AI Article Synopsis

  • A prospective cohort study was conducted to analyze opioid use after spine surgery, comparing low-intensity and high-intensity procedures using health data from a military hospital.
  • The study found that patients undergoing high-intensity surgeries required more opioid prescriptions and had a longer total days' supply of opioids post-surgery compared to those with low-intensity surgeries.
  • However, while chronic opioid use rates post-surgery were higher for the high-intensity group after adjusting for complications, overall long-term opioid usage did not show significant differences when factoring in pre-operative usage.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Prospective cohort using routinely collected health data.

Objective: To compare opioid use based on surgery intensity (low or high).

Summary Of Background Data: Many factors influence an individual's experience of pain. The extent to which postsurgical opioid use is influenced by the severity of spine surgery is unknown.

Methods: The participants were individuals undergoing spine surgery in a large military hospital. Procedures were categorized as low intensity (eg, microdiscectomy and laminectomy) and high intensity (eg, fusion and arthroplasty). The Surgical Scheduling System and Military Health System Data Repository were queried for healthcare utilization the 1 year before and after surgery. We compared opioid use after surgery between groups, adjusting for prior opioid use and surgical complications.

Results: A total of 342 individuals met the inclusion criteria, with mean age 45.4 years (SD 10.9), and 33.0% were women. Of these, 221 (64.6%) underwent a low-intensity procedure and 121 (35.4%) underwent a high-intensity procedure. Mean postoperative opioid prescription fills were greater in the high- versus low-intensity group (9.0 vs. 5.7; P <0.001), as were the mean total days' supply (158.9 vs. 81.8; P <0.001). Median morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) were not significantly different (40.2 vs. 42.7; P =0.287). Of the cohort, 26.3% were chronic opioid users after surgery. Adjusted rates of long-term opioid use were not different between groups when only accounting for prior opioid use but significantly higher for the high-intensity group when adjusting for surgical complications (OR=2.08; 95% CI 1.09-3.97). Of the entire cohort, 52.5% was still filling opioid prescriptions after 6 months.

Conclusions: Higher-intensity procedures were associated with greater postoperative opioid use than lower-intensity procedures. Chronic opioid use was not significantly different between surgical intensity groups when considering only prior opioid use. Chronic opioid use was significantly higher among higher intensity procedures when accounting for surgical complications. The presence of surgical complications is a stronger predictor of postsurgical long-term opioid use in high-intensity surgeries than history of opioid use alone.

Level Of Evidence: Level III.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BRS.0000000000005069DOI Listing

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