阿片类药物手术患者纳洛酮联合处方:一项回顾性队列研究

IF 0.6 Q4 SURGERY
Lyen C. Huang , Henry Nibley , Melissa Cheng , Josh Bleicher , Hyunkyu Ko , Jordan E. Johnson , Marta L. McCrum
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景在美国,外科医生处方的阿片类药物占处方药过量的11%。2020年,处方阿片类药物占所有阿片类相关过量死亡的24%,美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)建议将纳洛酮联合处方作为减少伤害的策略,用于过量和死亡的高危患者。我们试图1)检查手术患者(使用常见的术后处方量)和那些有阿片类药物相关过量或不良事件潜在风险因素的患者的纳洛酮联合处方率,2)确定与接受纳洛酮联合处方的患者相关的因素,使用2020年8月至2021年5月期间在学术机构接受手术的所有患者的电子医疗记录进行的回顾性研究。我们将手术后开具的阿片类药物送往我们卫生系统的药房。主要结果是在服用阿片类药物的患者中共同服用纳洛酮的百分比。结果纳洛酮的总体联合用药率较低(1.7%),只有14.6%的患者开了≥350毫克吗啡当量(MME,相当于46.7羟考酮5mg片剂),8.6%的非法药物患者开了纳洛酮。在多变量分析中,被开具>;350 MME、使用非法药物或烟草、接受选择性或紧急普通外科手术、自称西班牙裔或ASA评分为2-4的患者更有可能接受纳洛酮联合处方。结论手术后纳洛酮联合处方仍然很低,即使对高危患者也是如此。纳洛酮、安全储存和处置剩余阿片类药物等减少危害的策略可以减少外科医生对美国阿片类危机恶化的医源性贡献。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Naloxone co-prescriptions for surgery patients prescribed opioids: A retrospective cohort study

Background

Surgeon-prescribed opioids contribute to 11% of prescription drug overdoses in the United States (US). With prescription opioids involved in 24% of all opioid-related overdose deaths in 2020, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends naloxone co-prescribing to patients at high-risk of overdose and death as a harm reduction strategy. We sought to 1) examine naloxone co-prescribing rates to surgical patients (using common post-surgical prescribing amounts) and those with potential risk factors for opioid-related overdoses or adverse events, and 2) identify the factors associated with patients receiving naloxone co-prescriptions.

Methods

We conducted a single-institution, retrospective study using the electronic medical records of all patients undergoing surgery at an academic institution between August 2020 and May 2021. We included post-surgical adults prescribed opioids that were sent to a pharmacy in our health system. The primary outcome was the percentage of co-prescribed naloxone in patients prescribed opioids.

Results

The overall naloxone co-prescription rate was low (1.7%). Only 14.6% of patients prescribed ≥350 morphine milligram equivalents (MME, equivalent to 46.7 oxycodone 5 mg tablets) and 8.6% of patients using illicit drugs were co-prescribed naloxone. On multivariable analysis, patients who were prescribed >350 MME, used illicit drugs or tobacco, underwent an elective or emergent general surgery procedure, self-identified as Hispanic, or had ASA scores of 2-4 were more likely to receive a naloxone co-prescription.

Conclusions

Naloxone co-prescribing after surgery remains low, even for high-risk patients. Harm reduction strategies such as naloxone, safe storage, and disposal of leftover opioids could reduce surgeons’ iatrogenic contributions to the worsening US opioid crisis.

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