Literature DB >> 34414800

Perioperative Factors Associated With Chronic Opioid Use After Spine Surgery.

Eric Y Montgomery1, Mark N Pernik1, Zachary D Johnson1, Luke J Dosselman1, Zachary K Christian1, Palvasha R Deme1, Emmanuel A Adeyemo1, Umaru Barrie1, Olatunde Badejo1, Nick A Stewart1, Ruta Uttarkar1, Owoicho Adogwa1, Najib El Tecle2, Salah G Aoun1, Carlos A Bagley1,3.   

Abstract

STUDY
DESIGN: Retrospective case control.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of the current study is to determine risk factors associated with chronic opioid use after spine surgery.
METHODS: In our single institution retrospective study, 1,299 patients undergoing elective spine surgery at a tertiary academic medical center between January 2010 and August 2017 were enrolled into a prospectively collected registry. Patients were dichotomized based on renewal of, or active opioid prescription at 3-mo and 12-mo postoperatively. The primary outcome measures were risk factors for opioid renewal 3-months and 12-months postoperatively. These primarily included demographic characteristics, operative variables, and in-hospital opioid consumption via morphine milligram equivalence (MME). At the 3-month and 12-month periods, we analyzed the aforementioned covariates with multivariate followed by bivariate regression analyses.
RESULTS: Multivariate and bivariate analyses revealed that script renewal at 3 months was associated with black race (P = 0.001), preoperative narcotic (P < 0.001) or anxiety/depression medication use (P = 0.002), and intraoperative long lumbar (P < 0.001) or thoracic spine surgery (P < 0.001). Lower patient income was also a risk factor for script renewal (P = 0.01). Script renewal at 12 months was associated with younger age (P = 0.006), preoperative narcotics use (P = 0.001), and ≥4 levels of lumbar fusion (P < 0.001). Renewals at 3-mo and 12-mo had no association with MME given during the hospital stay or with the usage of PCA (P > 0.05).
CONCLUSION: The current study describes multiple patient-level factors associated with chronic opioid use. Notably, no metric of perioperative opioid utilization was directly associated with chronic opioid use after multivariate analysis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  addiction; chronic pain; narcotic renewal; opioid use; postoperative narcotic; spine surgery

Year:  2021        PMID: 34414800     DOI: 10.1177/21925682211035723

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Global Spine J        ISSN: 2192-5682


  2 in total

1.  Lower Extremity Osteoarthritis: A Risk Factor for Mental Health Disorders, Prolonged Opioid Use, and Increased Resource Utilization After Single-Level Lumbar Spinal Fusion.

Authors:  Justin J Turcotte; Paul J King; Chad M Patton
Journal:  J Am Acad Orthop Surg Glob Res Rev       Date:  2022-03-17

Review 2.  Management of Postoperative Pain in Patients Following Spine Surgery: A Narrative Review.

Authors:  Nitin K Prabhakar; Andrea L Chadwick; Chinwe Nwaneshiudu; Anuj Aggarwal; Vafi Salmasi; Theresa R Lii; Jennifer M Hah
Journal:  Int J Gen Med       Date:  2022-05-02
  2 in total

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