lundi 11 juillet 2016

Surgeries found to increase risk of chronic opioid use

The opioid abuse epidemic

Since prescription painkillers became cheap and plentiful in the mid-1990s, drug overdose death rates in the United States have more than tripled, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Seventy-eight Americans die every day from an opioid overdose, it reported.

Previous studies have shown increased risks of chronic opioid use post-surgery, but unlike past studies, Sun and colleagues set out to examine patients who hadn’t received prescriptions for opioids for at least one year prior to surgery. Among the opioid prescription drugs examined in the study were hydrocodone, oxycodone and fentanyl — the drug responsible for the recent accidental overdose death of legendary musician Prince.

The researchers examined health claims from 641,941 privately insured patients between the ages of 18 and 64 who had not filled an opioid prescription in the year prior to surgery, then compared them with about 18 million nonsurgical patients, who also hadn’t received opioid prescriptions for at least a year. The claims were filed between 2001 and 2013 and provided by Marketscan, a database of 35 million beneficiaries.

Except for the minor procedures known to be somewhat pain-free, such as a cataract surgery and laparoscopic appendectomy, all 11 types of surgery were associated with an increased risk of chronic opioid use, the study said.

Other pain-control measures

“The message isn’t that you shouldn’t have surgery,” Sun said. “Rather, there are things that anesthesiologists can do to reduce the risk by finding other ways of controlling the pain and using replacements for opioids when possible.”

Sun said he and his colleagues in surgery and anesthesia at Stanford try to use regional anesthetics when possible to reduce the need for opioids post-surgery. He added that patients should also be encouraged to use pain-management alternatives such as Tylenol following surgery.

The message isn’t that you shouldn’t have surgery.

“Even when taken exactly as prescribed, opioids carry significant risks and side effects,” said study co-author Beth Darnall, PhD, clinical associate professor of anesthesiology and author of the book Less Pain, Fewer Pills: Avoid the Dangers of Prescription Opioids and Gain Control over Chronic Pain. “Ideally, opioids are avoided in treating chronic pain, and pain treatment should emphasize comprehensive care, including physical therapy, pain psychology and self-management strategies.”

As a pain psychologist and clinician-scientist, Darnall emphasizes alternate methods of pain management based on evidence-based techniques that can help calm the nervous system such as diaphragmatic breathing, progressive muscle relaxation and mindful meditation.

She is studying the use of a pain psychology class at Stanford for women undergoing surgery for breast cancer called “My Surgical Success” designed to help patients develop a personalized pain-management plan to control the anxiety associated with anticipating surgical pain.

“It turns out that a lot of chronic pain develops from surgery, and pre-surgical pain ‘catastrophizing’ is a major risk factor for having a lot of pain,” Darnall said. “We hope that by optimizing patients’ psychology — and giving them skills to calm their own nervous system — they will have less pain after surgery, need fewer opioids and recover quicker.”

Laurence Baker, PhD, professor of health research and policy, is also a co-author of the paper.

The research was funded by a grant from the Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research and the Anesthesia Quality Institute.

Stanford’s Department of Anesthesiology also supported the work.

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Surgeries found to increase risk of chronic opioid use

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