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Multimodal Pain Management Protocol to Decrease Opioid Use and to Improve Pain Control After Thoracic Surgery

Authors :
Isabel C. Clark
Robert D. Allman
Austin L. Rogers
Tamara S. Goda
Kathryn Smith
Tyler Chanas
Aundrea L. Oliver
Mark D. Iannettoni
Carlos J. Anciano
James E. Speicher
Source :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery. 114:2008-2014
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Opioid addiction continues to be a devastating problem in our communities, and up to 40% of patients begin their addiction with legally prescribed opioids after injury or surgical procedure. An opioid-free multimodal pain regimen was developed with the goal of decreasing opioid exposure while maintaining adequate pain control.A retrospective single-institution study was conducted of 313 consecutive patients undergoing minimally invasive lobectomy before (n = 211) and after (n = 102) implementation of an opioid-free protocol from 2016 to 2020. Data analysis was conducted on preoperative characteristics, postoperative opioid use at set time points (postoperative day 0, postoperative days 1 to 7, and total stay), pain scores, discharge with opioid prescription, and postoperative outcomes.Patients on the opioid-free protocol had significantly lower average total morphine milligram equivalents at all time points. In addition, 56% of patients in the opioid-free group received no oral opioids at all, and 91% did not receive a patient-controlled analgesia pump. Average pain scores were significantly lower in the opioid-free protocol patients along with percentage of time spent with pain scores3 and6. With implementation of the protocol, 62% of patients are discharged without an opioid prescription compared with only 7% previously.Implementation of an opioid-free protocol led to a significant decrease in the use of postoperative opioids at all time points while improving overall management of pain. In addition, most patients are discharged with no home opioid prescription, decreasing a potential source of community opioid spread.

Details

ISSN :
00034975
Volume :
114
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....12f3fc5ffbacbf40c930339f445d7833