• Spine · Mar 2020

    Implementation of an Opioid Reduction Protocol for Simple Outpatient Neurosurgical Procedures: A Single-Center Experience.

    • Nicholas Eley, Matt Sikora, Anna K Wright, and Jean-Christophe Leveque.
    • Neuroscience Institute, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA.
    • Spine. 2020 Mar 15; 45 (6): 397-404.

    Study DesignQuality improvement with before and after evaluation of the intervention.ObjectiveTo evaluate postoperative opioid utilization at a high-volume tertiary referral center following implementation of an opioid reduction protocol for simple outpatient neurosurgical procedures.Summary Of Background DataThe opioid epidemic has been well-publicized both in the scientific and lay press over the last few years. As a response to this crisis many state-wide and national medical groups have sought to develop opioid prescribing guidelines for both acute and chronic pain states. Some guidelines have studied opioid prescribing in orthopedic procedures but have primarily limited their recommendations to simple outpatient orthopedic joint procedures. Although, it is not clear that these opioid prescribing reductions are directly translatable to neurosurgical procedures.MethodsWe implemented an opioid reduction protocol geared towards the postoperative management for simple outpatient neurosurgical procedures and measured the effect on number of pills and total morphine equivalent dose (MED) prescribed, postoperative readmissions, refill requests, and conversion to long-term opiate use.ResultsOur study population was 246 patients, with 109 patients in the pre-intervention (PRE) group and 137 patients in the post-intervention (POST) group. The vast majority of patients in both groups were discharged with an opioid prescription (93% PRE, 91% POST, P = 0.87). The POST group had significantly lower total discharge opioid medication quantity (52 tabs PRE, 27 tabs POST, P < 0.001), discharge day MED (51.3 PRE, 45.3 POST, P = 0.01), and total discharge MED (287 PRE, 149 POST, P < 0.001).ConclusionA standardized discharge protocol for postoperative neurosurgery can lead to significant reductions in opioid discharge quantity without compromising patient safety or increasing the utilization of hospital resources through readmissions, refill requests, or clinic phone calls. This study provides an example of a feasible and effective discharge prescription regimen that may be generalizable to some of the most common outpatient neurosurgical procedures.Level Of Evidence3.

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