AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated opioid use among patients with lumbar disc herniation based on their treatment timing, categorizing them into nonsurgical, early surgery (surgery within 30 days), and late surgery (surgery after 30 days).
  • The research included over 573,000 patients, revealing that those who had early surgery experienced a significant increase in opioid use after surgery, but it decreased more quickly compared to those who had late surgery.
  • Results indicated that early surgery not only led to lower average daily opioid prescriptions but also resulted in a lower overall incidence of opioid usage and cumulative opioid burden over one year compared to nonsurgical and late surgery patients.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess opioid usage in surgical and nonsurgical patients with lumbar disc herniation receiving different treatments and timing of treatments.

Methods: Individuals with newly diagnosed lumbar intervertebral disc herniation without myelopathy were queried from a health claims database. Patients were categorized into 3 cohorts: nonsurgical, early surgery, and late surgery. Early surgery cohort patients underwent surgery within 30 days postdiagnosis; late surgery cohort patients had surgery after 30 days but before 1 year postdiagnosis. The index date was defined as the diagnosis date for nonsurgical patients and the initial surgery date for surgical patients. The primary outcome was the average daily opioid morphine milligram equivalents (MME) prescribed. Additional outcomes included percentage of opioid-using patients and cumulative opioid burden.

Results: Inclusion criteria were met by 573,082 patients: 533,226 patients received nonsurgical treatments, 22,312 patients received early surgery, and 17,544 patients received late surgery. Both surgical cohorts experienced a postsurgical increase in opioid usage, which then sharply declined and gradually plateaued, with daily opioid MME consistently lower in the early versus late surgery cohort. The early surgery cohort also consistently had a lower prevalence of opioid-using patients than the late surgery cohort. Patients receiving nonsurgical treatment demonstrated the highest 1-year post index cumulative opioid burden, and the early surgery cohort consistently had lower cumulative opioid MME than the late surgery cohort.

Conclusions: Early surgery in patients with lumbar disc herniation is associated with lower long-term average daily MME, incidence of opioid use, and 1-year cumulative MME burden compared with nonsurgical and late surgery treatment approaches.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2023.02.029DOI Listing

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