Authors
Constanza de Dios, Robert Suchting, Charles Green, James M Klugh, John A Harvin, Heather E Webber, Joy M Schmitz, Scott D Lane, Jin H Yoon, Angela Heads, Kandice Motley, Angela Stotts
Publication date
2023/12/1
Journal
Surgery
Volume
174
Issue
6
Pages
1463-1470
Publisher
Mosby
Description
Background
Screening to identify patients at risk for opioid misuse after trauma is recommended but not commonly used to guide perioperative opioid management interventions. The Multimodal Analgesic Strategies for Trauma trial demonstrated that an opioid-minimizing multimodal pain regimen reduced opioid exposure in a heterogeneous trauma patient population. Here, we assess the efficacy of the Multimodal Analgesic Strategies for Trauma multimodal pain regimen in a critical patient subgroup who screened at high risk for opioid misuse.
Methods
The Multimodal Analgesic Strategies for Trauma trial compared an opioid-minimizing multimodal pain regimen (oral acetaminophen, naproxen, gabapentin, lidocaine patch, as-needed opioid) against an original multimodal pain regimen (intravenous followed by oral acetaminophen, 48-hour celecoxib and pregabalin, followed by naproxen and gabapentin …
Total citations