Cluster-Randomized Trial of Opiate-Sparing Analgesia after Discharge from Elective Hip Surgery eTable 1. International Committee of Medical Journal Editors Data Sharing Statement

Journal of the American College of Surgeons(2019)

引用 13|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Surgeons have traditionally relied on opiates after hip replacement, despite a growing epidemic of abuse. This study assessed the efficacy of multimodal analgesia and impact of conservative opiate prescribing after discharge from hip surgery.In this cluster-randomized trial, 235 patients undergoing hip replacement (5 surgeons) received 1 of 3 discharge pain regimens: scheduled-dose multimodal analgesia with a minimal opiate supply (group A), scheduled-dose multimodal analgesia with a traditional opiate supply (group B), or a traditional pro re nata (as needed) opiate regimen alone (group C). Each of the surgeons comprised a distinct cluster and alternated in a randomized sequence between interventions. The multimodal regimen comprised fixed-schedule doses of acetaminophen, meloxicam, and gabapentin. Primary outcomes were daily visual analogue scale pain and opiate use for 30 days. Secondary outcomes included satisfaction, sleep quality, opiate-related symptoms, hip function, and adverse events. The primary intent-to-treat analysis was performed using linear mixed models.Daily pain was significantly lower in group A (coefficient [Coeff] -0.81; p = 0.003) and group B (Coeff -0.61; p = 0.021) relative to group C. Although daily opiate use in group A (Coeff -0.77; p < 0.001) and group B (Coeff -0.30; p = 0.04) was lower than group C, opiate use for group A was also lower than group B (Coeff -0.46; p = 0.002). Duration of opiate use was significantly shorter for group A (1.14 weeks) and group B (1.39 weeks) compared with group C (2.57 weeks). There were fewer opiate-related symptoms, most commonly fatigue, in group A compared with C, but groups B and C were not significantly different. Both multimodal regimens improved satisfaction and sleep, and there were no differences in hip function or adverse events.Multimodal analgesia with minimal opiates improved pain control while significantly decreasing opiate use and opiate-related adverse effects. It is time to rethink our reliance on opiates after elective operations.
更多
查看译文
关键词
analgesia,elective hip surgery etable,cluster-randomized,opiate-sparing
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要