From the Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.
J Patient Saf. 2023 Oct 1;19(6):379-385. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000001144.
Older adults undergoing orthopedic procedures are commonly discharged from the hospital on opioids, but risk factors for postdischarge opioid-related adverse drug events (ORADEs) have not been previously examined. We aimed to identify risk factors for ORADEs after hospital discharge following orthopedic procedures.
This is a retrospective cohort study of a national sample of Medicare beneficiaries 65 years or older, who underwent major orthopedic surgery during hospitalization in 2016 and had an opioid fill within 2 days of discharge. We excluded beneficiaries with hospice claims and those admitted from or discharged to a facility. We used billing codes and medication claims to define potential ORADEs requiring a hospital revisit within 30 days of discharge.
Among 30,514 hospitalizations with a major orthopedic procedure (89.7% arthroplasty, 5.6% treatment of fracture of dislocation, 4.7% other) and an opioid claim, a potential ORADE requiring hospital revisit occurred in 750 (2.5%). Independent risk factors included age of 80 years or older (hazard ratio [HR], 1.65; 95% confidence interval, 1.38-1.97), female sex (HR, 1.34 [1.16-1.56]), and clinical conditions, including heart failure (HR, 1.34 [1.10-1.62]), respiratory illness (HR, 1.23 [1.03-1.46]), kidney disease (HR, 1.23 [1.04-1.47]), dementia/delirium (HR, 1.63 [1.26-2.10]), anxiety disorder (HR, 1.42 [1.18-1.71]), and musculoskeletal/nervous system injuries (HR, 1.54 [1.24-1.90]). Prior opioid use, coprescribed sedating medications, and opioid prescription characteristics were not associated with ORADEs after adjustment for patient characteristics.
Potential ORADEs occurred in 2.5% of older adults discharged with opioids after orthopedic surgery. These risk factors can inform clinician decision making, conversations with older adults, and targeting of harm reduction strategies.
接受骨科手术的老年人通常会在出院时开阿片类药物,但出院后与阿片类药物相关的不良药物事件(ORADEs)的风险因素尚未得到研究。我们旨在确定骨科手术后出院后发生 ORADEs 的危险因素。
这是一项针对全国 Medicare 受益人的回顾性队列研究,这些受益人在 2016 年住院期间接受了主要的骨科手术,并且在出院后 2 天内有阿片类药物的用药记录。我们排除了有临终关怀要求的受益人和从住院机构或出院到住院机构的受益人的记录。我们使用计费代码和药物记录来定义潜在的 ORADEs,这些 ORADEs需要在出院后 30 天内再次住院治疗。
在 30514 例主要骨科手术(89.7%为关节置换术,5.6%为骨折脱位治疗,4.7%为其他)和阿片类药物用药记录的住院患者中,有 750 例(2.5%)发生了需要再次住院治疗的潜在 ORADEs。独立的危险因素包括 80 岁或以上年龄(危险比[HR],1.65;95%置信区间,1.38-1.97)、女性(HR,1.34 [1.16-1.56])和临床状况,包括心力衰竭(HR,1.34 [1.10-1.62])、呼吸疾病(HR,1.23 [1.03-1.46])、肾脏疾病(HR,1.23 [1.04-1.47])、痴呆/意识混乱(HR,1.63 [1.26-2.10])、焦虑障碍(HR,1.42 [1.18-1.71])和肌肉骨骼/神经系统损伤(HR,1.54 [1.24-1.90])。在调整患者特征后,先前使用阿片类药物、同时开用镇静药物以及阿片类药物处方特征与 ORADEs 无关。
骨科手术后出院时使用阿片类药物的老年人中有 2.5%发生了潜在的 ORADEs。这些危险因素可以为临床医生的决策、与老年人的沟通以及目标明确的减少伤害策略提供信息。