Mortality Associated with Implantation and Management of Intrathecal Opioid Drug Infusion Systems to Treat Noncancer Pain

Author:

Coffey Robert J.1,Owens Mary L.2,Broste Steven K.3,Dubois Michel Y.4,Ferrante F Michael5,Schultz David M.6,Stearns Lisa J.7,Turner Michael S.8

Affiliation:

1. Medical Advisor, Neuromodulation Clinical and Emerging Therapies.

2. Medical Safety Director, Neuromodulation Regulatory Affairs.

3. Director, Neuromodulation Biostatistics, Medtronic Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota.

4. Professor of Anesthesiology, Director, Education and Research, New York University Pain Program, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York.

5. Professor of Clinical Anesthesiology, Director of Pain Medicine, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California.

6. Medical Director, MAPS Medical Pain Clinics, Minneapolis, Minnesota.

7. Medical Director, The Center for Pain and Supportive Care, Scottsdale, Arizona.

8. Clinical Assistant Professor of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, and Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pharmacy, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.

Abstract

Background In 2006, the authors observed a cluster of three deaths, which circumstances suggested were opioid-related, within 1 day after placement of intrathecal opioid pumps for noncancer pain. Further investigation suggested that mortality among such patients was higher than previously appreciated. The authors performed investigations to quantify that mortality and compare the results to control populations, including spinal cord stimulation and low back surgery. Methods After analyzing nine index cases--three sentinel cases and six identified by a prospective strategy--the authors used epidemiological methods to investigate whether mortality rates reflected patient- or therapy-related differences. Mortality rates after intrathecal opioid therapy and spinal cord stimulation were derived by correlating Medtronic device registration data with de-identified data from the Social Security Death Master File. Aggregate demographic and comorbidity data were obtained from Medicare and United Healthcare population databases to examine the influence of demographics and comorbidities on mortality. Results Device registration and Social Security analyses revealed an intrathecal opioid therapy mortality rate of 0.088% at 3 days after implantation, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 yr-a higher mortality than after spinal cord stimulation implants or after lumbar diskectomy in community hospitals. Demographic, illness profile, and mortality analyses of large databases suggest, despite limitations, that excess mortality was related to intrathecal opioid therapy, and could not be fully explained by other factors. These findings were consistent with the nine index cases that revealed that respiratory arrest caused or contributed to death in all patients. No device malfunctions associated with overinfusion were identified among cases where data were available. Conclusions Patients with noncancer pain treated with intrathecal opioid therapy experience increased mortality compared to similar patients treated by using other therapies. Respiratory depression as a consequence of intrathecal drug overdosage or mixed intrathecal and systemic drug interactions is one plausible, but hypothetical mechanism. The exact causes for patient deaths and the proportion of those deaths attributable to intrathecal opioid therapy remain to be determined. These findings, although based on incomplete information, suggest that it may be possible to reduce mortality in noncancer intrathecal opioid therapy patients.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference56 articles.

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