Establishing Geriatric Opiate Use Patterns in Trauma

Author:

Hammond Emily1,Zhan-Moodie Samantha1,Sapkalova Viktoriya1,Rivera Daniel1,Agrawal Rishabh1,Thomas Jason1,Fox Elizabeth1,Lawson Andrew1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Medical College of Georgiaat Augusta University, Augusta, GA, USA

Abstract

Introduction: There is evidence that providers often overprescribe opiates in the postoperative period. Despite an ever-growing geriatric population, there is little research detailing current opiate usage in older patients after trauma. This population presents a unique set of challenges for pain management and prescription drug dependence due to sensitivity, a narrow therapeutic window, and high rates of pre-existing polypharmacy. Objective: Assess the use of narcotics in geriatric trauma patients with various injury patterns to establish a reference point for future intervention for reduction in narcotic dependence. Methods: We created a database of trauma patients’ age ≥65 years admitted to a single level 1 trauma center in the Southeastern United States during the 2019 calendar year. Information gathered included patient factors, injury patterns, operative intervention, pain medications prescribed during hospitalization and at discharge, total and average daily morphine milligram equivalents (MME) inpatient and outpatient, and requests/prescriptions for narcotics at follow-up. Results: In 2019, there were 475 patients aged ≥65 admitted to our level 1 trauma center for acute traumatic injuries. 219 of those patients required operative intervention. Average total inpatient MME for this cohort was 169.0 with average daily MME of 22.89. The average total prescribed MME upon discharge was 79.27. There were 29 patients documented to request narcotic prescription refill at time of clinic follow-up, 27 of whom were prescribed a narcotic medication at follow-up. Conclusion: This dataset establishes a reference point for opiate use in geriatric trauma patients to facilitate further research for mitigation of risk in this population.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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