Opioid Use After Inguinal and Ventral Hernia Repair

Author:

Millard Jessica L.1,Moraney Robyn2,Childs Jordan C.3,Ewing Joseph A.1,Carbonell Alfredo M.2,Cobb William S.2,Warren Jeremy A.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Prisma Health Upstate-Greenville Memorial, Greenville, SC, USA

2. University of South Carolina School of Medicine-Greenville, Greenville, SC, USA

3. Department of Surgery, Prisma Health Upstate: Summer Program for Undergraduate Research in Surgery, Greenville, SC, USA

Abstract

Background Recent data on opioid consumption indicate that patients typically require far less than is prescribed. Prisma Health Upstate Hernia Center adopted standardized postoperative prescribing after hernia repair and began tracking patient-reported opioid utilization. The aim of this study is to evaluate patient opioid use after hernia repair in order to guide future prescribing. Methods All patients who underwent primary ventral (umbilical and epigastric), incisional, and inguinal hernia repair between February and May 2019 were reviewed. Patients reported the number of opioid pills taken at their first postoperative visit and documented either in the progress note or in the Americas Hernia Society Quality Collaborative (AHSQC) patient-reported outcomes (PRO) questionnaire. All demographic, operative, and outcomes data were captured prospectively in the AHSQC. Opioid use reported as milligram morphine equivalents (MME). Results A total of 162 surgeries were performed during the study period, and 107 had patient-reported opioid use for analysis. Inguinal hernia repair was performed in 36 patients, 10 primary ventral hernia repairs, and 61 incisional hernia repairs. No opioid use was reported in 63.9% of inguinal hernias, 60% of primary ventral hernias, and 20% of incisional hernias. Inguinal hernia patients consumed a mean of 10.5 MME, primary ventral patients 11 MME, and incisional hernia patients 78.5 MME. Conclusion Patients require little to no opioid after primary ventral or inguinal hernia repair and opioid-free surgery is feasible. Incisional hernia is more heterogenous, but the majority of patients still required less opioid than previously thought.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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