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Opioid Use Common After Spine Surgery

MedpageToday

NEW ORLEANS -- One year after surgery to relieve back pain, about of third of patients still were using narcotic painkillers, according to a study that raised new concerns about the long-term use of opioids.

The finding, presented at the meeting here, emerged from an analysis of data from 172 patients who underwent elective surgery for repair of the cervical spine.

Although many patients expressed satisfaction with the outcome of surgery, 51% of patients who were using opioids before the surgery still were using the drugs one year later, and colleagues reported.

And among those who were not using the drugs before surgery, 18% were using them a year after their surgery.

Overall, 55 patients or 32% were using the opioids a year later.

The finding suggests that patients may become dependent on the drugs and have a difficult time getting off them, said , a professor of family medicine at Oregon Health and Science University who has done research on back pain and opioid use.

"The worrisome thing is patients often are getting opioids because it is the easiest thing," said Deyo who was not involved in the study.

Deyo said the study findings echoed other research showing a high level of opioid use continued as far as 2 years after patients underwent lumbar spine surgery.

Opioid use increased dramatically during the 2000s as the drugs were prescribed more for chronic, non cancer pain, though rigorous studies have not demonstrated either safety or efficacy for treatment of chronic back pain.

Along with the increased use has been escalating numbers of overdose deaths and addiction.

Journal Sentinel/鶹ý investigative reports found that the increased prescribing was linked to a push to liberalize use of the drugs by non profit medical societies that received millions of dollars in funding from opioid companies.

Wang, the study's lead author, said she was surprised at the finding given that more than 70% the patients reported being satisfied with the results of their surgery.

"There was sort of a disconnect there," said Wang, an associate professor of neurosurgery at the Medical College of Wisconsin who practices at Froedtert Hospital where the surgeries took place. "I would have expected opioid use to go down."

Because opioid use was much higher at one-year among those who already were taking the drugs before their surgery, it suggests that starting someone on the drugs can lead to a chronic problem, she said.

Wang said it is not known who was prescribing the drugs a year later.

It could have been the surgeons, but it also could have been pain specialists or family practice doctors, she said.

Most of the surgeries involved spinal fusions that occurred between 2008 and 2011. The average age of the patients was 51.

The study shows that doctors need to do more to determine who should be getting opioids and who should not, said a professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation at the University of Washington.

"You have to look at it holistically," said Prather, who was not involved in the study.

She said sometimes patients demand opioids, but that doesn't mean they should always get them.

Wang said more needs to be done to find out if non narcotic alternatives can be used. Those include anti-seizure drugs, anti-depressants, anti-inflammatory drugs, exercise and cognitive behavioral therapy.

Disclosures

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded the study. Wang and Prather reported no financial conflicts.