Chronic Opioid Prescribing After Common Otolaryngology Procedures in Adults

Author:

Weber Alizabeth1ORCID,Smith Joshua B.1,Simpson Matthew C.12,Brinkmeier Jennifer V.3,Massa Sean T.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Saint Louis University School of Medicine St Louis Missouri USA

2. Advanced Health Data (AHEAD) Institute Saint Louis University St Louis Missouri USA

3. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis St Louis Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractObjective(1) Describe short and long‐term opioid prescribing patterns and variation after common otolaryngologic procedures and (2) assess risk factors for chronic opioid use in this cohort.Study DesignRetrospective cohort.SettingOptum's deidentified Integrated Claims‐Clinical data set.MethodsAn adult cohort of patients undergoing common otolaryngology procedures from 2010 to 2017 was identified. Associations between procedure and other covariates with any initial opioid prescription and continuous opioid prescriptions were assessed with multivariable modeling. Opioid use was defined as continuous if a new prescription was filled within 30 days of the previous prescription. A time‐to‐event analysis assessed continuous prescriptions from the index procedure to end of the last continuous opioid prescription.ResultsAmong a cohort of 19,819 patients undergoing predominately laryngoscopy procedures (12,721, 64.2%), 2585 (13.0%) received an opioid prescription with variation in receiving a prescription, daily dose, and total initially prescribed dose varying by procedure, patient demographics, provider characteristics, and facility type. Opioids were prescribed most frequently after tonsillectomy (45.4%) and least frequently after laryngoscopy with interventions (3.9%), which persisted in the multivariable models. Overall rates of continuous use at 180 and 360 days were 0.48% and 0.27%, respectively. Among patients receiving an initial opioid prescription, maintaining continuous prescriptions was associated with tonsillectomy procedures, age (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR]: 0.997 per year, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.993‐0.999), opioid prescriptions 6 months preprocedure (aHR: 0.42, 95% CI: 0.37‐0.47), and nonotolaryngology initial prescribers (aHRs: <1, P < .05).ConclusionThere is substantial variation in initial prescribing practices and continuous opioid prescriptions after common Otolaryngology procedures, but the overall rate of maintaining a continuous prescription starting after these procedures is very low.Level of EvidenceLevel 3.

Publisher

Wiley

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