Nguyen Long-Co L, Sing David C, Bozic Kevin J
University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California.
Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas.
J Arthroplasty. 2016 Sep;31(9 Suppl):282-7. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2016.01.068. Epub 2016 Mar 17.
The purpose of this study was to assess whether weaning of opioid use in the preoperative period improved total joint arthroplasty (TJA) outcomes.
Forty-one patients who regularly used opioids and successfully weaned (defined as a 50% reduction in morphine-equivalent dose) before a primary total knee or hip arthroplasty were matched with a group of TJA patients who did not wean and a matched control group of TJA patients who did not use opioids preoperatively. The difference between preoperative and postoperative (at 6-12 months follow-up) patient-reported outcomes were assessed using the change in University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) activity score, SF12v2, and The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC). Paired t tests and 1-way repeated measures analysis of variance were performed to assess differences in TJA outcomes between groups.
Patients using opioids who successfully weaned had greater improvements in both disease-specific and generic measures of health outcomes than patients who did not wean (WOMAC 43.7 vs 17.8, P < .001; SF12v2 Physical Component Score 10.5 vs 1.85, P = .003; UCLA activity score 1.49 vs 0, P < .001). There was no statistical difference between the 2 groups on SF12v2 Mental Component Score 2.48 vs 4.21, P = .409. Patients who successfully weaned from opioids had similar outcomes to control patients who did not use opioids: WOMAC 39.0 vs 43.7, P = .31; SF12v2 Physical Component Score 12.5 vs 10.5, P = .35; SF12v2 Mental Component Score 3.08 vs 2.48, P = .82; UCLA activity 1.90 vs 1.49, P = .23.
Patients with a history of chronic opioid use who successfully decreased their use of opioids before surgery had substantially improved clinical outcomes that were comparable to patients who did not use opioids at all.
本研究的目的是评估术前停用阿片类药物是否能改善全关节置换术(TJA)的疗效。
41例在初次全膝关节或髋关节置换术前定期使用阿片类药物且成功戒断(定义为吗啡当量剂量减少50%)的患者与一组未戒断的TJA患者以及一组术前未使用阿片类药物的匹配TJA对照组患者进行匹配。使用加利福尼亚大学洛杉矶分校(UCLA)活动评分、SF12v2和西安大略和麦克马斯特大学关节炎指数(WOMAC)的变化评估术前和术后(6至12个月随访)患者报告的结局差异。进行配对t检验和单因素重复测量方差分析以评估各组之间TJA结局的差异。
成功戒断阿片类药物的患者在疾病特异性和一般健康结局指标方面的改善均大于未戒断的患者(WOMAC为43.7对17.8,P <.001;SF12v2身体成分评分10.5对1.85,P =.003;UCLA活动评分1.49对0,P <.001)。两组在SF12v2心理成分评分方面无统计学差异,分别为2.48对4.21,P =.409。成功从阿片类药物戒断的患者与未使用阿片类药物的对照患者结局相似:WOMAC为39.0对43.7,P =.31;SF12v2身体成分评分12.5对10.5,P =.35;SF12v2心理成分评分3.08对2.48,P =.82;UCLA活动评分为1.90对1.49,P =.23。
有慢性阿片类药物使用史且在手术前成功减少阿片类药物使用的患者,其临床结局有显著改善,与根本未使用阿片类药物的患者相当。