Abstract
Summary
Despite adoption of robust clinical pathways, narcotic administration within the inpatient setting is highly variable and may benefit from the implementation of standardized multi-modal pain management protocols.
Introduction
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) candidates have historically received high doses of opioids within the perioperative period for the management of surgical pain. Healthcare systems have responded by improving opioid prescribing documentation and implementing narcotic-sparing pain protocols into TKA integrated care pathways (ICP). Despite these efforts, there are few technological platforms specifically designed to measure the narcotic burden immediately postoperatively. Here we present an early iteration of an inpatient narcotic administration-reporting tool, which normalizes patient narcotic consumption as an average daily morphine-milligram-equivalence (MME) per surgical encounter (MME/day/encounter) among total knee arthroplasty (TKA) recipients. This information may help orthopaedic surgeons visualize their individual granular inpatient narcotic prescribing habits individually and compared to other surgeons, while taking into consideration patient and procedure specific variables in order to optimize use and curtail unnecessary narcotic prescriptions.
Material and Methods
A query of our electronic data warehouse, was performed for patients undergoing elective primary TKA between January 1, 2016 to April 30, 2017. Patients undergoing revision or bilateral procedures were excluded. Patient demographics, inpatient and surgical factors, and inpatient narcotic administration were retrieved. Narcotic type, route and dose were converted into average total Morphine Milligram Equivalents per patient for each post- operative day (figure 1). These MME/day/encounter values were subsequently used determine mean and variance of narcotics prescribed by individual surgeons. A secondary analysis of regional distribution of inpatient narcotic consumption was determined by patient's zip codes.
Results
In total, 20 surgeons performed 3,666 primary TKAs. The institutional average narcotic dose administered for a single surgical encounter was 34.45±60.06 MME/day (Figure 1). Average surgeon narcotic prescribing ranged from 18.54 to 42.84 MME/day. Similarly, intra-surgeon variability of narcotic prescribing habits varied from ±20.23 to ±129.02 MME/day. Further visualization of patient breakdown did not demonstrate a trend towards increased narcotic administration or variability for surgeons when compared to race or insurance type.
Discussion
Our results suggest that narcotic administration following primary TKA demonstrated a substantial degree of intra-institutional variability for individual surgeons despite the use of standardized clinical pathways. TKA candidates may benefit from the implementation of a more rigid standardization of multi-modal pain management protocols that can control pain while minimizing the narcotic burden. Studies designed to analyze the variability of narcotic use in the post-operative period and determine strategies to minimize inappropriate variation are needed.
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