4.6 Article

Out-of-hospital opioid prescriptions after knee and hip arthroplasty: prescribers and the first prescribed opioid

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BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA
卷 130, 期 4, 页码 459-467

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bja.2022.12.024

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dosage; hip arthroplasty; knee arthroplasty; opioid prescription; pharmacoepidemiology; prescribers

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This study in the Netherlands examined the first prescribed opioids and the prescribers after knee and hip arthroplasty between 2013 and 2018. It found that the dose of the first prescribed opioid was associated with the total dispensed dose and long-term opioid use in the first year post-surgery. Orthopaedic surgeons primarily prescribed the first prescription, while general practitioners were responsible for consecutive prescriptions.
Background: We determined the first prescribed opioid and the prescribers of opioids after knee and hip arthroplasty (KA/HA) between 2013 and 2018 in the Netherlands. We also evaluated whether the first prescribed opioid dose was associated with the total dispensed dose and long-term opioid use in the first postoperative year.Methods: The Dutch Foundation for Pharmaceutical Statistics was linked to the Dutch Arthroplasty Register. Stratified for KA/HA, the first out-of-hospital opioid within 30 days of operation was quantified as median morphine milligram equivalent (MME). Opioid prescribers were orthopaedic surgeons, general practitioners, rheumatologists, anaesthesiol-ogists, and other physicians. Long-term use was defined as >= 1 opioid prescription for >90 postoperative days. We used linear and logistic regression analyses adjusted for confounders.Results: Seventy percent of 46 106 KAs and 51% of the 42 893 HAs were prescribed >= 1 opioid. Oxycodone increased as first prescribed opioid (from 44% to 85%) whereas tramadol decreased (64-11%), but their dosage remained stable (stronger opioids were preferred by prescribers). An increase in the first prescription of 1% MME resulted in a 0.43%/0.37% increase in total MME (KA/HA, respectively). A 100 MME increase in dose of the first dispensed opioid had a small effect on long-term use (prevalence: 25% KA, 20% HA) (odds ratio=1.02/1.01 for KA/HA, respectively). Orthopaedic surgeons increasingly prescribed the first pre-scription between 2013 and 2018 (44-69%). General practitioners mostly prescribed consecutive prescriptions (>50%).Conclusion: Oxycodone increased as first out-of-hospital prescription between 2013 and 2018. The dose of the first prescribed opioid was associated with the total dose and a small increased risk of prolonged use. First prescriptions were mostly written by orthopaedic surgeons and consecutive prescriptions by general practitioners.

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