Cazzulino Alejandro, Meza Blake C, Woodard Thaddeus, Swarup Ishaan, Shah Apurva S
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY.
J Pediatr Orthop. 2021 Aug 1;41(7):457-462. doi: 10.1097/BPO.0000000000001859.
The prevalence of nonmedical use of prescription opioids among American teenagers is staggering. Reducing the quantity of postoperative opioid prescriptions can help address this epidemic by decreasing the availability of opioids. As the fourth most common opioid prescribers, orthopaedic surgeons are primed to lead efforts to reverse this crisis. The purpose of this study was to determine patient factors associated with filling opioid prescriptions after pediatric orthopaedic surgery and to recommend potential methods to limit excess opioid prescriptions.
This retrospective cohort study included 1413 patients who were prescribed opioids upon discharge after an orthopaedic surgical procedure at a single urban children's hospital from 2017 to 2018. The state's Prescription Drug Monitoring Program was used to determine which patients filled their opioid prescriptions. Comparisons of demographic, clinical, and surgical factors were made between patients that filled their opioid prescription upon discharge and those that did not. Statistical analysis included λ2, Mann-Whitney U, and binary logistic regression for significant factors from bivariate analysis.
Nine percent (n=127) of patients did not fill their opioid prescriptions after discharge. Those who filled and did not fill prescriptions were similar in terms of sex, ethnicity, race, insurance type, and age at surgery (P>0.05). Patients who did not fill their opioid prescriptions received significantly fewer opioids during their postoperative hospital course (5.3 vs. 7.7 mg oxycodone, P=0.01). Not receiving oral oxycodone during postoperative hospitalization (odds ratio=2.16, 95% confidence interval: 1.49-3.14) and undergoing upper extremity surgery (odds ratio=2.00, 95% confidence interval: 1.37-2.91) were independently associated with not filling opioid prescriptions after surgery in the multivariate analysis.
This study identified a subset of pediatric orthopaedic surgery patients who were prescribed opioids upon discharge but did not fill those prescriptions. Factors that increased the likelihood that patients did not fill their prescriptions upon discharge included fewer postoperative hospital course opioids, no oral oxycodone, and surgery on the upper extremity. Future studies must be performed to help decrease the number of opioids prescribed unnecessarily.
Level III-prognostic cohort study.
美国青少年非医疗用途使用处方阿片类药物的情况惊人。减少术后阿片类药物处方量可通过减少阿片类药物的可获得性来帮助应对这一流行病。作为第四大常见的阿片类药物开方者,骨科医生有责任带头努力扭转这一危机。本研究的目的是确定小儿骨科手术后与填写阿片类药物处方相关的患者因素,并推荐限制过量阿片类药物处方的潜在方法。
这项回顾性队列研究纳入了2017年至2018年在一家城市儿童医院接受骨科手术后出院时被开具阿片类药物的1413例患者。利用该州的处方药监测计划来确定哪些患者填写了他们的阿片类药物处方。对出院时填写阿片类药物处方的患者和未填写的患者在人口统计学、临床和手术因素方面进行了比较。统计分析包括二元分析中显著因素的卡方检验、曼-惠特尼U检验和二元逻辑回归。
9%(n = 127)的患者出院后未填写阿片类药物处方。填写和未填写处方的患者在性别、种族、民族、保险类型和手术年龄方面相似(P>0.05)。未填写阿片类药物处方的患者在术后住院期间接受的阿片类药物明显较少(羟考酮5.3毫克对7.7毫克,P = 0.01)。在多变量分析中,术后住院期间未接受口服羟考酮(比值比 = 2.16,95%置信区间:1.49 - 3.14)和接受上肢手术(比值比 = 2.00,95%置信区间:1.37 - 2.91)与术后未填写阿片类药物处方独立相关。
本研究确定了一部分小儿骨科手术患者,他们出院时被开具了阿片类药物但未填写这些处方。增加患者出院时未填写处方可能性的因素包括术后住院期间阿片类药物用量较少、未使用口服羟考酮以及上肢手术。必须开展进一步研究以帮助减少不必要的阿片类药物处方数量。
III级 - 预后队列研究。