Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/28635
Title: Complete opioid transition to sublingual Buprenorphine after abdominal surgery is associated with significant reductions in opioid requirements, but not reduction in hospital length of stay: a retrospective cohort study.
Austin Authors: Heldreich, Charlotte;Ganatra, Sameer;Lim, Zheng;Meyer, Ilonka;Hu, Raymond T C ;Weinberg, Laurence ;Tan, Chong O 
Affiliation: Anaesthesia
The Whittington Hospital, Magdala Avenue, Highgate, London, N19 5NF, UK
Issue Date: 21-Jan-2022
Date: 2022
Publication information: BMC Anesthesiology 2022; 22(1): 30
Abstract: The use of sublingual buprenorphine (SLBup) for acute pain after major abdominal surgery may offer the potential advantages of unique analgesic properties and more reliable absorption during resolving ileus. We hypothesized that complete opioid transition to SLBup rather than oral oxycodone (OOxy) in the early postoperative period after major abdominal surgery would reduce hospital length of stay, and acute pain and total OMEDD (Oral Morphine Equivalent Daily Dose) requirements in the first 24 h from post-parenteral opioid transition. We reviewed 146 patients who had undergone elective and emergency abdominal surgery under our quaternary referral centre's Upper Gastro-Intestinal and Colo-Rectal Surgical Units 6 months before and after the introduction of complete postoperative transition to sublingual buprenorphine, rather than oral oxycodone, in July 2017. Our primary endpoint was 24-hourly post-transition OMEDDs; secondary endpoints were 24-hourly post-transition Mean NRS-11 pain scores on movement (POM) and length of hospital stay (LOS). Univariate analysis and linear multivariate regression analyses were used to quantify effect size and identify surgical, patient & other analgesic factors associated with these outcome measures. Patients transitioning to SLBup had reduced 24-hourly post-transition OMEDD requirements on postoperative day 2 (POD) (26 mg less, p = 0.04) and NRS-11 POM at POD1 (0.7 NRS-11 units less, p = 0.01). When adjusting for patient, surgical and special analgesic factors, SLBup was associated with a similar reduction in OMEDDs (Unstandardised beta-coefficient -26 mg, p = 0.0001), but not NRS-11 POM (p = 0.47) or hospital LOS (p = 0.16). Our change of practice from use of OOxy to SLBup as primary transition opioid from patient-controlled analgesia delivered full opioid agonists was associated with a clinically significant decrease in 24-hourly post-parenteral opioid transition OMEDDs and improved NRS-11 POM, but without an association with hospital LOS after major abdominal surgery. Further prospective randomized work is required to confirm these observed associations and impact on other important patient-centred outcomes.
URI: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/28635
DOI: 10.1186/s12871-021-01531-2
ORCID: 0000-0003-1161-8239
0000-0001-8864-4844
0000-0002-8025-9519
0000-0002-0169-0600
0000-0001-7403-7680
Journal: BMC Anesthesiology
PubMed URL: 35062880
PubMed URL: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35062880/
Type: Journal Article
Appears in Collections:Journal articles

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