From the Department of Anesthesiology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
Departments of Anesthesiology and Public Health Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, North Carolina.
Anesth Analg. 2019 Aug;129(2):543-552. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000003941.
Persistent postoperative opioid use is thought to contribute to the ongoing opioid epidemic in the United States. However, efforts to study and address the issue have been stymied by the lack of a standard definition, which has also hampered efforts to measure the incidence of and risk factors for persistent postoperative opioid use. The objective of this systematic review is to (1) determine a clinically relevant definition of persistent postoperative opioid use, and (2) characterize its incidence and risk factors for several common surgeries. Our approach leveraged a group of international experts from the Perioperative Quality Initiative-4, a consensus-building conference that included representation from anesthesiology, surgery, and nursing. A search of the medical literature yielded 46 articles addressing persistent postoperative opioid use in adults after arthroplasty, abdominopelvic surgery, spine surgery, thoracic surgery, mastectomy, and thoracic surgery. In opioid-naïve patients, the overall incidence ranged from 2% to 6% based on moderate-level evidence. However, patients who use opioids preoperatively had an incidence of >30%. Preoperative opioid use, depression, factors associated with the diagnosis of substance use disorder, preoperative pain, and tobacco use were reported risk factors. In addition, while anxiety, sex, and psychotropic prescription are associated with persistent postoperative opioid use, these reports are based on lower level evidence. While few articles addressed the health policy or prescriber characteristics that influence persistent postoperative opioid use, efforts to modify prescriber behaviors and health system characteristics are likely to have success in reducing persistent postoperative opioid use.
持续使用阿片类药物被认为是导致美国阿片类药物流行的一个因素。然而,由于缺乏标准定义,研究和解决这一问题的努力受到了阻碍,这也阻碍了衡量持续性术后阿片类药物使用的发生率和风险因素的努力。本系统评价的目的是:(1)确定一个与临床相关的持续性术后阿片类药物使用的定义,(2)描述其在几种常见手术中的发生率和风险因素。我们的方法利用了来自围手术期质量倡议-4 的一组国际专家,这是一个共识会议,包括来自麻醉学、外科和护理的代表。对成人关节置换术、腹盆腔手术、脊柱手术、胸科手术、乳房切除术和胸科手术后持续性术后阿片类药物使用的医学文献进行了检索。在没有使用过阿片类药物的患者中,根据中等水平的证据,总体发生率从 2%到 6%不等。然而,术前使用阿片类药物的患者发生率超过 30%。术前使用阿片类药物、抑郁、与物质使用障碍诊断相关的因素、术前疼痛和吸烟被报道为风险因素。此外,虽然焦虑、性别和精神药物处方与持续性术后阿片类药物使用有关,但这些报告的证据级别较低。虽然很少有文章涉及影响持续性术后阿片类药物使用的卫生政策或处方者特征,但努力改变处方者行为和卫生系统特征可能会成功地减少持续性术后阿片类药物使用。