1. Outcomes of a Standardized Pain Pathway for Transgender Patients Undergoing Vaginoplasty and Vulvoplasty.
- Author
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Burney E, Bash J, Robinson E, Scull D, Bassale S, Barton C, and Chouhan JD
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Male, Prospective Studies, Vulva surgery, Pain Management methods, Middle Aged, Pain Measurement, Treatment Outcome, Critical Pathways standards, Gynecologic Surgical Procedures methods, Gynecologic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Young Adult, Sex Reassignment Surgery methods, Pain, Postoperative drug therapy, Pain, Postoperative diagnosis, Pain, Postoperative etiology, Analgesics, Opioid therapeutic use, Vagina surgery, Transgender Persons
- Abstract
Objective: To establish and evaluate a multimodal, opioid-minimizing pathway for gender-affirming vaginoplasty (GAVa) and vulvoplasty (GAVu) in treating postoperative pain., Methods: A standardized pain pathway including opioids, non-opioid analgesics, and patient counseling was implemented at a single academic institution with a center for transgender care. Postoperative pain levels, analgesia methods, and opioid use for 84 GAVa and 64 GAVu patients were prospectively gathered during inpatient postoperative days 2-4 and outpatient follow-up at 2 weeks. Pertinent patient, operative, and medication administration data were extracted from patient charts and outpatient pain was measured with the Brief Pain Inventory short form (BPI-sf)., Results: On average, GAVa patients used 89.3 MME and GAVu patients used 41.8 MME during inpatient stay. MME decreased daily for both groups. There was no difference in MME between open and robotic GAVa. Forty-nine percent of GAVa patients and 54% of GAVu patients used ketorolac with decreasing daily inpatient use. Postoperative pain levels were similar between GAVa and GAVu patients. Fifty percent of respondents denied postoperative pain in the 24 hours preceding the survey. Forty-four percent of GAVa and of GAVu patients did not use any opioid medications in the outpatient setting, while 81% of GAVa and 83% of GAVu patients used fewer than 20 of 30 prescribed opioid tablets. Ibuprofen and acetaminophen were rated the most effective outpatient analgesics among GAVa and GAVu patients, respectively., Conclusion: The multimodal pathway demonstrated effective postoperative pain control for GAVa and GAVu patients while minimizing opioid use and has changed institutional prescribing practice., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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