Effect of cannabis use history on postoperative opioid utilization in lumbar fusion patients: an American retrospective study.

IF 2.3 Q2 ORTHOPEDICS Asian Spine Journal Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-22 DOI:10.31616/asj.2024.0194
Pranav Mirpuri, Syed Ibad Khalid, Patrick King, Joanna Mary Roy, Aladine Elsamadicy, Ankit Indravadan Mehta, Owoicho Adogwa
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Abstract

Study design: A retrospective cohort study.

Purpose: To examine the effect of cannabis use history on postoperative opioid utilization in patients undergoing one- to three-level lumbar fusion for degenerative spine disease.

Overview of literature: Strategies to minimize dosing and chronic opioid use are needed for spine surgery given their widespread prescription for postsurgical pain management.

Methods: In this database study, medical coding was used to identify patients who had undergone one- to three-level lumbar fusions between 2012 and 2021. Propensity score matching was used to create two equal cohorts with respect to cannabis use history. Opioid utilization rates (morphine milligram equivalents [MME]/day) and overuse rates at 6 months post-index procedure were assessed. All pvalues <0.05 were considered statistically significant.

Results: Following examination of 153,500 patient records, 1,216 patients were matched into cannabis user and non-cannabis user cohorts. Cannabis users had lower rates of opioid utilization compared to non-cannabis users as early as 2 months after fusion (47.7% vs. 41.1%, p <0.05), a relationship which persisted at 6 months (46.2% vs. 37.7%, p <0.01). Additionally, cannabis users had lower rates of high-dose opioid utilization (≥100 MME per day) during the initial 14-30 days following surgery (6.91% vs. 3.79%, p <0.05).

Conclusions: Patients with a history of cannabis use were less likely to be using opioids as early as 2 months postoperatively and had lower rates of high-dose opioid utilization in the immediate postoperative period. Physicians operating on these patients should consider their cannabis use patterns to provide appropriate titration of pain medication over time.

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大麻使用史对腰椎融合术患者术后阿片类药物使用的影响:一项美国回顾性研究。
研究设计目的:研究大麻使用史对因脊柱退行性疾病接受一至三级腰椎融合术的患者术后阿片类药物使用的影响:鉴于阿片类药物广泛用于术后疼痛治疗,因此脊柱手术需要尽量减少剂量和长期使用阿片类药物的策略:在这项数据库研究中,我们使用医疗编码来识别在 2012 年至 2021 年间接受过一至三级腰椎融合术的患者。采用倾向得分匹配法创建了两个使用大麻史相同的队列。评估了阿片类药物使用率(吗啡毫克当量 [MME]/天)和索引手术后 6 个月的过度使用率。所有 p 值结果:在对 153,500 份病历进行检查后,1,216 名患者被分为大麻使用者和非大麻使用者两组。与非大麻使用者相比,大麻使用者在融合后 2 个月内使用阿片类药物的比例较低(47.7% 对 41.1%,P 结论:大麻使用者在融合后 2 个月内使用阿片类药物的比例较高(47.7% 对 41.1%,P 结论):有大麻使用史的患者在术后 2 个月内使用阿片类药物的可能性较低,术后初期使用大剂量阿片类药物的比例也较低。为这些患者进行手术的医生应考虑他们的大麻使用模式,以便随着时间的推移提供适当的镇痛药物滴定。
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来源期刊
Asian Spine Journal
Asian Spine Journal ORTHOPEDICS-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
4.30%
发文量
108
审稿时长
24 weeks
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