Medical Practice Perspective: Identification and Mitigation of Risk Factors for Mortality Associated with Intrathecal Opioids for Non-Cancer Pain
Objective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7–9.8), 3.4...
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Published in: | Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.) Vol. 11; no. 7; pp. 1001 - 1009 |
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Blackwell Publishing Inc
01-07-2010
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Abstract | Objective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7–9.8), 3.4 (confidence interval, 2.9–3.8), and 2.7 (confidence interval, 2.6–2.8) times higher, respectively, at each interval than expected based on the age‐ and gender‐matched general U.S. population. A substantial portion of this excess mortality is probably therapy related and cannot be entirely accounted for by underlying demographic or patient‐related factors, or by device malfunctions. We also analyzed multiple complementary internal, governmental, and insurance databases to quantify mortality and to identify medical practice patterns that appear to be associated with patient mortality risks, and to suggest measures for physicians and health care facilities to consider in order to reduce those risks. Both of those objectives involve judgments, which may be controversial and are subject to practical limitations.
Results. Multiple clinical and patient‐ or therapy‐related factors appear to increase the risk for early post‐implant mortality. Specific risk mitigation measures associated with each factor include: close attention to the starting intrathecal opioid dose (or restarting dose after therapy interruption); avoidance of outpatient implant or other device procedures that involve less than 24‐hour monitoring for respiratory depression; supervision of concomitant opioid, respiratory depressant, or other central nervous system active drug intake early post‐implant and chronically in the outpatient setting; and careful programming or dosage calculations and decisions in order to avoid the unintentional administration of high intrathecal opioid drug doses.
Conclusions. Mortality after initiation of or device interventions in intrathecal drug delivery patients appears to occur as a result of multiple factors that present possible mitigation opportunities for physicians and health care facilities. |
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AbstractList | Objective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7–9.8), 3.4 (confidence interval, 2.9–3.8), and 2.7 (confidence interval, 2.6–2.8) times higher, respectively, at each interval than expected based on the age‐ and gender‐matched general U.S. population. A substantial portion of this excess mortality is probably therapy related and cannot be entirely accounted for by underlying demographic or patient‐related factors, or by device malfunctions. We also analyzed multiple complementary internal, governmental, and insurance databases to quantify mortality and to identify medical practice patterns that appear to be associated with patient mortality risks, and to suggest measures for physicians and health care facilities to consider in order to reduce those risks. Both of those objectives involve judgments, which may be controversial and are subject to practical limitations.
Results. Multiple clinical and patient‐ or therapy‐related factors appear to increase the risk for early post‐implant mortality. Specific risk mitigation measures associated with each factor include: close attention to the starting intrathecal opioid dose (or restarting dose after therapy interruption); avoidance of outpatient implant or other device procedures that involve less than 24‐hour monitoring for respiratory depression; supervision of concomitant opioid, respiratory depressant, or other central nervous system active drug intake early post‐implant and chronically in the outpatient setting; and careful programming or dosage calculations and decisions in order to avoid the unintentional administration of high intrathecal opioid drug doses.
Conclusions. Mortality after initiation of or device interventions in intrathecal drug delivery patients appears to occur as a result of multiple factors that present possible mitigation opportunities for physicians and health care facilities. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7-9.8), 3.4 (confidence interval, 2.9-3.8), and 2.7 (confidence interval, 2.6-2.8) times higher, respectively, at each interval than expected based on the age- and gender-matched general U.S. population. A substantial portion of this excess mortality is probably therapy related and cannot be entirely accounted for by underlying demographic or patient-related factors, or by device malfunctions. We also analyzed multiple complementary internal, governmental, and insurance databases to quantify mortality and to identify medical practice patterns that appear to be associated with patient mortality risks, and to suggest measures for physicians and health care facilities to consider in order to reduce those risks. Both of those objectives involve judgments, which may be controversial and are subject to practical limitations. Multiple clinical and patient- or therapy-related factors appear to increase the risk for early post-implant mortality. Specific risk mitigation measures associated with each factor include: close attention to the starting intrathecal opioid dose (or restarting dose after therapy interruption); avoidance of outpatient implant or other device procedures that involve less than 24-hour monitoring for respiratory depression; supervision of concomitant opioid, respiratory depressant, or other central nervous system active drug intake early post-implant and chronically in the outpatient setting; and careful programming or dosage calculations and decisions in order to avoid the unintentional administration of high intrathecal opioid drug doses. Mortality after initiation of or device interventions in intrathecal drug delivery patients appears to occur as a result of multiple factors that present possible mitigation opportunities for physicians and health care facilities. OBJECTIVEThe authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7-9.8), 3.4 (confidence interval, 2.9-3.8), and 2.7 (confidence interval, 2.6-2.8) times higher, respectively, at each interval than expected based on the age- and gender-matched general U.S. population. A substantial portion of this excess mortality is probably therapy related and cannot be entirely accounted for by underlying demographic or patient-related factors, or by device malfunctions. We also analyzed multiple complementary internal, governmental, and insurance databases to quantify mortality and to identify medical practice patterns that appear to be associated with patient mortality risks, and to suggest measures for physicians and health care facilities to consider in order to reduce those risks. Both of those objectives involve judgments, which may be controversial and are subject to practical limitations.RESULTSMultiple clinical and patient- or therapy-related factors appear to increase the risk for early post-implant mortality. Specific risk mitigation measures associated with each factor include: close attention to the starting intrathecal opioid dose (or restarting dose after therapy interruption); avoidance of outpatient implant or other device procedures that involve less than 24-hour monitoring for respiratory depression; supervision of concomitant opioid, respiratory depressant, or other central nervous system active drug intake early post-implant and chronically in the outpatient setting; and careful programming or dosage calculations and decisions in order to avoid the unintentional administration of high intrathecal opioid drug doses.CONCLUSIONSMortality after initiation of or device interventions in intrathecal drug delivery patients appears to occur as a result of multiple factors that present possible mitigation opportunities for physicians and health care facilities. AbstractObjective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously appreciated: 0.088% within 3 days, 0.39% at 1 month, and 3.89% at 1 year. These rates were 7.5 (confidence interval, 5.7-9.8), 3.4 (confidence interval, 2.9-3.8), and 2.7 (confidence interval, 2.6-2.8) times higher, respectively, at each interval than expected based on the age- and gender-matched general U.S. population. A substantial portion of this excess mortality is probably therapy related and cannot be entirely accounted for by underlying demographic or patient-related factors, or by device malfunctions. We also analyzed multiple complementary internal, governmental, and insurance databases to quantify mortality and to identify medical practice patterns that appear to be associated with patient mortality risks, and to suggest measures for physicians and health care facilities to consider in order to reduce those risks. Both of those objectives involve judgments, which may be controversial and are subject to practical limitations.Results. |
Author | Stearns, Lisa J. Turner, Michael S. Coffey, Robert J. Ferrante, F. Michael Schultz, David M. Broste, Steven K. Dubois, Michel Y. Owens, Mary L. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Robert J. surname: Coffey fullname: Coffey, Robert J. email: robert.coffey@medtronic.com organization: Medtronic Inc – sequence: 2 givenname: Mary L. surname: Owens fullname: Owens, Mary L. organization: Medtronic Inc – sequence: 3 givenname: Steven K. surname: Broste fullname: Broste, Steven K. organization: Medtronic Inc – sequence: 4 givenname: Michel Y. surname: Dubois fullname: Dubois, Michel Y. organization: Department of Anesthesiology, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, New York – sequence: 5 givenname: F. Michael surname: Ferrante fullname: Ferrante, F. Michael organization: Department of Anesthesiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California – sequence: 6 givenname: David M. surname: Schultz fullname: Schultz, David M. organization: Medical Advanced Pain Specialists, Minneapolis, Minnesota – sequence: 7 givenname: Lisa J. surname: Stearns fullname: Stearns, Lisa J. organization: The Center for Pain and Supportive Care, Scottsdale, Arizona – sequence: 8 givenname: Michael S. surname: Turner fullname: Turner, Michael S. organization: Indianapolis Neurosurgical Group, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA |
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Snippet | Objective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than... The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than previously... OBJECTIVEThe authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is higher than... AbstractObjective. The authors recently determined that early and longer term mortality after initiation or reinitiation of intrathecal opioid therapy is... |
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SubjectTerms | Analgesics, Opioid - poisoning Analgesics, Opioid - therapeutic use Databases, Factual Drug Overdose Humans Infusion Pumps, Implantable - adverse effects Injections, Spinal - adverse effects Injections, Spinal - mortality Intrathecal Drugs Morphine Mortality Opioid Pain Pain - drug therapy Risk Factors |
Title | Medical Practice Perspective: Identification and Mitigation of Risk Factors for Mortality Associated with Intrathecal Opioids for Non-Cancer Pain |
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