• Reg Anesth Pain Med · Feb 2025

    Review

    Upskilling pain relief after surgery: a scoping review of perioperative behavioral intervention efficacy and practical considerations for implementation.

    • Beth D Darnall, Lauren Abshire, Rena E Courtney, and Sara Davin.
    • Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA bdarnall@stanford.edu.
    • Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2025 Feb 5; 50 (2): 9310193-101.

    AbstractPerioperative skills-based interventions may support non-pharmacological management of pain and opioid reduction after surgery. Such interventions may target and enhance predictors for surgical recovery and possibly reduce chronic postsurgical pain. Existing meta-analyses are limited by inclusion of studies that are either non-surgical or with outcomes occurring only in the hours after surgery. Lacking is a scoping review of studies testing perioperative skills-based interventions for postsurgical pain relief and opioid reduction in the days and months after surgery. We reviewed the efficacy of perioperative behavioral interventions; over what time frame and in which surgical populations efficacy evidence exists; and whether such interventions can prevent chronic postsurgical pain. 20 randomized trials were included, with the following intervention types: hypnosis, relaxation therapy, stress management training, mindfulness, mixed-type skills interventions (mind-body skills, preoperative pain self-management, empowered relief for surgery); cognitive behavioral-therapy (CBT); and mindfulness-based CBT. We summarize study methods, treatment specifics, and analgesic effects. No studies were designed to test intervention efficacy for preventing chronic postsurgical pain. Only two studies used active controls as the study comparator. Two studies showed positive effects on postsurgical opioid use. No studies tested whether the interventions enhanced time to pain cessation after surgery. Four studies demonstrated durable analgesic effects at 3-12 months after surgery. We describe the real-world practicality of intervention integration into the perioperative pathway and provide dissemination and implementation methodologies that may increase intervention uptake and therefore fulfill calls from national agencies to better integrate behavioral pain treatments into perioperative care.© American Society of Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine 2025. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. Published by BMJ Group.

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