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No significant difference in risk of prolonged opioid use following outpatient versus inpatient total shoulder arthroplasty: A propensity matched analysis.
No significant difference in risk of prolonged opioid use following outpatient versus inpatient total shoulder arthroplasty: A propensity matched analysis. Shoulder & elbow Xiao, M., Curtis, D. M., Cheung, E. V., Freehill, M. T., Abrams, G. D. 2023; 15 (3): 292-299Abstract
Background: The purpose of this investigation was to compare rates of filled opioid prescriptions and prolonged opioid use in opioid naive patients undergoing total shoulder arthroplasty (TSA) in inpatient versus outpatient settings.Methods: A retrospective cohort study was conducted using a national insurance claims database. Inpatient and outpatient cohorts were created by identifying continuously enrolled, opioid naive TSA patients. A greedy nearest-neighbor algorithm was used to match baseline demographic characteristics between cohorts with a 1:1 inpatient to outpatient ratio to compare the primary outcomes of filled opioid prescriptions and prolonged opioid use following surgery between cohorts.Results: A total of 11,703 opioid naive patients (mean age 72.5±8.5 years, 54.5% female, 87.6% inpatient) were included for analysis. After propensity score matching (n=1447 inpatients; n=1447 outpatients), outpatient TSA patients were significantly more likely to fill an opioid prescription in the perioperative window compared to inpatients (82.9% versus 71.5%, p<0.001). No significant differences in prolonged opioid use were detected (5.74% inpatient versus 6.77% outpatient; p=0.25).Conclusions: Outpatient TSA patients were more likely to fill opioid prescriptions compared to inpatient TSA patients. The quantity of opioids prescribed and rates of prolonged opioid use were similar between the cohorts.Level of evidence: Therapeutic Level III.
View details for DOI 10.1177/17585732211060754
View details for PubMedID 37325386