Department of Pharmacy Services and Lady Davis Institute, Jewish General Hospital, 3755 ch. de la Côte-Sainte-Catherine, Montréal, Québec, H3T 1E2, Canada.
Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Montreal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Clin Drug Investig. 2019 Mar;39(3):301-308. doi: 10.1007/s40261-018-00744-7.
As an increasing number of elderly are undergoing orthopaedic procedures, it is important to understand and evaluate postoperative pain management in this population, especially in regard to opioid use. Data in the literature pertaining to the very elderly remains scarce.
This study was conducted to evaluate whether older patients require lower opioid doses than their younger counterparts after undergoing an elective or urgent orthopaedic procedure, and to assess the cumulative incidence of adverse events and length of stay for each age group.
A retrospective cohort study was performed to compare the mean opioid use and pain control between two groups of elderly patients (65-79 years and ≥ 80 years of age). The study included 250 patients who underwent either an elective arthroplasty or urgent orthopaedic surgery following a fracture. Data were collected during the 7 days following surgery.
No significant difference was found in mean and maximal pain scores between the two groups. Opioid use (expressed in intravenous morphine equivalents) was higher in the younger group. The difference reached statistical significance on the first postoperative day (subjects 65-79 years of age taking 21.3 mg, vs. 10.9 mg for the group over 80 years of age; mean difference 10.3 mg, 95% confidence interval 1.3-19.4). This was also observed in patients undergoing elective surgery on postoperative days 1, 5, 6 and 7. No difference in opioid use was observed between age groups in patients undergoing urgent surgery. Acute cognitive status deterioration, delirium, oxygen desaturation and constipation were observed more frequently in the older group, while mean length of stay was higher in the older group undergoing urgent surgery (8 vs. 17 days, p < 0.001).
Our findings further support age-related differences in opioid requirements during the postoperative context after elective orthopaedic surgery, while no difference was found between age groups after urgent surgery.
随着越来越多的老年人接受骨科手术,了解和评估该人群的术后疼痛管理非常重要,尤其是在使用阿片类药物方面。文献中关于非常老年人的数据仍然很少。
本研究旨在评估接受择期或紧急骨科手术后,老年患者是否需要比年轻患者更少的阿片类药物,并评估每个年龄组的不良事件发生率和住院时间。
对 250 名接受择期关节置换术或骨折后紧急骨科手术的老年患者(65-79 岁和≥80 岁)进行回顾性队列研究。比较两组患者的平均阿片类药物使用量和疼痛控制情况。数据在手术后 7 天内收集。
两组患者的平均和最大疼痛评分无显著差异。年轻组的阿片类药物使用量(以静脉注射吗啡当量表示)较高。术后第 1 天差异具有统计学意义(65-79 岁组患者使用 21.3mg,80 岁以上组患者使用 10.9mg;平均差异 10.3mg,95%置信区间 1.3-19.4)。在接受择期手术的患者中,第 1、5、6 和 7 天也观察到了同样的情况。在接受紧急手术的患者中,不同年龄组之间的阿片类药物使用量无差异。在老年组中观察到急性认知状态恶化、谵妄、氧饱和度下降和便秘更为频繁,而在接受紧急手术的老年组中平均住院时间较长(8 天 vs. 17 天,p<0.001)。
我们的发现进一步支持术后背景下择期骨科手术后阿片类药物需求与年龄相关的差异,而在紧急手术后不同年龄组之间没有差异。