Opioid Consumption Patterns and Prolonged Opioid Use Among Opioid-Naïve Ankle Fracture Patients.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-2023
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Previous literature has demonstrated an association between acute opioid exposure and the risk of long-term opioid use. Here, the investigators assess immediate postoperative opioid consumption patterns as well as the incidence of prolonged opioid use among opioid-naïve patients following ankle fracture surgery.
METHODS: Included patients underwent outpatient open reduction and internal fixation of an ankle or tibial plafond fracture over a 1-year period. At patients' first postoperative visit, opioid pills were counted and standardized to the equivalent number of 5-mg oxycodone pills. Prolonged use was defined as filling a prescription for a controlled substance more than 90 days after the index procedure, tracked by the New Jersey Prescription Drug Monitoring Program up to 1 year postoperatively.
RESULTS: At the first postoperative visit, 173 patients consumed a median of 24 out of 40 pills prescribed. The initial utilization rate was 60%, and 2736 pills were left unused. In all, 32 (18.7%) patients required a narcotic prescription 90 days after the index procedure. Patients with a self-reported history of depression (P = .11) or diabetes (P = .07) demonstrated marginal correlation with prolonged narcotic use.
CONCLUSION: Our study demonstrated that, on average, patients utilize significantly fewer opioid pills than prescribed and that many patient demographics are not significant predictors of continued long-term use following outpatient ankle fracture surgery. Large variations in consumption rates make it difficult for physicians to accurately prescribe and predict prolonged narcotic use.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level III.
Volume
16
Issue
1
First Page
36
Last Page
42
ISSN
1938-7636
Published In/Presented At
Skibicki, H., Saini, S., Rogero, R., Nicholson, K., Shakked, R. J., Fuchs, D., Winters, B. S., Raikin, S. M., Pedowitz, D. I., & Daniel, J. N. (2023). Opioid Consumption Patterns and Prolonged Opioid Use Among Opioid-Naïve Ankle Fracture Patients. Foot & ankle specialist, 16(1), 36–42. https://doi.org/10.1177/1938640021992922
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
33576251
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article