4.5 Article

Opioid Prescribing Patterns After Head and Neck Surgery

Journal

OTOLARYNGOLOGY-HEAD AND NECK SURGERY
Volume 165, Issue 4, Pages 550-555

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0194599821992365

Keywords

opioid; postoperative pain; nonopioid pain regimen

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The study revealed that female patients, younger individuals, smokers, and those requiring higher doses of opioids during hospital stay are more likely to experience inadequate pain control postoperatively. These patients could benefit from additional education, earlier follow-up visits, and a comprehensive nonopioid pain management regimen.
Objective Postoperative prescription narcotics increase access to opioids and associated abuse among patients, family, and acquaintances. Judicious opioid stewardship is required. Best practice questions remain for larger head and neck surgeries. We aim to review opioid utilization patterns in an urban patient population to identify patients at risk for poor postoperative pain control. Study Design Case series with planned chart review for patients undergoing head and neck surgery (2015-2018). Setting Single urban hospital. Methods Outcome measures included postoperative phone calls and emergency room visits as markers for inadequate pain control. Age, sex, race, body mass index (BMI), smoking status, comorbidities, prior narcotic filling behavior, surgery type, and duration were evaluated as potential risk factors for pain control. Chi-square and Wilcoxon tests were used for group comparisons. Results In total, 215 patients met inclusion criteria: male (22%), white/Hispanic (47%), and African American (44%). Median BMI was 31.6 kg/m(2); median age was 52 years. Surgeries included total thyroidectomy (41%), hemithyroidectomy (27%), and parathyroidectomy (15%). The 23-hour observation patients (n = 175, 81%) had a median of 20 morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs). Sixteen patients experienced inadequate pain control. Female sex (P = .03), younger age (P = .02), current smoker (P = .03), and higher inpatient MME (P = .006) were associated with inadequate pain control. Conclusion Female sex, younger age, smokers, and high inpatient opioid dose requirements are associated with inadequately controlled pain. These patients may benefit from additional education, earlier postoperative visits, and a more comprehensive nonopioid regimen.

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