Many surgery patients get opioid prescriptions, but many don’t need to, study suggests
2021 JUN 24 (NewsRx) -- By a
Treating post-surgery pain with non-opioid pain medications such as ibuprofen or acetaminophen didn’t lead to higher pain levels or more serious issues during recovery, and didn’t dampen patients’ satisfaction with their care, according to new results from a study of more than 22,000 patients who had one of seven common operations at 70 hospitals.
The team behind the study has also produced a free, evidence-based guide for surgeons and other acute care providers, to help them treat patients’ pain without the risk of persistent use that opioids carry.
The new study is published in the Annals of Surgery by a team from Michigan Medicine, the University of Michigan’s academic medical center. They analyzed 2019 data from a
Similar outcomes & experiences with and without opioids
The vast majority - 86% -- of the patients received a prescription for an opioid after they had hernia, gallbladder, appendix, bowel, thyroid or gynecological operations.
But when the researchers compared those patients’ experiences and survey responses with data from the 14% of patients who only got non-opioid painkiller prescriptions, they found little difference.
In all, an equal percentage -- 12% -- of both groups of patients had a major adverse event within 30 days of their initial operation. Specifically, there was no difference in complications, emergency department visits, or reoperations between groups. Patients not prescribed opioids were slightly more likely to be readmitted to the hospital, but rarely due to pain-related issues.
There was also no difference in the percentage who sought emergency care for pain.
The survey, carried out one month to three months after their operation, asked patients about their pain in the first seven days after they left the hospital, their satisfaction with their care, their quality of life and their level of regret about having surgery. Nearly 60% of patients completed it.
In all, 82% of both groups - patients who got an opioid prescription, and those who did not - said they were highly satisfied with their care. An even higher, but still equal, percentage of both groups (93%) said they had no regret about their surgery.
Those who didn’t receive opioid prescriptions were actually more likely to report no pain in the first week after surgery than those who did (12% vs 7%). The non-opioid patients were also slightly more likely to say they had the best possible quality of life after surgery (66% vs 63%).
“Opioids have been a routine part of post-surgical pain care for decades, but the risk that they could lead to persistent use has been clearly documented,” said
Senior author
He notes that 16% of the patients in the study were taking opioids on an ongoing basis before they had their operations. Long-term opioid use is known to increase risks from surgery.
“This study clearly shows no difference in pain, major adverse events or patient-centered outcomes when opioids aren’t prescribed,” he said. “The growing body of evidence about the risks of opioid medications to the patient, and to others who might misuse leftover pills from the patient’s prescriptions, has to be considered together with evidence about their relative effectiveness for pain control.”
Another new paper, led by Michigan OPEN co-director
That study shows that between 4% and 7% of all patients who had surgery that required a hospital stay went on to fill opioid prescriptions months after their surgical pain should have faded, which the authors called new persistent opioid use. The same was true for between 1.5% and 6.4% of patients who had an outpatient operation. In this study, none of the patients had been filling opioid prescriptions before their operation.
These patients went on to have more hospital and emergency care in the following year, compared with those who didn’t fill a single opioid prescription immediately after their operation.
While some of the patients who didn’t fill an opioid prescription after surgery did go on to receive opioids for other reasons later in the follow-up year, those who started on opioids after surgery received five times more opioid prescriptions and much higher overall health care costs.
The Michigan OPEN team has published research on the use of opioids for acute pain for several years, and used it to develop opioid prescribing recommendations for specific operations and procedures.
They’ve also created tools to help prescribers set patients’ expectations around pain control before they receive care. This can help patients understand how to use any opioids they might be prescribed wisely, and dispose of them safely.
The group’s new guidebook provides a comprehensive toolkit and additional information for prescribers and patients.
(Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world.)



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