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Methadone and a Clinical Pathway in Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis Surgery: A Historically Controlled Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared two groups of patients undergoing spinal fusion for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: a control group and a group treated with a specific clinical pathway involving methadone and other medications.
  • Implementing this pathway resulted in lower average pain scores and significantly reduced postoperative opioid consumption in the experimental group.
  • Additionally, patients in the experimental group had a shorter hospital stay, highlighting the effectiveness of the multimodal approach in improving care.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Historically controlled clinical trial.

Objectives: Patients presenting for correction of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) by posterior spinal fusion may benefit from structured clinical pathways. We studied the effects of implementing a published clinical pathway for the perioperative care of patients with AIS that required intraoperative use of methadone at our institution.

Methods: We performed a historically controlled clinical trial of patients undergoing posterior spinal fusion for AIS by comparing a retrospectively collected control group of 25 patients with a prospective experimental group of 14 patients receiving methadone, gabapentin, propofol, and remifentanil as part of a new clinical pathway.

Results: Use of the pathway decreased average pain scores evaluated by the Numeric Rating Scale in the 24 hours following surgery (4.8 [4-6] to 3.4 [2-4], = .03 [-2.6 to -0.2; = -2.3]) and postoperative opioid consumption by 76% (41 [29-51] mg to 10 [4-17] mg, < .001 [-45 to -15; Welch's = 4.9]) during the same period. Improved analgesia and reduced reliance on opioids facilitated other postoperative elements of the clinical pathway and shortened the average hospital length of stay by 1 day (4 [3-6] days to 3 [3-5] days, = .001 [-2 to -1; = 67, = -3.3]).

Conclusions: Multimodal analgesia and a clinical pathway add value in the perioperative care of patients undergoing posterior spinal fusion for AIS by improving analgesia and shortening hospitalization. The prospective arm of the trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov under NCT02481570.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7485079PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2192568219878135DOI Listing

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