Abstract
Background: Excessive opioid prescribing following surgery contributes to the growing opioid crisis. Prescribing practices are modifiable, yet data to guide appropriate prescription of opioids at surgical discharge remain sparse. This study aimed to evaluate factors associated with opioid consumption following discharge from surgery. Methods: An international prospective multicentre cohort study was performed recruiting adult patients undergoing common general, orthopaedic, gynaecological and urological surgery, with follow-up 7 days after discharge. The primary outcome measures were the quantities of prescribed and consumed opioids in oral morphine milligram equivalents. Descriptive and multivariable analyses were performed to investigate factors associated with the primary outcome measures. Results: This analysis included 4273 patients from 144 hospitals in 25 countries. Overall, 1311 (30.7%) patients were prescribed opioids at discharge. For those patients prescribed opioids, mean (SD) 179 (240) oral morphine milligram equivalents were prescribed, yet only 81 (145) oral morphine milligram equivalents were consumed within the first 7 days after discharge. An increased dose of opioids prescribed at discharge was associated with an increased dose of opioids consumed during the follow-up period (β = 0.33 (95%CI 0.31–0.34), p < 0.001). The risk of prescribing more opioids than patients consumed increased as quantities of opioids prescribed at discharge exceeded 100 oral morphine milligram equivalents, independent of patient comorbidity, procedure and pain. Patients were prescribed more than twice the quantity of opioids they consumed in the first 7 days following discharge from surgery. Conclusions: Our data suggest that the current quantities of opioids provided at discharge exceed patient needs and may contribute to increasing community opioid use and circulation.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 924-936 |
Number of pages | 13 |
Journal | Anaesthesia |
Volume | 79 |
Issue number | 9 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2024 |
Keywords
- opioids
- pain management
- surgery
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In: Anaesthesia, Vol. 79, No. 9, 09.2024, p. 924-936.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Research › peer-review
TY - JOUR
T1 - Patterns of opioid use after surgical discharge
T2 - a multicentre, prospective cohort study in 25 countries
AU - Gaborit, Lorane
AU - Kalyanasundaram, Kaviya
AU - Vu, Jennifer
AU - Basam, Aya
AU - Elhadi, Muhammed
AU - Wright, Deborah
AU - Martin, Jennifer
AU - Park, Melissa
AU - Pockney, Peter
AU - Ntalouka, Maria
AU - Abubaker, Noora
AU - Elhadi, Muhammed
AU - Saeed, Umar
AU - Abdulwahed, Eman
AU - Alsori, Mohamed
AU - Alrifae, Ghaliya Mohamed H.
AU - Farrell, Michael
AU - Liu, Gordon
AU - Smith, Nicholas
AU - Xu, William
AU - Varghese, Chris
AU - Harrison, Ewen
AU - Basam, Aya
AU - Li, Jiting
AU - Shah, Jainil
AU - Waraich, Abdullah
AU - Gaborit, Lorane
AU - Pathak, Upasana
AU - Hilder, Amie
AU - Elhadi, Muhammed
AU - Jabur, Aiden
AU - Kalyanasundaram, Kaviya
AU - Ohis, Christina
AU - Ong, Chui Foong
AU - Park, Melissa
AU - Siribaddana, Venesa
AU - Raubenheimer, Kyle
AU - Vu, Jennifer
AU - Wells, Cameron
AU - Liu, Gordon
AU - Ferguson, Liam
AU - Xu, William
AU - Varghese, Chris
AU - Pockney, Peter
AU - Atherton, Kristy
AU - Dawson, Amanda
AU - Martin, Jennifer
AU - Banerjee, Arnab
AU - Dudi-Venkata, Nagendra
AU - Lightfoot, Nicholas
AU - Ludbrook, Isabella
AU - Peters, Luke
AU - Sara, Rachel
AU - Watson, David
AU - Wright, Deborah
AU - Adeyeye, Ademola
AU - Alvarez-Lozada, Luis Adrian
AU - Atici, Semra Demirli
AU - Buhavac, Milos
AU - Calini, Giacomo
AU - Elhadi, Muhammed
AU - Ioannidis, Orestis
AU - Tepe, Mustafa Deniz
AU - Nath, Upanmanyu
AU - Uzair, Ahmad
AU - Yang, Wah
AU - Zaidi, Faseeh
AU - Singh, Surya
AU - Abdullah, Bahiyah
AU - Palacios, Diana Sofia Garces
AU - Ragab, Ahmed
AU - Ahmed, Ahmed
AU - Raubenheimer, Kyle
AU - Daudu, Davina
AU - Goh, Sarah
AU - Benyani, Simran Vinod
AU - Karthikeyan, Nandini
AU - Mansour, Laure Taher
AU - Seow, Warren
AU - Tasi, Zoya
AU - Jabur, Aiden
AU - Pathak, Upasana
AU - Park, Melissa
AU - Abdelmelek, Dhia Errahmane
AU - Boussahel, Ikram Fatima Zohra
AU - Kaabache, Oumelaz
AU - Lemdaoui, Naoual
AU - Nebbar, Oualid
AU - Rais, Mounira
AU - Abdoun, Meriem
AU - Kouicem, Aya Tinhinane
AU - Bouaoud, Souad
AU - Bouchenak, Kamel
AU - Saada, Hind
AU - Ouyahia, Amel
AU - Messai, Wassila
AU - Choong, Zhi Shyuan
AU - Ting, Clarissa
AU - Larkin, Michelle
AU - Fong, Pei Jun
AU - Soh, Isabel
AU - De Grandi, Alyssia
AU - Iftikhar, Hareem
AU - Sinha, Akansha
AU - Kapoor, Dhruv
AU - Chlebicka, Tara
AU - Singer, David
AU - Goddard, Kim
AU - Matthews, Lisa
AU - Lin, Rosalina
AU - Chambers, Jessica
AU - Chan, Juliet
AU - Macnab, Brooke
AU - Barker, John
AU - Mckenzie, Morgan
AU - Ferguson, Neil
AU - Juwaheer, Ghanisht
AU - Muralidharan, Vijayaragavan
AU - Gill, Sonia
AU - Sung, Nakjun
AU - Patel, Rohan
AU - Walters, Chris
AU - Nguyen, Kevin
AU - Liu, David
AU - Cabalag, Carlos
AU - Lee, Jennifer
AU - Leow, San Hui Anita
AU - Ng, Suat Li
AU - Ashraf, Hamza
AU - Mulder, Fraizer
AU - Loo, Jonathan
AU - Proud, David
AU - Wong, Samantha
AU - Zhou, Yida
AU - Soh, Qi Rui
AU - Chye, David
AU - Stevens, Sean
AU - Tang, Patrick
AU - Kritharides, Stephen
AU - Dong, Jason
AU - Morice, Oscar
AU - Huang, Dora
AU - Hardidge, Andrew
AU - Amarasekara, Mishka
AU - Kink, Aleah
AU - Bolton, Damien
AU - Rawal, Alisha
AU - Singh, Jasraaj
AU - Heard, Matthew
AU - Hassan, Yusuf
AU - Naqeeb, Ahmed
AU - Cobden, Andrew
AU - Prinsloo, Duron
AU - Quadros, Dwain
AU - Gunn, Emma
AU - Kim, Ha Jin
AU - Ekwebelam, Jennifer
AU - Shanahan, James
AU - Alkazali, Mustafa
AU - Hoosenally, Mariyah
AU - Nara, Naveen
AU - Nguyen, Peter
AU - Barker, Sally
AU - Tamsett, Zacchary
AU - Rigby, Naomi
AU - Patel, Hinal
AU - Ferguson, Eloise
AU - Byrnes, Lauren
AU - Bravo, Alexander
AU - Hilder, Amie
AU - Hui, Ally
AU - Karmakar, Antara
AU - Wang, Bill
AU - Goonawardena, Janindu
AU - Cheung, King Tung
AU - Chan, Nicholas
AU - Natarajan, Ragul
AU - Cade, Richard
AU - Jin, Rong
AU - Sengupta, Shomik
AU - Snider, Ruth
AU - Morisetty, Harsha
AU - Weeda, Lewis
AU - Sun, Phoebe
AU - Chilaka, Lalitya
AU - Cover, Jacinta
AU - Gunasekara, Aashrinee De Silva Abeweera
AU - Senthilrajan, Rahavi
AU - Alwahaib, Anas
AU - Limmer, Alexandra
AU - Zamanbandhon, Bushra
AU - Jaffry, Kumail
AU - Shen, Yijia
AU - Chua, Alan
AU - Syed, Saifulla
AU - Saha, Sushanth
AU - Glynatsis, John
AU - Aitchison, Lori
AU - Lagana, Bernard
AU - Crossman, Mason
AU - Watson, David
AU - Dawson, Abby
AU - Fong, Bryan
AU - Harrison, Ella
AU - Horsburgh, Eleanor
AU - Glynatsis, John
AU - Khoo, Michael
AU - Mishra, Kritika
AU - Hewton, Lewis
AU - Mesecke, Alex
AU - Tu, Hien
AU - Tun, Than
AU - Wong, Jason
AU - Ong, Elynn
AU - Law, Tara Nyssa
AU - Landy, Ashlee
AU - Leano, Alyssa
AU - Li, Andrea
AU - Soni, Akshay
AU - Dowdle, Benjamin
AU - Pilgrim, Charles
AU - Abeysirigunawardana, Dewmi
AU - Jeyarajan, Deepak Rajan
AU - Patel, Diya
AU - Mckinnon, Kyle
AU - Gould, Madeline
AU - Gilmore, Paul
AU - Geng, Ruxi
AU - Loughnan, Rachael
AU - Norton-Smith, Sarahjane
AU - Nyame, Solomon
AU - Tan, Sarah
AU - Yoon, Si Woo
AU - Wang, Yantong
AU - Zhang, Yichi
AU - Wang, Zixuan
AU - Mare, Hans
AU - Withanage, Indrajith
AU - Khattar, Mitali
AU - Toft, Alexandra
AU - Sivasuthan, Goutham
AU - Zhao, Hailin
AU - Addley, Jordan
AU - Phan, Victoria
AU - Chauhan, Karanjeet
AU - Vollenhoven, Beverley
AU - Nandurkar, Rohan
AU - Edwards, Elton
AU - Maccormick, Andrew
AU - TASMAN Collaborative
N1 - Funding Information: The study was prospectively registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ANZCTR: ACTRN12621001451897p). OPERAS has received funding from the Maurice and Phyllis Paykel Trust (Ref: 213122) and Surgical Research Funds, University of Newcastle Australia. Full data are not available to be shared due to data protection issues, however, the corresponding author is happy to be contacted. Analysis code can also be shared on request. No competing interests are declared. Open access publishing facilitated by The University of Auckland, as part of the Wiley \u2010 The University of Auckland agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors. Anaesthesia published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association of Anaesthetists.
PY - 2024/9
Y1 - 2024/9
N2 - Background: Excessive opioid prescribing following surgery contributes to the growing opioid crisis. Prescribing practices are modifiable, yet data to guide appropriate prescription of opioids at surgical discharge remain sparse. This study aimed to evaluate factors associated with opioid consumption following discharge from surgery. Methods: An international prospective multicentre cohort study was performed recruiting adult patients undergoing common general, orthopaedic, gynaecological and urological surgery, with follow-up 7 days after discharge. The primary outcome measures were the quantities of prescribed and consumed opioids in oral morphine milligram equivalents. Descriptive and multivariable analyses were performed to investigate factors associated with the primary outcome measures. Results: This analysis included 4273 patients from 144 hospitals in 25 countries. Overall, 1311 (30.7%) patients were prescribed opioids at discharge. For those patients prescribed opioids, mean (SD) 179 (240) oral morphine milligram equivalents were prescribed, yet only 81 (145) oral morphine milligram equivalents were consumed within the first 7 days after discharge. An increased dose of opioids prescribed at discharge was associated with an increased dose of opioids consumed during the follow-up period (β = 0.33 (95%CI 0.31–0.34), p < 0.001). The risk of prescribing more opioids than patients consumed increased as quantities of opioids prescribed at discharge exceeded 100 oral morphine milligram equivalents, independent of patient comorbidity, procedure and pain. Patients were prescribed more than twice the quantity of opioids they consumed in the first 7 days following discharge from surgery. Conclusions: Our data suggest that the current quantities of opioids provided at discharge exceed patient needs and may contribute to increasing community opioid use and circulation.
AB - Background: Excessive opioid prescribing following surgery contributes to the growing opioid crisis. Prescribing practices are modifiable, yet data to guide appropriate prescription of opioids at surgical discharge remain sparse. This study aimed to evaluate factors associated with opioid consumption following discharge from surgery. Methods: An international prospective multicentre cohort study was performed recruiting adult patients undergoing common general, orthopaedic, gynaecological and urological surgery, with follow-up 7 days after discharge. The primary outcome measures were the quantities of prescribed and consumed opioids in oral morphine milligram equivalents. Descriptive and multivariable analyses were performed to investigate factors associated with the primary outcome measures. Results: This analysis included 4273 patients from 144 hospitals in 25 countries. Overall, 1311 (30.7%) patients were prescribed opioids at discharge. For those patients prescribed opioids, mean (SD) 179 (240) oral morphine milligram equivalents were prescribed, yet only 81 (145) oral morphine milligram equivalents were consumed within the first 7 days after discharge. An increased dose of opioids prescribed at discharge was associated with an increased dose of opioids consumed during the follow-up period (β = 0.33 (95%CI 0.31–0.34), p < 0.001). The risk of prescribing more opioids than patients consumed increased as quantities of opioids prescribed at discharge exceeded 100 oral morphine milligram equivalents, independent of patient comorbidity, procedure and pain. Patients were prescribed more than twice the quantity of opioids they consumed in the first 7 days following discharge from surgery. Conclusions: Our data suggest that the current quantities of opioids provided at discharge exceed patient needs and may contribute to increasing community opioid use and circulation.
KW - opioids
KW - pain management
KW - surgery
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192691090&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/anae.16297
DO - 10.1111/anae.16297
M3 - Article
C2 - 38721718
AN - SCOPUS:85192691090
SN - 0003-2409
VL - 79
SP - 924
EP - 936
JO - Anaesthesia
JF - Anaesthesia
IS - 9
ER -