Background: In response to the opioid epidemic, prescribing guidelines and statewide surgical opioid management programs were initiated in 2018-19. This analysis aims to document the sustainability of a regional opioid stewardship consortium through the pandemic and beyond.
Study design: From September 2019 through August 2023, 15 NSQIP hospitals in two states gathered opioid-specific variables on patients undergoing 12 procedures. Operations were performed by seven specialties including general surgery, gynecology, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, surgical oncology, urology, and vascular surgery. Data were gathered on preoperative opioid use, intraoperative opioids and blocks, opioid avoidance strategies and discharge opioid prescriptions. Cochran-Armitage trend and Wald tests were utilized to assess temporal effects with p values <0.001 considered significant.
Results: Among 18,325 patients who underwent surgery, 54% were women, with a median age of 60 years. The percentage of patients taking opioids preoperatively decreased significantly (p<0.001) in the overall cohort from 17% to 10%. The utilization of intraoperative blocks also increased significantly (p<0.001) among all patients from 21% to 27%. The utilization of opioid avoidance strategies was maintained in the majority of the patients (68-70%) and the percentage of postoperative opioid prescriptions on discharge remained the same (81%) over the four-year study period.
Conclusion: From 2019 to 2023, the percentage of patients taking opioids preoperatively decreased significantly, and the utilization of intraoperative blocks also increased significantly. The PENNJ-SOS program played a key role in combatting the opioid crisis over the four years of data collection, adapting effectively to the challenges posed by the Coronavirus Disease 2019 pandemic.
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