Article Text
Abstract
Despite a decline in opioid prescriptions over the past decade, patients commonly receive opioid analgesics as a treatment for postoperative pain in the USA. One complication that patients may experience after surgery is persistent postoperative opioid use (PPOU), or opioid use beyond the typical recovery period. Often defined as beyond 3 months postsurgery, PPOU is frequently conflated with chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP), where pain persists well after the expected healing time following surgery. This narrative review explores the distinct risk factors for each condition, their interrelation, and potential future research directions.
For PPOU, major risk factors include the risky use of substances including misuse and use disorders; depression and other mental health disorders; a history of chronic pain before surgery including back pain; and certain surgical types (ie, total knee arthropathy, open cholecystectomy, total hip arthropathy). Conversely, CPSP risk factors include the type of surgery (ie, thoracic and breast surgeries), mental health conditions (particularly catastrophizing), and pain in both the preoperative and postoperative phases. Despite the overlap of some factors, studies typically employ different frameworks when examining PPOU and CPSP, with a biopsychosocial model applied for CPSP and little emphasis on an individual’s social environment employed for PPOU. Additionally, existing studies predominantly rely on retrospective insurance claims data, which may not capture the full scope of risk factors.
To fill gaps in understanding, investigations may prospectively assess and analyze patient-reported outcomes, implement similar frameworks, and concurrently measure both conditions to advance the scientific understanding of PPOU and CPSP.
- Pain, Postoperative
- Anesthesia, General
- Opioids
- Opioid-Related Disorders
- Acute Pain
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Footnotes
X @MarkBicket
Contributors MB is the guarantor.
Funding SR receives support from the Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research through the Medical Student Anesthesia Research Fellowships (MSARF) program.
Competing interests SR receives support from the Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research through the Medical Student Anesthesia Research Fellowships (MSARF) program. Other authors have no sources of funding to declare for this manuscript.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.