Evaluation of a multidisciplinary, multimodal pain management protocol following pancreas transplantation

Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre‐ and post‐transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy...

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Published inClinical transplantation Vol. 37; no. 1; pp. e14856 - n/a
Main Authors Lindner, Brian K., Lakhani, Shahzia A., Cooper, Matthew, Nguyen, Brian M., Vranic, Gayle, Yi, Soo Y., Abrams, Peter
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Denmark 01.01.2023
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Abstract Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre‐ and post‐transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy, and discharge planning have all been demonstrated to reduce opioid use after transplant. Methods This is a single‐center, retrospective study analyzing patients before and after implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol. Morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) use during the index transplant hospitalization and the need for opioids at discharge was compared between the pre‐ and post‐protocol groups. Results A total of 52 patients were included in the study, 31 in the pre and 21 in the post‐protocol groups. Inpatient MME use was reduced from 135.5 to 67.5 MMEs after protocol implementation. Additionally, the number of patients discharged on opioids following transplant decreased from 90.3% to 47.6%. Pain scores, length of stay (LOS), and return of bowel function was not different between groups. Conclusion The implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol significantly decreased opioid use during the post‐surgical hospitalization and in the 6 months following transplantation. A combination of non‐opioid analgesics, patient education, and discharge planning can be beneficial elements in pancreas transplant pain management.
AbstractList Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre‐ and post‐transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy, and discharge planning have all been demonstrated to reduce opioid use after transplant. Methods This is a single‐center, retrospective study analyzing patients before and after implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol. Morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) use during the index transplant hospitalization and the need for opioids at discharge was compared between the pre‐ and post‐protocol groups. Results A total of 52 patients were included in the study, 31 in the pre and 21 in the post‐protocol groups. Inpatient MME use was reduced from 135.5 to 67.5 MMEs after protocol implementation. Additionally, the number of patients discharged on opioids following transplant decreased from 90.3% to 47.6%. Pain scores, length of stay (LOS), and return of bowel function was not different between groups. Conclusion The implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol significantly decreased opioid use during the post‐surgical hospitalization and in the 6 months following transplantation. A combination of non‐opioid analgesics, patient education, and discharge planning can be beneficial elements in pancreas transplant pain management.
Patients undergoing solid-organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre-existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre- and post-transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy, and discharge planning have all been demonstrated to reduce opioid use after transplant. This is a single-center, retrospective study analyzing patients before and after implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol. Morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) use during the index transplant hospitalization and the need for opioids at discharge was compared between the pre- and post-protocol groups. A total of 52 patients were included in the study, 31 in the pre and 21 in the post-protocol groups. Inpatient MME use was reduced from 135.5 to 67.5 MMEs after protocol implementation. Additionally, the number of patients discharged on opioids following transplant decreased from 90.3% to 47.6%. Pain scores, length of stay (LOS), and return of bowel function was not different between groups. The implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol significantly decreased opioid use during the post-surgical hospitalization and in the 6 months following transplantation. A combination of non-opioid analgesics, patient education, and discharge planning can be beneficial elements in pancreas transplant pain management.
INTRODUCTIONPatients undergoing solid-organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre-existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre- and post-transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy, and discharge planning have all been demonstrated to reduce opioid use after transplant. METHODSThis is a single-center, retrospective study analyzing patients before and after implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol. Morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) use during the index transplant hospitalization and the need for opioids at discharge was compared between the pre- and post-protocol groups. RESULTSA total of 52 patients were included in the study, 31 in the pre and 21 in the post-protocol groups. Inpatient MME use was reduced from 135.5 to 67.5 MMEs after protocol implementation. Additionally, the number of patients discharged on opioids following transplant decreased from 90.3% to 47.6%. Pain scores, length of stay (LOS), and return of bowel function was not different between groups. CONCLUSIONThe implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol significantly decreased opioid use during the post-surgical hospitalization and in the 6 months following transplantation. A combination of non-opioid analgesics, patient education, and discharge planning can be beneficial elements in pancreas transplant pain management.
Abstract Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing comorbidities. High levels of opioid use both pre‐ and post‐transplant are associated with unfavorable transplant outcomes. Patient education, multimodal therapy, and discharge planning have all been demonstrated to reduce opioid use after transplant. Methods This is a single‐center, retrospective study analyzing patients before and after implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol. Morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs) use during the index transplant hospitalization and the need for opioids at discharge was compared between the pre‐ and post‐protocol groups. Results A total of 52 patients were included in the study, 31 in the pre and 21 in the post‐protocol groups. Inpatient MME use was reduced from 135.5 to 67.5 MMEs after protocol implementation. Additionally, the number of patients discharged on opioids following transplant decreased from 90.3% to 47.6%. Pain scores, length of stay (LOS), and return of bowel function was not different between groups. Conclusion The implementation of a multimodal, multidisciplinary pain management protocol significantly decreased opioid use during the post‐surgical hospitalization and in the 6 months following transplantation. A combination of non‐opioid analgesics, patient education, and discharge planning can be beneficial elements in pancreas transplant pain management.
Author Yi, Soo Y.
Lakhani, Shahzia A.
Nguyen, Brian M.
Abrams, Peter
Lindner, Brian K.
Cooper, Matthew
Vranic, Gayle
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Issue 1
Keywords pancreas transplant
multidisciplinary
pain management
opioid
Language English
License 2022 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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Notes Lindner BK, Lakhani, SA, Cooper M, Nguyen BM, Vranic G, Yi SY, Abrams PL. Evaluation of a Multidisciplinary, Multimodal Pain Management Protocol Following Pancreas Transplantation.
Clin. Transplant
Brian K. Lindner, 0000‐0001‐9766‐9496, @brian_lindner1, Shahzia A. Lakhani, 0000‐0003‐4916‐2644, Matthew Cooper, 0000‐0002‐3438‐9638, @Mattcoopmd1, Brian M. Nguyen, 0000‐0001‐7814‐7940, Gayle Vranic, 0000‐0002‐3272‐6688, Soo Youn Yi, 0000‐0003‐0539‐1509, Peter L. Abrams, 0000‐0002‐6121‐362X
Requests for offprints: Brian Lindner, 3800 Reservoir Rd NW, Washington, DC 20007
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Snippet Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing comorbidities. High...
Patients undergoing solid-organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre-existing comorbidities. High levels of...
Abstract Introduction Patients undergoing solid‐organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre‐existing...
INTRODUCTIONPatients undergoing solid-organ transplantation demonstrate pain arising from both the surgical intervention and pre-existing comorbidities. High...
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Publisher
StartPage e14856
SubjectTerms Analgesics, Non-Narcotic
Analgesics, Opioid - therapeutic use
Humans
multidisciplinary
opioid
pain management
Pain Management - methods
Pain, Postoperative - drug therapy
Pain, Postoperative - etiology
pancreas transplant
Pancreas Transplantation - adverse effects
Retrospective Studies
Title Evaluation of a multidisciplinary, multimodal pain management protocol following pancreas transplantation
URI https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111%2Fctr.14856
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36398867
https://search.proquest.com/docview/2738195006
Volume 37
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