Opioid Consumption Rate Following Foot and Ankle Surgery

Author:

Kvarda Peter1,Hagemeijer Noortje Catharina1,Waryasz Gregory12,Guss Daniel12,DiGiovanni Christopher W.12,Johnson Anne H.3

Affiliation:

1. Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA, USA

2. Newton-Wellesley Hospital, Newton, MA, USA

3. Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Background: The rapid increase in the consumption of prescription opioids has become one of the leading medical, economic, and sociological burdens in North America. In the United States, orthopedic surgery is the fourth leading specialty in the number of opioids prescribed, and the largest among all operative specialties. There is insufficient evidence to guide surgeons about appropriate opioid prescription amounts after orthopedic foot and ankle (F&A) procedures. The aim of this study was to determine the opioid consumption rate after foot and ankle procedures and identify risk factors associated with higher use. Methods: A total of 535 patients who underwent foot and/or ankle surgery between August 2016 and March 2018 were included in the study. Each patient received a preoperative discussion about postoperative pain and expectations alongside a standardized handout. At the 2-week postoperative visit, the patients self-reported the amount of consumed opioids. Prescription details, number of opioid pills consumed, refill requests, pain-issue-related telephone calls, and additional physician/emergency department visits were documented. Patient demographics, comorbidities, use of regional anesthesia, hospitalization, surgery type/severity, and preoperative opioid use were collected. A total of 244 patients had a sufficiently complete data set for inclusion in the final cohort. Subjects had a mean age of 50 years (±16.3) and a body mass index (BMI) of 29 (±6.1). Sixty-six (27%) patients underwent a soft tissue procedure alone and 178 (73%) underwent a bony procedure. Results: On average, patients consumed 46.6% of the prescribed pills following a bony procedure and 42.4% after a soft tissue procedure, which resulted in a total of 4496 leftover pills. BMI, procedure type (bony vs soft tissue)/severity, and number of opioids prescribed were positively correlated with elevated consumption rates ( P = .008, P < .001, P < .001, P < .001, respectively). Conclusion: BMI, procedure type, and higher initial pill dispensation correlated with a larger number of consumed pills during the postoperative period. On average, patients took 42.4% of the prescribed opioid after soft tissue procedures and 46.6% after bony procedures, resulting in a significant number of unused pills. Future guidelines are necessary to improve postoperative pain management to prevent narcotic overprescription and minimize the downstream potential for unprescribed community opioid access. Level of Evidence: Level III, retrospective case series, analytic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery

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