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Intraoperative Opioid Waste and Association of Intraoperative Opioid Dose with Postoperative Adverse Outcomes: A Hospital Registry Study

Authors :
Redaelli, S
Suleiman, A
von Wedel, D
Ashrafian, S
Munoz-Acuna, R
Chen, G
Khany, M
Stewart, C
Ratajczak, N
Hertig, J
Nabel, S
Schaefer, M
Ramachandran, S
Redaelli, Simone
Suleiman, Aiman
von Wedel, Dario
Ashrafian, Sarah
Munoz-Acuna, Ricardo
Chen, Guanqing
Khany, Mitra
Stewart, Catriona
Ratajczak, Nikolai
Hertig, John
Nabel, Sarah
Schaefer, Maximilian S.
Ramachandran, Satya Krishna
Redaelli, S
Suleiman, A
von Wedel, D
Ashrafian, S
Munoz-Acuna, R
Chen, G
Khany, M
Stewart, C
Ratajczak, N
Hertig, J
Nabel, S
Schaefer, M
Ramachandran, S
Redaelli, Simone
Suleiman, Aiman
von Wedel, Dario
Ashrafian, Sarah
Munoz-Acuna, Ricardo
Chen, Guanqing
Khany, Mitra
Stewart, Catriona
Ratajczak, Nikolai
Hertig, John
Nabel, Sarah
Schaefer, Maximilian S.
Ramachandran, Satya Krishna
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: Perioperative opioid use has been associated with adverse clinical outcomes. Additionally, opioid disposal carries significant costs, due to the waste of pharmaceutical products and the time needed by skilled labor to report the waste. In this study, we aimed to estimate costs and predict factors of opioid-associated intraoperative product waste, as well as to evaluate whether higher intraoperative opioid doses are associated with increased risk of adverse postoperative outcomes. Methods: We included 170,607 patients undergoing general anesthesia and receiving intraoperative fentanyl, hydromorphone, or morphine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA, USA, between January 2010 and June 2020. We estimated product waste-associated costs based on various opioid syringe sizes and determined predictors of opioid waste. Further, we evaluated whether higher opioid doses were associated with postoperative adverse events according to the severity-indexed, incident report-based medication error-reporting program classification. The primary outcome included post-extubation desaturation, postoperative nausea or vomiting, or postoperative somnolence or sedation. Results: The use of the smallest syringe sizes (50 mcg for fentanyl, 0.2 mg for hydromorphone, and 2 mg for morphine) resulted in the lowest product waste-associated costs. The main predictor of opioid waste was the administration of more than one intraoperative opioid (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 7.64, 95% CI 7.40-7.89, P < 0.001). Intraoperative doses of fentanyl > 50-100 mcg (aOR = 1.17 [1.10-1.25], P < 0.001, adjusted risk difference [ARD] 2%) and > 100 mcg (aOR = 1.24 [1.16-1.33], P < 0.001, ARD 3%), hydromorphone > 1 mg (aOR = 1.13 [1.06-1.20], P < 0.001, ARD 2%), and morphine > 2-4 mg (aOR = 1.26 [1.02-1.56], P = 0.04, ARD 3%) and > 4 mg (aOR = 1.45 [1.18-1.77], P < 0.001, ARD 5%) were associated with higher risk of the primary outcom

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
STAMPA, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1427431422
Document Type :
Electronic Resource