TY - JOUR
T1 - Opioid-Prescribing Guidelines for Common Surgical Procedures
T2 - An Expert Panel Consensus
AU - Opioids After Surgery Workgroup
AU - Overton, Heidi N.
AU - Hanna, Marie N.
AU - Bruhn, William E.
AU - Hutfless, Susan
AU - Bicket, Mark C.
AU - Makary, Martin A.
AU - Matlaga, Brian
AU - Johnson, Clark
AU - Sheffield, Jeanne
AU - Shechter, Ronen
AU - Nguyen, Hien
AU - Osgood, Greg
AU - Walsh, Christi
AU - Burkhart, Richard
AU - Blair, Alex
AU - Ludwig, Wes
AU - Nesbit, Suzanne
AU - Wang, Peiqi
AU - Morgan, Suzette
AU - Jones, Christian
AU - Kodadek, Lisa
AU - Taylor, James
AU - Enumah, Zachary
AU - Gilmore, Richard
AU - Habibi, Mehran
AU - Williams, Kayode
AU - Russell, Jon
AU - Wang, Karen
AU - Etra, Joanna
AU - Broderick, Stephen
AU - Zavadsky, Tiffany
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018
PY - 2018/10
Y1 - 2018/10
N2 - Background: One in 16 surgical patients prescribed opioids becomes a long-term user. Overprescribing opioids after surgery is common, and the lack of multidisciplinary procedure-specific guidelines contributes to the wide variation in opioid prescribing practices. We hypothesized that a single-institution, multidisciplinary expert panel can establish consensus on ideal opioid prescribing for select common surgical procedures. Study Design: We used a 3-step modified Delphi method involving a multidisciplinary expert panel of 6 relevant stakeholder groups (surgeons, pain specialists, outpatient surgical nurse practitioners, surgical residents, patients, and pharmacists) to develop consensus ranges for outpatient opioid prescribing at the time of discharge after 20 common procedures in 8 surgical specialties. Prescribing guidelines were developed for opioid-naïve adult patients without chronic pain undergoing uncomplicated procedures. The number of opioid tablets was defined using oxycodone 5 mg oral equivalents. Results: For all 20 surgical procedures reviewed, the minimum number of opioid tablets recommended by the panel was 0. Ibuprofen was recommended for all patients unless medically contraindicated. The maximum number of opioid tablets varied by procedure (median 12.5 tablets), with panel recommendations of 0 opioid tablets for 3 of 20 (15%) procedures, 1 to 15 opioid tablets for 11 of 20 (55%) procedures, and 16 to 20 tablets for 6 of 20 (30%) procedures. Overall, patients who had the procedures voted for lower opioid amounts than surgeons who performed them. Conclusions: Procedure-specific prescribing recommendations may help provide guidance to clinicians who are currently overprescribing opioids after surgery. Multidisciplinary, patient-centered consensus guidelines for more procedures are feasible and may serve as a tool in combating the opioid crisis.
AB - Background: One in 16 surgical patients prescribed opioids becomes a long-term user. Overprescribing opioids after surgery is common, and the lack of multidisciplinary procedure-specific guidelines contributes to the wide variation in opioid prescribing practices. We hypothesized that a single-institution, multidisciplinary expert panel can establish consensus on ideal opioid prescribing for select common surgical procedures. Study Design: We used a 3-step modified Delphi method involving a multidisciplinary expert panel of 6 relevant stakeholder groups (surgeons, pain specialists, outpatient surgical nurse practitioners, surgical residents, patients, and pharmacists) to develop consensus ranges for outpatient opioid prescribing at the time of discharge after 20 common procedures in 8 surgical specialties. Prescribing guidelines were developed for opioid-naïve adult patients without chronic pain undergoing uncomplicated procedures. The number of opioid tablets was defined using oxycodone 5 mg oral equivalents. Results: For all 20 surgical procedures reviewed, the minimum number of opioid tablets recommended by the panel was 0. Ibuprofen was recommended for all patients unless medically contraindicated. The maximum number of opioid tablets varied by procedure (median 12.5 tablets), with panel recommendations of 0 opioid tablets for 3 of 20 (15%) procedures, 1 to 15 opioid tablets for 11 of 20 (55%) procedures, and 16 to 20 tablets for 6 of 20 (30%) procedures. Overall, patients who had the procedures voted for lower opioid amounts than surgeons who performed them. Conclusions: Procedure-specific prescribing recommendations may help provide guidance to clinicians who are currently overprescribing opioids after surgery. Multidisciplinary, patient-centered consensus guidelines for more procedures are feasible and may serve as a tool in combating the opioid crisis.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.07.659
DO - 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2018.07.659
M3 - Article
C2 - 30118896
AN - SCOPUS:85056426425
SN - 1072-7515
VL - 227
SP - 411
EP - 418
JO - Journal of the American College of Surgeons
JF - Journal of the American College of Surgeons
IS - 4
ER -