860.0020.0020.0000.0$7481$1496$–
SpineTotal2460.0840.0470.03744.09.10$36,754$7351$70,000
Cervical spinal fusion and other back/neck proc exc disc excis/decomp800.0580.0360.02237.91.76$44,076$8815$20,000
Dorsal and lumbar fusion proc except for curvature of back1080.1110.0590.05246.85.62$41,129$8226$50,000
Intervertebral disc excision and decompression580.0710.0410.03042.31.74$18,465$3693$<10,000
OrthopedicTotal6040.0820.0730.00911.05.44$14,857$2971$20,000
Hip and femur procedures for trauma except joint replacement740.1350.1210.01410.41.04$19,357$3871$<10,000
Hip joint replacement1740.0890.0790.01011.21.74$15,396$3079$<10,000
Knee and lower leg procedures500.0570.0450.01221.10.60$31,108$6222$<10,000
Knee replacement2560.0720.0660.0068.31.54$8934$1787$<10,000
Shoulder upper arm and forearm procedures500.0620.0450.01727.40.85$20,287$4057$<10,000

Modeled results for complications and annual complications-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown. P values and confidence intervals were not calculated

aValues ≥$7000 are rounded to the nearest $10,000; values <$7000 are indicated by the notation “<$10,000”

LOS and annual LOS-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP Modeled results for length of stay (LOS) and annual LOS-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown. P values and confidence intervals were not calculated aMean of all cases bValues are rounded to the nearest $20,000 cAPR-DRG values for this category just miss the rounding cut-off, causing a $20,000 gap between their sum and the category-level value Complication reductions and annual complications-related cost savings after dropping one level of opioid use and adding IV APAP Modeled results for complications and annual complications-related costs after dropping one level of opioid use and adding intravenous acetaminophen (IV APAP) are shown. P values and confidence intervals were not calculated aValues ≥$7000 are rounded to the nearest $10,000; values <$7000 are indicated by the notation “<$10,000” At the category level, general surgery showed the largest percentage reduction in LOS (32.0%/total 161.12 days), while orthopedics, with much larger average case volume, showed the largest LOS-related cost reduction ($1,340,000). OBGYN showed the lowest percentage reduction in LOS (10.7%/456.17 total days) (Table 5). At the APR-DRG level, knee and lower leg procedures showed the largest percentage reduction in LOS (39.0%/84.00 total days), closely followed by dorsal and lumbar fusion (34.5%/137.16 total days) and laparoscopic cholecystectomy (34.3%/123.48 total days), while cesarean delivery, with much larger average case volume, showed the largest LOS-related cost reduction ($600,000), despite having a low percentage reduction in LOS (13.5%/253.44 total days). Vaginal delivery showed the lowest percentage reduction in LOS (7.5%/167.62 total days), while uterine and adnexa procedures, with lower average case volume, showed the smallest LOS-related cost reduction ($80,000) (Table 5).

Potential Opioid-Related Complications

Reducing opioid use and adding IV APAP resulted in a reduction in the modeled opioid complication rate by an average of 28.7% (range 5.4–44.0%), with associated complications-related annual cost savings of $0.2 M (Table 6). At the category level, spine showed the largest percentage reduction in complications (44.0%) and the largest complications rate-related cost reduction ($70,000). The cardiovascular category showed the smallest percentage reduction in complications (5.4%) and the smallest complications-related cost savings ($10,000), along with the OBGYN category (Table 6). At the APR-DRG level, dorsal and lumbar spinal fusion showed the largest percentage reduction in complications (46.8%), while bowel procedures showed the largest complications-related cost reduction ($60,000). Percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without acute myocardial infarction (AMI) showed the lowest percentage reduction in complication rate (−43.5%), as well as the lowest complications-related cost reduction ($20,000)—indicating that opioid reduction was modeled to have an adverse impact on complication rates for procedures in this APR-DRG. However, for the other 16 APR-DRGs, opioid reduction was modeled to have a positive impact on reducing complication rates for those procedures (Table 6).

Discussion

While opioid therapy is a fundamental component of postoperative pain management, the risk of ADEs and negative patient outcomes pose significant safety concerns [36]. Increasingly, a multimodal approach to pain management is being used as a way to decrease postoperative opioid reliance but still provide optimal pain control [37]. Because of reduced opioid doses used, this new approach to pain management may decrease the risk of ORADEs [24, 38] and associated health care costs [25, 38]. Recent pain guidelines for critically ill patients suggest this approach to avoid ADEs [12]. Since hospitals and outpatient clinics strive to provide care in an efficient and cost-effective manner to survive in the current budget-conscious healthcare climate, a major issue is providing balanced pain management while using the lowest effective dose of opioids. In particular, HCAHPS scores are tied to reimbursement, and two questions relate to pain management [39]. Prior studies have demonstrated postoperative use of IV APAP reduces opioid consumption. In the pivotal US study of IV APAP for acute pain management, IV APAP was associated with a 46% reduction over the first 6 h and 33% reduction (vs. placebo) in total morphine consumption in the first 24 h following surgery [40]. Other randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have shown reductions in opioid consumption up to 78% [e.g., 41–45]. Taken together, results from prior studies [46-48] and the current analysis suggest a positive impact on overall hospital costs associated with reducing opioid consumption and adding IV APAP. Accordingly, IV APAP may be recommended as a standard of care in MMA regimens for postoperative pain management to reduce reliance on opioid monotherapy. In RCTs, postoperative use of IV APAP has been associated with a shorter average LOS (0.4–1.5 days) relative to placebo or active controls [41, 45, 49]. In addition, a retrospective cohort study of case-matched patients who underwent total hip or knee replacement surgery [38], IV APAP used as part of an MMA strategy was associated with improved clinical outcomes in terms of fewer overall adverse events, shortened LOS, and reduced total hospital resources. A total of 22,146 cases and controls were similar in terms of age, race, sex, marital status, insurance status, and preoperative comorbidities. Overall adverse events were significantly lower with IV APAP (24.3%) than with controls (26.3%, P < 0.001), numerically less frequent in all subgroups, and significantly less frequent for renal, infectious, and miscellaneous adverse events (all P < 0.05). Also, IV APAP was associated with a shorter LOS, with 1 out of 11 patients discharged 1 day earlier (P < 0.001) and lower average hospital costs: $16,381 for cases compared with $16,927 for controls (P < 0.001). Cost savings estimated by structural equation modeling of $547 per patient were due to $325 from direct effects and $222 from indirect effects, the latter mediated through adverse events and reduced LOS. In the current study, the largest percentage reduction in LOS and opioid-related complications, seen in the spine category, may represent a greater benefit of adding IV APAP in more painful procedures. Specifically, spine surgery and other painful procedures generally require higher doses and/or more frequent administration of pain medications, with opioids used predominantly. Reducing the use of opioids in these patients by using IV APAP as part of an MMA strategy [50, 51] can reduce ORADE incidence and LOS [47, 52] while also reducing hospitalization costs [47]. In summary, the purpose of this study was to model the impact of reducing postoperative opioid use by implementing an MMA approach utilizing IV APAP. This investigation indicates that reducing opioid use and including IV APAP during treatment can contribute to decreased LOS, opioid-related complication rates, and costs from a hospital perspective. A subsequent sensitivity analysis restricting the data to the 24-h postoperative period was utilized to serve as an estimate of “perioperative” use on outcome measures. Results from this sensitivity analysis were similar to the current analysis.

Limitations of the Study

Although the authors consider the results of the current study to be valid, certain methodological procedures were not feasible to perform that would have enhanced rigor. Specifically, propensity scores or any other kind of pre-analysis matching data treatments were not used. In addition, study constraints precluded matching. Opioid and non-opioid drug doses were categorized according to charge data, which has limited precision in regards to quantity/doses of drug a patient received. Therefore, ordinal bucketed categories were used instead of continuous measures. Estimated dosing was based on quantities charged, which is not a consistent representation of actual dosing. Out-of-range quantities were adjusted based on assumptions of use of mg/mL as charge quantities rather than dose quantity. Use of IV APAP was coded as a binary yes/no. Due to study constraints, as with opioid and non-opioid cases, a finer measure could not be used. As listed in the regression details, some interactions were included whereas others were not. Optimally, the many dozens of different kinds of interactions between all our variables would have been examined, but, due to the large number of models involved in this study (17 APR-DRGs across 2 outcomes equals 34 models of interest), it was unfeasible to produce highly customized models for each case. The limitations noted here raise the question whether all of the different modeling decisions made put the analysis at risk of implicit multiple comparisons problems [53, 54]. While the data were not modeled in all of the variations desired, an attempt was made to mitigate the multiple concern by replicating regression results with new samples, as mentioned above. The replications performed also confirmed the findings of this analysis.

Future Research Considerations

Although the current study collected data on non-opioid pain medications in addition to IV APAP, analysis of these data was beyond the scope of the current study and may warrant future analysis and reporting. Additional work to better understand the impact of opioid reduction on percutaneous cardiovascular procedures without AMI may be of interest. Also, analysis of specific MMA approaches to identify the APR-DRGs for which they appear to provide the most benefit with respect to decreased LOS, opioid-related complication rates, and overall hospital costs may be warranted.

Conclusions

Prevention of ORADES rather than treatment of ADEs is a more effective strategy for hospitals, given the large economic burden and negative impact on patient outcomes associated with these events. A multimodal approach is a growing strategy to minimize the frequency of ORADEs as well as associated costs. This investigation indicates that reducing opioid use and including IV APAP for postoperative pain management has the potential to decrease LOS, opioid-related complication rates, and costs from a hospital perspective.
  45 in total

Review 1.  Intravenous acetaminophen: a review of pharmacoeconomic science for perioperative use.

Authors:  Jonathan S Jahr; Peter Filocamo; Sumit Singh
Journal:  Am J Ther       Date:  2013 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.688

2.  Early adjuvant use of nonopioids associated with reduced odds of serious postoperative opioid adverse events and need for rescue in children.

Authors:  Terri Voepel-Lewis; Deborah Wagner; Constance Burke; Alan R Tait; Jennifer Hemberg; Elsa Pechlivanidis; Shobha Malviya; Akkeneel Talsma
Journal:  Paediatr Anaesth       Date:  2012-09-15       Impact factor: 2.556

3.  Long-term analgesic use after low-risk surgery: a retrospective cohort study.

Authors:  Asim Alam; Tara Gomes; Hong Zheng; Muhammad M Mamdani; David N Juurlink; Chaim M Bell
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  2012-03-12

Review 4.  Management of common opioid-induced adverse effects.

Authors:  John M Swegle; Craig Logemann
Journal:  Am Fam Physician       Date:  2006-10-15       Impact factor: 3.292

5.  Intravenous paracetamol is highly effective in pain treatment after tonsillectomy in adults.

Authors:  Ahmed Atef; Ahmed Aly Fawaz
Journal:  Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol       Date:  2007-09-22       Impact factor: 2.503

6.  A comprehensive multimodal pain treatment reduces opioid consumption after multilevel spine surgery.

Authors:  Ole Mathiesen; Benny Dahl; Berit A Thomsen; Birgitte Kitter; Nan Sonne; Jørgen B Dahl; Henrik Kehlet
Journal:  Eur Spine J       Date:  2013-05-17       Impact factor: 3.134

Review 7.  Clinical practice guidelines for the management of pain, agitation, and delirium in adult patients in the intensive care unit.

Authors:  Juliana Barr; Gilles L Fraser; Kathleen Puntillo; E Wesley Ely; Céline Gélinas; Joseph F Dasta; Judy E Davidson; John W Devlin; John P Kress; Aaron M Joffe; Douglas B Coursin; Daniel L Herr; Avery Tung; Bryce R H Robinson; Dorrie K Fontaine; Michael A Ramsay; Richard R Riker; Curtis N Sessler; Brenda Pun; Yoanna Skrobik; Roman Jaeschke
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 7.598

8.  Effect of opioid-related adverse events on outcomes in selected surgical patients.

Authors:  Gary M Oderda; Tong J Gan; Bernadette H Johnson; Scott B Robinson
Journal:  J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother       Date:  2013-01-09

9.  Relationship between potential opioid-related adverse effects and hospital length of stay in patients receiving opioids after orthopedic surgery.

Authors:  Laura T Pizzi; Richard Toner; Kathleen Foley; Erin Thomson; Wing Chow; Myoung Kim; Joseph Couto; Marc Royo; Eugene Viscusi
Journal:  Pharmacotherapy       Date:  2012-05-08       Impact factor: 4.705

Review 10.  Respiratory and haemodynamic effects of acute postoperative pain management: evidence from published data.

Authors:  J N Cashman; S J Dolin
Journal:  Br J Anaesth       Date:  2004-05-28       Impact factor: 9.166

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1.  A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Intravenous Acetaminophen on Hospital Length of Stay in Obese Individuals Undergoing Sleeve Gastrectomy.

Authors:  Farrell E Cooke; Jon D Samuels; Alfons Pomp; Farida Gadalla; Xian Wu; Cheguevara Afaneh; Gregory F Dakin; Peter A Goldstein
Journal:  Obes Surg       Date:  2018-10       Impact factor: 4.129

Review 2.  American Society for Enhanced Recovery and Perioperative Quality Initiative Joint Consensus Statement on Perioperative Opioid Minimization in Opioid-Naïve Patients.

Authors:  Christopher L Wu; Adam B King; Timothy M Geiger; Michael C Grant; Michael P W Grocott; Ruchir Gupta; Jennifer M Hah; Timothy E Miller; Andrew D Shaw; Tong J Gan; Julie K M Thacker; Michael G Mythen; Matthew D McEvoy
Journal:  Anesth Analg       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 5.108

3.  Budget Impact and Cost-Effectiveness of Intravenous Meloxicam to Treat Moderate-Severe Postoperative Pain.

Authors:  John A Carter; Libby K Black; Kathleen L Deering; Jonathan S Jahr
Journal:  Adv Ther       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 4.070

4.  Cost-effectiveness of intravenous acetaminophen and ketorolac in adolescents undergoing idiopathic scoliosis surgery.

Authors:  Vidya Chidambaran; Rajeev Subramanyam; Lili Ding; Senthilkumar Sadhasivam; Kristie Geisler; Bobbie Stubbeman; Peter Sturm; Viral Jain; Mark H Eckman
Journal:  Paediatr Anaesth       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 2.556

5.  The impact of intravenous acetaminophen pricing on opioid utilization and outcomes for children with appendicitis.

Authors:  Elaa M Mahdi; Shadassa Ourshalimian; David Darcy; Christopher J Russell; Lorraine I Kelley-Quon
Journal:  Surgery       Date:  2021-05-10       Impact factor: 4.348

6.  Improved Outcomes Associated With the Use of Intravenous Acetaminophen for Management of Acute Post-Surgical Pain in Cesarean Sections and Hysterectomies.

Authors:  Richard D Urman; Elaine A Boing; An T Pham; Victor Khangulov; Randi Fain; Brian H Nathanson; Xuan Zhang; George J Wan; Belinda Lovelace; Jessica Cirillo
Journal:  J Clin Med Res       Date:  2018-04-13

7.  Reduced length of stay and hospitalization costs among inpatient hysterectomy patients with postoperative pain management including IV versus oral acetaminophen.

Authors:  Ryan N Hansen; An T Pham; Elaine A Boing; Belinda Lovelace; George J Wan; Richard D Urman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-09-13       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 8.  Opioid free anesthesia: feasible?

Authors:  Pamela A Chia; Maxime Cannesson; Christine C Myo Bui
Journal:  Curr Opin Anaesthesiol       Date:  2020-08       Impact factor: 2.733

9.  Hospitalization Costs for Patients Undergoing Orthopedic Surgery Treated With Intravenous Acetaminophen (IV-APAP) Plus Other IV Analgesics or IV Opioid Monotherapy for Postoperative Pain.

Authors:  Brett A Maiese; An T Pham; Manasee V Shah; Michael T Eaddy; Orsolya E Lunacsek; George J Wan
Journal:  Adv Ther       Date:  2016-12-10       Impact factor: 3.845

10.  Efficacy of Intravenous Acetaminophen in Length of Stay and Postoperative Pain Control in Laparoscopic Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery Patients.

Authors:  Matthew Lange; Christina W Lee; Tara Knisely; Subbaiah Perla; Kimberly Barber; Michael Kia
Journal:  Bariatr Surg Pract Patient Care       Date:  2018-09-01       Impact factor: 0.607

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