Postoperative opioid prescribing patients with diabetes: Opportunities for personalized pain management

Author:

Zammit AlbanORCID,Coquet Jean,Hah JenniferORCID,el Hajouji Oualid,Asch Steven M.,Carroll Ian,Curtin Catherine M.,Hernandez-Boussard TinaORCID

Abstract

Background Opioids are commonly prescribed for postoperative pain, but may lead to prolonged use and addiction. Diabetes impairs nerve function, complicates pain management, and makes opioid prescribing particularly challenging. Methods This retrospective observational study included a cohort of postoperative patients from a multisite academic health system to assess the relationship between diabetes, pain, and prolonged opioid use (POU), 2008–2019. POU was defined as a new opioid prescription 3–6 months after discharge. The odds that a patient had POU was assessed using multivariate logistic regression controlling for patient factors (e.g., demographic and clinical factors, as well as prior pain and opiate use). Findings A total of 43,654 patients were included, 12.4% with diabetes. Patients with diabetes had higher preoperative pain scores (2.1 vs 1.9, p<0.001) and lower opioid naïve rates (58.7% vs 68.6%, p<0.001). Following surgery, patients with diabetes had higher rates of POU (17.7% vs 12.7%, p<0.001) despite receiving similar opioid prescriptions at discharge. Patients with Type I diabetes were more likely to have POU compared to other patients (Odds Ratio [OR]: 2.22; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]:1.69–2.90 and OR:1.44, CI: 1.33–1.56, respectively). Interpretation In conclusion, surgical patients with diabetes are at increased risk for POU even after controlling for likely covariates, yet they receive similar postoperative opiate therapy. The results suggest a more tailored approach to diabetic postoperative pain management is warranted.

Funder

U.S. National Library of Medicine

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference41 articles.

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