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Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery

STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to evaluate factors associated with increased risk of prolonged post-operative opioid pain medication usage following spine surgery, as well as identify the risk of various post-operative complications that may be associated with pre-ope...

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Autores principales: Kowalski, Christopher, Ridenour, Ryan, McNutt, Sarah, Ba, Djibril, Liu, Guodong, Bible, Jesse, Aynardi, Michael, Garner, Matthew, Leslie, Douglas, Dhawan, Aman
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33853404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21925682211003854
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author Kowalski, Christopher
Ridenour, Ryan
McNutt, Sarah
Ba, Djibril
Liu, Guodong
Bible, Jesse
Aynardi, Michael
Garner, Matthew
Leslie, Douglas
Dhawan, Aman
author_facet Kowalski, Christopher
Ridenour, Ryan
McNutt, Sarah
Ba, Djibril
Liu, Guodong
Bible, Jesse
Aynardi, Michael
Garner, Matthew
Leslie, Douglas
Dhawan, Aman
author_sort Kowalski, Christopher
collection PubMed
description STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to evaluate factors associated with increased risk of prolonged post-operative opioid pain medication usage following spine surgery, as well as identify the risk of various post-operative complications that may be associated with pre-operative opioid usage. METHODS: The MarketScan commercial claims and encounters database includes approximately 39 million patients per year. Patients undergoing cervical and lumbar spine surgery between the years 2005-2014 were identified using CPT codes. Pre-operative comorbidities including DSM-V mental health disorders, chronic pain, chronic regional pain syndrome (CRPS), obesity, tobacco use, medications, and diabetes were queried and documented. Patients who utilized opioids from 1-3 months prior to surgery were identified. This timeframe was chosen to exclude patients who had been prescribed pre- and post-operative narcotic medications up to 1 month prior to surgery. We utilized odds ratios (OR), 95% Confidence Intervals (CI), and regression analysis to determine factors that are associated with prolonged post-operative opioid use at 3 time intervals. RESULTS: 553,509 patients who underwent spine surgery during the 10-year period were identified. 34.9% of patients utilized opioids 1-3 months pre-operatively. 25% patients were still utilizing opioids at 6 weeks, 17.3% at 3 months, 12.7% at 6 months, and 9.0% at 1 year after surgery. Pre-operative opioid exposure was associated with increased likelihood of post-operative use at 6-12 weeks (OR 5.45, 95% CI 5.37-5.53), 3-6 months (OR 6.48, 95% CI 6.37-6.59), 6-12 months (OR 6.97, 95% CI 6.84-7.11), and >12 months (OR 7.12, 95% CI 6.96-7.29). Mental health diagnosis, tobacco usage, diagnosis of chronic pain or CRPS, and non-narcotic neuromodulatory medications yielded increased likelihood of prolonged post-op opioid usage. CONCLUSIONS: Pre-operative narcotic use and several patient comorbidities diagnoses are associated with prolonged post-operative opioid usage following spine surgery. Chronic opioid use, diagnosis of chronic pain, or use of non-narcotic neuromodulatory medications have the highest risk of prolonged post-operative opioid consumption. Patients using opiates pre-operatively did have an increased 30 and 90-day readmission risk, in addition to a number of serious post-operative complications. This data provides spine surgeons a number of variables to consider when determining post-operative analgesia strategies, and provides health systems, providers, and payers with information on complications associated with pre-operative opioid utilization.
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spelling pubmed-102405942023-06-06 Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery Kowalski, Christopher Ridenour, Ryan McNutt, Sarah Ba, Djibril Liu, Guodong Bible, Jesse Aynardi, Michael Garner, Matthew Leslie, Douglas Dhawan, Aman Global Spine J Original Articles STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. OBJECTIVE: Our purpose was to evaluate factors associated with increased risk of prolonged post-operative opioid pain medication usage following spine surgery, as well as identify the risk of various post-operative complications that may be associated with pre-operative opioid usage. METHODS: The MarketScan commercial claims and encounters database includes approximately 39 million patients per year. Patients undergoing cervical and lumbar spine surgery between the years 2005-2014 were identified using CPT codes. Pre-operative comorbidities including DSM-V mental health disorders, chronic pain, chronic regional pain syndrome (CRPS), obesity, tobacco use, medications, and diabetes were queried and documented. Patients who utilized opioids from 1-3 months prior to surgery were identified. This timeframe was chosen to exclude patients who had been prescribed pre- and post-operative narcotic medications up to 1 month prior to surgery. We utilized odds ratios (OR), 95% Confidence Intervals (CI), and regression analysis to determine factors that are associated with prolonged post-operative opioid use at 3 time intervals. RESULTS: 553,509 patients who underwent spine surgery during the 10-year period were identified. 34.9% of patients utilized opioids 1-3 months pre-operatively. 25% patients were still utilizing opioids at 6 weeks, 17.3% at 3 months, 12.7% at 6 months, and 9.0% at 1 year after surgery. Pre-operative opioid exposure was associated with increased likelihood of post-operative use at 6-12 weeks (OR 5.45, 95% CI 5.37-5.53), 3-6 months (OR 6.48, 95% CI 6.37-6.59), 6-12 months (OR 6.97, 95% CI 6.84-7.11), and >12 months (OR 7.12, 95% CI 6.96-7.29). Mental health diagnosis, tobacco usage, diagnosis of chronic pain or CRPS, and non-narcotic neuromodulatory medications yielded increased likelihood of prolonged post-op opioid usage. CONCLUSIONS: Pre-operative narcotic use and several patient comorbidities diagnoses are associated with prolonged post-operative opioid usage following spine surgery. Chronic opioid use, diagnosis of chronic pain, or use of non-narcotic neuromodulatory medications have the highest risk of prolonged post-operative opioid consumption. Patients using opiates pre-operatively did have an increased 30 and 90-day readmission risk, in addition to a number of serious post-operative complications. This data provides spine surgeons a number of variables to consider when determining post-operative analgesia strategies, and provides health systems, providers, and payers with information on complications associated with pre-operative opioid utilization. SAGE Publications 2021-04-15 2023-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10240594/ /pubmed/33853404 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21925682211003854 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) which permits non-commercial use, reproduction and distribution of the work as published without adaptation or alteration, without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access pages (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Articles
Kowalski, Christopher
Ridenour, Ryan
McNutt, Sarah
Ba, Djibril
Liu, Guodong
Bible, Jesse
Aynardi, Michael
Garner, Matthew
Leslie, Douglas
Dhawan, Aman
Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title_full Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title_fullStr Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title_short Risk Factors For Prolonged Opioid Use After Spine Surgery
title_sort risk factors for prolonged opioid use after spine surgery
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240594/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33853404
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21925682211003854
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