Opioid prescribing patterns and the effect of chronic kidney disease in pediatric urology population: A retrospective cohort analysis.

IF 2 3区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Journal of Pediatric Urology Pub Date : 2024-12-06 DOI:10.1016/j.jpurol.2024.11.015
Kristen M Meier, Darren Ha, Carter Sevick, Eliza D Blanchette, Megan A Brockel, Vijaya M Vemulakonda, Kyle O Rove
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Abstract

Background: Significant efforts have been undertaken to decrease opioid prescribing, but there is little research into patient-specific factors presenting as barriers in the pediatric surgical population. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have been shown to be a safe and effective alternative to opioids for pain control, however, concerns about their impact on renal function limit their use in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Data is limited on the interplay of CKD on opioid prescribing.

Objective: We hypothesized that opioid reduction efforts were successful, but patients with CKD would be more likely to receive an opioid prescription than those without CKD.

Study design: A retrospective cohort study of patients ≤18 years old undergoing urologic surgery from 2014 to 2022 was performed. Patients were stratified by CKD diagnosis, determined by chart diagnosis and confirmed with CKiD U25 eGFR calculations, excluding those with normal eGFR or Stage 1 CKD. Patients without a documented CKD diagnosis and without preoperative renal function testing were presumed not to have CKD. Patients were propensity matched using the optimal full algorithm across 12 different variables. Outcomes of interest were discharge opioid prescriptions, non-opioid analgesic prescriptions, and unscheduled healthcare encounters (urology clinic visits within 5 days, emergency department visits, readmissions, or reoperations within 30 days).

Results: 10,604 patients were included. 603 patients (5.7 %) had a pre-existing CKD diagnosis; the majority were CKD stage 2 (77.8 %, 466 patients). A significant decrease in discharge opioid prescriptions was seen for patients with and without CKD. Patients with CKD had greater opioid exposure prior to surgery (17.2 %, 104 versus 2.8 %, 280, p = 0.04). Those with CKD were equally likely to be prescribed NSAIDs (p = 0.36) and opioids (p = 0.09) at discharge. Patients with CKD were more likely to present to the emergency department (ED) within 30 days of surgery (17.6 % versus 7.9 %, p = 0.007).

Discussion: Similar proportions of patients with and without CKD received an opioid prescription at discharge. Patients with CKD were more likely to be exposed to opioids in-hospital earlier than non-CKD counterparts.

Conclusions: Multiple interventions and a dedicated postoperative opioid reduction protocol worked well, even in patients with CKD where there is concern about safely receiving NSAIDs. All-cause unplanned healthcare encounters did not differ significantly within groups with introduction of these interventions.

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阿片类药物处方模式和儿童泌尿科人群慢性肾脏疾病的影响:回顾性队列分析
背景:在减少阿片类药物处方方面已经做出了巨大的努力,但对儿童外科人群中存在障碍的患者特异性因素的研究很少。非甾体抗炎药(NSAIDs)已被证明是阿片类药物控制疼痛的安全有效的替代品,然而,对其对肾功能影响的担忧限制了其在慢性肾脏疾病(CKD)患者中的使用。关于慢性肾病与阿片类药物处方相互作用的数据有限。目的:我们假设减少阿片类药物的努力是成功的,但CKD患者比没有CKD的患者更有可能接受阿片类药物处方。研究设计:对2014 - 2022年接受泌尿外科手术的年龄≤18岁的患者进行回顾性队列研究。根据CKD诊断对患者进行分层,通过图表诊断确定,并通过CKiD U25 eGFR计算确认,排除eGFR正常或1期CKD的患者。没有CKD诊断和术前肾功能检查的患者被认为没有CKD。在12个不同的变量中使用最优全算法对患者进行倾向匹配。研究结果包括出院阿片类药物处方、非阿片类镇痛药处方和计划外医疗就诊(5天内泌尿科门诊就诊、急诊就诊、30天内再入院或再手术)。结果:共纳入10604例患者。603例患者(5.7%)已有CKD诊断;多数为CKD 2期(77.8%,466例)。在有和没有慢性肾病的患者中,阿片类药物的出院处方显著减少。CKD患者在手术前有更多的阿片类药物暴露(17.2%,104对2.8%,280,p = 0.04)。CKD患者在出院时服用非甾体抗炎药(p = 0.36)和阿片类药物(p = 0.09)的可能性相同。CKD患者更有可能在手术后30天内到急诊科就诊(17.6%对7.9%,p = 0.007)。讨论:有和没有CKD的患者在出院时接受阿片类药物处方的比例相似。与非慢性肾病患者相比,慢性肾病患者更有可能在医院更早地接触到阿片类药物。结论:多种干预措施和专门的术后阿片类药物减少方案效果良好,即使在CKD患者中,他们也担心接受非甾体抗炎药的安全性。引入这些干预措施后,组内的全因意外医疗接触没有显著差异。
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来源期刊
Journal of Pediatric Urology
Journal of Pediatric Urology PEDIATRICS-UROLOGY & NEPHROLOGY
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.00%
发文量
330
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pediatric Urology publishes submitted research and clinical articles relating to Pediatric Urology which have been accepted after adequate peer review. It publishes regular articles that have been submitted after invitation, that cover the curriculum of Pediatric Urology, and enable trainee surgeons to attain theoretical competence of the sub-specialty. It publishes regular reviews of pediatric urological articles appearing in other journals. It publishes invited review articles by recognised experts on modern or controversial aspects of the sub-specialty. It enables any affiliated society to advertise society events or information in the journal without charge and will publish abstracts of papers to be read at society meetings.
期刊最新文献
Letter to the editors on "International consensus on research priorities in hypospadias using a Delphi study approach". The influence of positive and negative intraoperative feedback in laparoscopic simulation in pediatric urology training. Alkaline urine is associated with increased risk of calcium phosphate nephrolithiasis in medically complex children receiving enteral nutrition. The utilization of a spare ureter to create a continent catheterizable channel to the bladder in pediatric patients. Response to the editorial commentary on 'When you cannot trust what you see: The confounding effect'.
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