Department of Anesthesiology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor.
Heron Therapeutics, San Diego, CA.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2021 Jun;27(6):760-771. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2021.20507. Epub 2021 Feb 24.
Opioid use after surgery is associated with increased health care utilization and costs. Although some studies show that surgical patients may later become persistent opioid users, data on the association between new persistent opioid use after surgery and health care utilization and costs are lacking. To compare health care utilization and costs after major inpatient or The IBM MarketScan Research databases were used to identify opioid-naive patients with major inpatient or outpatient surgeries and at least 1 year of continuous enrollment before and after this index surgery. Cohorts were stratified by new persistent opioid utilization status, setting of surgery (inpatient, outpatient), and payer (commercial, Medicare, Medicaid). Patients were considered new persistent opioid users if they had at least 1 opioid claim 4-90 days after index surgery and at least 1 opioid claim 91-180 days after index surgery. Patients with opioid prescription claims between 1 year and 15 days before their index event were excluded. Health care utilization and costs (excluding index surgery) were measured in the 1-year period after surgery. Predicted costs and cost ratios were estimated using multivariable log-linked gamma-family generalized linear models. In the inpatient cohorts, 827,583 commercial, 186,154 Medicare, and 104,734 Medicaid patients were included in the study, and the incidence of new persistent opioid use in these cohorts was 4.1%, 5.6%, and 7.1%, respectively. In the outpatient cohorts, 1,542,565 commercial, 390,876 Medicare, and 94,878 Medicaid patients were selected, with 2.0%, 1.5%, and 6.4% new persistent opioid use, respectively. Across all 3 payers in both surgical settings, patients with new persistent opioid use had a higher comorbidity burden and more use of concomitant medications in the baseline period. In the 1-year period after index surgery, patients with new persistent opioid use had more inpatient admissions, emergency department visits, and ambulance/paramedic service use than patients without persistent use, regardless of payer and setting. Patients with new persistent opioid use had approximately 5 times more opioid prescriptions and also had more nonopioid pharmacy claims than those without persistent use across all cohorts. After covariate adjustment, predicted 1-year total health care costs were significantly higher for patients with new persistent opioid use compared with those without persistent use for all comparisons (commercial inpatient: $29,499 vs. $11,798; Medicare inpatient: $34,455 vs. $21,313; Medicaid inpatient: $14,622 vs. $6,678; commercial outpatient: $18,751 vs. $7,517; Medicare outpatient ($26,411 vs. $13,577; Medicaid outpatient: $12,381 vs. $6,784; all < 0.001). New persistent opioid use after major surgery in opioid-naive patients is associated with increased health care utilization and costs in the year after surgery across all surgical settings and payers. : Funding for this study was provided by Heron Therapeutics, which participated in analysis and interpretation of data, drafting, reviewing, and approving the publication. All authors contributed to the analysis and interpretation of the data and development of the publication and maintained control over the final content. England and Evans-Shields are employees of Heron Therapeutics. Kong, Lew, Zimmerman, and Henriques are employees of IBM Watson Health, which was compensated by Heron Therapeutics for conducting this research. Brummett is a paid consultant for Heron Therapeutics, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, and Alosa Health and provides expert testimony. He further reports receipt of research funding from MDHHS (Sub K Michigan Open), NIDA (Centralized Pain Opioid Non-Responsiveness R01 DA038261-05), NIH0DHHS-US-16 PAF 07628 (R01 NR017096-05), NIH-DHHS (P50 AR070600-05 CORT), NIH-DHHS-US (K23 DA038718-04), NIH-DHHS-US-16-PAF06270 (R01 HD088712-05), NIH-DHHS-US-17-PAF02680 (R01 DA042859-05), and UM Michigan Genomics Initiative and holds a patent for peripheral perineural dexmedetomidine. Sun reports funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (K08DA042314) as well as consulting fees from the Mission Lisa Foundation that are unrelated to this work.
手术后使用阿片类药物与增加医疗保健的利用和成本有关。尽管一些研究表明,手术患者以后可能会成为持续性阿片类药物使用者,但关于手术后新的持续性阿片类药物使用与医疗保健的利用和成本之间的关系的数据却很缺乏。
使用 IBM MarketScan 研究数据库,我们确定了接受重大住院或门诊手术且在该指数手术后至少有 1 年连续入组的阿片类药物初治患者。队列按新的持续性阿片类药物使用情况、手术地点(住院、门诊)和付款人(商业、医疗保险、医疗补助)分层。如果患者在指数手术后 4-90 天内至少有 1 次阿片类药物索赔,且在指数手术后 91-180 天内至少有 1 次阿片类药物索赔,则被认为是新的持续性阿片类药物使用者。在其指数事件前 1 年和 15 天内有阿片类药物处方的患者被排除在外。在手术后的 1 年内测量医疗保健的利用和(不包括指数手术)费用。使用多变量对数链接伽马族广义线性模型估计预测的成本和成本比。
在住院患者队列中,827583 名商业患者、186154 名医疗保险患者和 104734 名医疗补助患者纳入研究,这些队列中,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者的比例分别为 4.1%、5.6%和 7.1%。在门诊患者队列中,1542565 名商业患者、390876 名医疗保险患者和 94878 名医疗补助患者被选中,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者的比例分别为 2.0%、1.5%和 6.4%。在所有 3 种支付者和两种手术环境中,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者在基线期的合并症负担更高,同时使用的伴随药物也更多。在指数手术后的 1 年内,与没有持续性使用的患者相比,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者的住院入院、急诊就诊和救护车/护理人员服务使用次数更多。所有队列中,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者的阿片类药物处方约为 5 倍,非阿片类药物处方也多于没有持续性使用的患者。在调整协变量后,与没有持续性使用的患者相比,新的持续性阿片类药物使用者在所有比较中 1 年的总医疗保健费用预计都更高(商业住院:$29499 与 $11798;医疗保险住院:$34455 与 $21313;医疗补助住院:$14622 与 $6678;商业门诊:$18751 与 $7517;医疗保险门诊:$26411 与 $13577;医疗补助门诊:$12381 与 $6784;所有 P 值均<0.001)。
在阿片类药物初治患者中,手术后新的持续性阿片类药物使用与手术后 1 年内的医疗保健利用和成本增加有关,无论手术地点和付款人如何。