Mark Henry1. 1. Hand & Wrist Center of Houston, TX, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prescription opioids threaten potential addiction, diversion, and death. Nonopioid regimens have demonstrated similar efficacy for select upper extremity postoperative patients. METHODS: After adopting a practice policy completely abolishing opioid prescriptions, data were collected on all consecutive surgical cases for the next 6 months, without exclusion. There were 800 cases, 61% male and 39% female, with a mean age of 45. Seventy patients (9%) reported already using prescription medications employed in multimodality regimens; no instruction was given to alter consumption. Patients were divided into 5 groups based on the type of surgery: elective soft tissue (24%), trauma wound management (19%), soft tissue structural repairs (9%), hand fracture/bone procedures (34%), and wrist to elbow fracture/bone procedures (14%). Each group was compared directly to each other group with a 2-tailed t-test, P < .05. RESULTS: Patients reported achieving pain control without the need for further medication assistance by a mean of postoperative day 2.7. Times to pain control by group were as follows: 1.5, 3.1, 2.7, 2.9, and 3.6 days respectively. Mean postoperative daily pain scores (using a 10-point visual analog scale) for days 1 to 5 were as follows: 2.8, 2.1, 1.5, 1.0, and 0.6, respectively, with a sum of 8.0. During the 6-month tracking period, the practice only received 4 calls from patients with questions about pain control (0.5% of cases). CONCLUSIONS: Patients achieved good immediate pain control without opioids and reported rapidly declining pain levels over the next several days to the point of no longer requiring medication. TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prospective cohort case series, therapeutic; Level IV.
BACKGROUND: Prescription opioids threaten potential addiction, diversion, and death. Nonopioid regimens have demonstrated similar efficacy for select upper extremity postoperative patients. METHODS: After adopting a practice policy completely abolishing opioid prescriptions, data were collected on all consecutive surgical cases for the next 6 months, without exclusion. There were 800 cases, 61% male and 39% female, with a mean age of 45. Seventy patients (9%) reported already using prescription medications employed in multimodality regimens; no instruction was given to alter consumption. Patients were divided into 5 groups based on the type of surgery: elective soft tissue (24%), trauma wound management (19%), soft tissue structural repairs (9%), hand fracture/bone procedures (34%), and wrist to elbow fracture/bone procedures (14%). Each group was compared directly to each other group with a 2-tailed t-test, P < .05. RESULTS: Patients reported achieving pain control without the need for further medication assistance by a mean of postoperative day 2.7. Times to pain control by group were as follows: 1.5, 3.1, 2.7, 2.9, and 3.6 days respectively. Mean postoperative daily pain scores (using a 10-point visual analog scale) for days 1 to 5 were as follows: 2.8, 2.1, 1.5, 1.0, and 0.6, respectively, with a sum of 8.0. During the 6-month tracking period, the practice only received 4 calls from patients with questions about pain control (0.5% of cases). CONCLUSIONS: Patients achieved good immediate pain control without opioids and reported rapidly declining pain levels over the next several days to the point of no longer requiring medication. TYPE OF STUDY/LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Prospective cohort case series, therapeutic; Level IV.
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