Implications of the parenteral opioid shortage for prescription patterns and pain control among hospitalized patients with cancer referred to palliative care

Article

HAIDER, Ali | QIAN, Yu | LU, Zhanni | NAQVI, Syed | ZHUANG, Amy | REDDY, Akhila | DALAL, Shalini | ARTHUR, Joseph | TANCO, Kimberson | DEV, Rony | WILLIAMS, Janet | WU, Jimin | LIU, Diane | BRUERA, Eduardo

Importance: The recent parenteral opioid shortage (POS) has potential implications for cancer-related pain management in hospitalized patients. Objective: This study compared changes in opioid prescriptions and clinically improved pain (CIP) among patients treated by an inpatient palliative care (PC) team before and after our institution first reported the POS. Design, Setting, and Participants: A cohort study of 386 eligible patients with cancer treated at a comprehensive cancer center 1 month before and after the announcement of the POS. We reviewed data from electronic health records, including patient demographics, opioid type, route of administration, and dose. Board-certified palliative care specialists assessed CIP at follow-up day 1. Exposures: The announcement of the POS by the institution's pharmacy and therapeutics committee on February 8, 2018. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was to measure the change in opioid prescription patterns of physicians, and the secondary outcome was to measure the proportion of patients who achieved CIP before and after announcement of the POS. Results: Of 386 eligible patients, 196 were men (51%), 270 were white (70%), and the median age was 58 years (interquartile range, 46-67 years). Parenteral opioids were prescribed less frequently by the referring oncology teams after the POS (56 of 314 [18%]) vs before the POS (109 of 311 [35%]) (P < .001). The PC team also prescribed fewer parenteral opioids after the POS (96 of 336 [29%]) vs before the POS (159 of 338 [47%]) (P < .001). After the POS (vs before the POS), significantly fewer patients achieved CIP on follow-up day 1 (119 [62%] vs 144 [75%] of 193; P = .01). Multivariate analysis showed that before the POS, patients had an 89% higher chance of achieving CIP on follow-up day 1 (odds ratio, 1.89; 95% CI, 1.22-2.94; P = .005). Conclusions and Relevance: There was a significant change in opioid prescription patterns associated with the POS. Furthermore, after the POS, fewer patients achieved CIP. These factors have potential implications for patient satisfaction and hospital length of stay.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamaoncol.2019.0062

Voir la revue «JAMA oncology»

Autres numéros de la revue «JAMA oncology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Implications of the parenteral opioid shortag...

Article indépendant | HAIDER, Ali | JAMA oncology

Importance: The recent parenteral opioid shortage (POS) has potential implications for cancer-related pain management in hospitalized patients. Objective: This study compared changes in opioid prescriptions and clinically improved...

Implications of the parenteral opioid shortag...

Article indépendant | HAIDER, Ali | JAMA oncology

Importance: The recent parenteral opioid shortage (POS) has potential implications for cancer-related pain management in hospitalized patients. Objective: This study compared changes in opioid prescriptions and clinically improved...

Factors associated with improvement in uncont...

Article indépendant | QIAN, Yu | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°4 | vol.23

Background: Increasing the total opioid dose is the standard approach for managing uncontrolled cancer pain. Other than simply increasing the opioid dose, palliative care interventions are multidimensional and may improve pain con...

De la même série

Association of early palliative care use with...

Article | SULLIVAN, Donald R. | JAMA oncology | n°12 | vol.5

Importance: Palliative care is a patient-centered approach associated with improvements in quality of life; however, results regarding its association with a survival benefit have been mixed, which may be a factor in its underuse....

Implications of the parenteral opioid shortag...

Article | HAIDER, Ali | JAMA oncology

Importance: The recent parenteral opioid shortage (POS) has potential implications for cancer-related pain management in hospitalized patients. Objective: This study compared changes in opioid prescriptions and clinically improved...

Effectiveness of integrated palliative and on...

Article | EL-JAWAHRI, Areej | JAMA oncology

Importance: Patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) receiving intensive chemotherapy experience substantial decline in their quality of life (QOL) and mood during their hospitalization for induction chemotherapy and often recei...

Palliative care is the umbrella, not the rain...

Article | ZIMMERMANN, Camilla | JAMA oncology

Early palliative care improves patients’ quality of life and is recommended as standard care for patients with advanced cancer.Nevertheless, referrals to palliative care usually occur in the last weeks of life, leading to un...

Effect of a community health worker intervent...

Article | PATEL, Manali I. | JAMA oncology

Importance: Deficiencies in advance care planning and symptom management are associated with avoidable acute care use among patients with cancer. Community health worker (CHW)-led approaches may be an approach to reduce acute care...

Chargement des enrichissements...