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3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Our study’s primary aim is to determine if there is an association between cancer-related pain among patients who underwent major elective procedures and postoperative opioid overdose. In addition, the relationship between cancer-related pain in this population and inpatien...

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Autores principales: Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E, Mukhtar, Fahad, Oshunbade, Adebamike, Gbadamosi, Semiu, Adejumo, Adeyinka, Owoh, Jude C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6799167/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.88
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author Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E
Mukhtar, Fahad
Oshunbade, Adebamike
Gbadamosi, Semiu
Adejumo, Adeyinka
Owoh, Jude C.
author_facet Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E
Mukhtar, Fahad
Oshunbade, Adebamike
Gbadamosi, Semiu
Adejumo, Adeyinka
Owoh, Jude C.
author_sort Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Our study’s primary aim is to determine if there is an association between cancer-related pain among patients who underwent major elective procedures and postoperative opioid overdose. In addition, the relationship between cancer-related pain in this population and inpatient mortality, total hospital charge and length of stay was assessed. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Our study sample consisted of adults 18 years and older who had at least one of eight elective procedures. Data was obtained from the National Inpatient Sample (NIS). Variables were identified using ICD-9 codes. Our primary predictor was cancer-related pain while our primary outcome was opioid overdose. Secondary outcomes were inpatient mortality, length of stay and total charge. Propensity-matched regression models were employed in assessing the association between cancer-related pain and outcomes of interest. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Among 4,085,355 selected patients, 0.8% (n = 2,665) had cancer-related pain while 99.92% (n = 4,082,690) had no diagnosis of cancer-related pain. All subjects with cancer-related pain (n = 2,665) were successfully matched to subjects with no diagnosis of cancer-related pain in a 1:5 ratio yielding 13,325 controls. Patients with cancer-related pain had significantly higher odds of opioid overdose (aOR 4.82 [95% CI [2.68-8.67]; p-value <0.0001) and inpatient mortality (aOR 1.39[1.11-1.74]; p-value 0.0043). Patients with cancer-related pain were also likely to stay significantly longer in the hospital (12.76 days vs. 7.88 days) with significantly higher total hospital charges ($140,220 vs. $88,316). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: Pain is a common complication of cancer pathogenesis, diagnosis or treatment. Though a rare outcome, opioid overdose could lead to undesirable outcomes. Cancer patients undergo invasive diagnostic and therapeutic procedures as part of their cancer management or for conditions not related to their primary cancer diagnosis. Safety measures including alternatives to opioids are recommended to prevent the poor clinical outcomes and higher healthcare utilization indices associated with opioid overdose in this population.
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spelling pubmed-67991672019-10-28 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E Mukhtar, Fahad Oshunbade, Adebamike Gbadamosi, Semiu Adejumo, Adeyinka Owoh, Jude C. J Clin Transl Sci Clinical Epidemiology/Clinical Trial OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Our study’s primary aim is to determine if there is an association between cancer-related pain among patients who underwent major elective procedures and postoperative opioid overdose. In addition, the relationship between cancer-related pain in this population and inpatient mortality, total hospital charge and length of stay was assessed. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Our study sample consisted of adults 18 years and older who had at least one of eight elective procedures. Data was obtained from the National Inpatient Sample (NIS). Variables were identified using ICD-9 codes. Our primary predictor was cancer-related pain while our primary outcome was opioid overdose. Secondary outcomes were inpatient mortality, length of stay and total charge. Propensity-matched regression models were employed in assessing the association between cancer-related pain and outcomes of interest. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Among 4,085,355 selected patients, 0.8% (n = 2,665) had cancer-related pain while 99.92% (n = 4,082,690) had no diagnosis of cancer-related pain. All subjects with cancer-related pain (n = 2,665) were successfully matched to subjects with no diagnosis of cancer-related pain in a 1:5 ratio yielding 13,325 controls. Patients with cancer-related pain had significantly higher odds of opioid overdose (aOR 4.82 [95% CI [2.68-8.67]; p-value <0.0001) and inpatient mortality (aOR 1.39[1.11-1.74]; p-value 0.0043). Patients with cancer-related pain were also likely to stay significantly longer in the hospital (12.76 days vs. 7.88 days) with significantly higher total hospital charges ($140,220 vs. $88,316). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: Pain is a common complication of cancer pathogenesis, diagnosis or treatment. Though a rare outcome, opioid overdose could lead to undesirable outcomes. Cancer patients undergo invasive diagnostic and therapeutic procedures as part of their cancer management or for conditions not related to their primary cancer diagnosis. Safety measures including alternatives to opioids are recommended to prevent the poor clinical outcomes and higher healthcare utilization indices associated with opioid overdose in this population. Cambridge University Press 2019-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6799167/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.88 Text en © The Association for Clinical and Translational Science 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncnd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use or in order to create a derivative work.
spellingShingle Clinical Epidemiology/Clinical Trial
Onyeakusi, Nnaemeka E
Mukhtar, Fahad
Oshunbade, Adebamike
Gbadamosi, Semiu
Adejumo, Adeyinka
Owoh, Jude C.
3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title_full 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title_fullStr 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title_full_unstemmed 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title_short 3517 Cancer-Related Pain is a Predictor of In-hospital Opioid Overdose among Postoperative patients
title_sort 3517 cancer-related pain is a predictor of in-hospital opioid overdose among postoperative patients
topic Clinical Epidemiology/Clinical Trial
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6799167/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cts.2019.88
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