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Journal Article

Citation

Macdermid JC, McClure JA, Richards L, Faber KJ, Jaglal S. OTA Int. 2022; 5(3): e202.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Orthopaedic Trauma Association, Publisher Wolters Kluwer)

DOI

10.1097/OI9.0000000000000202

PMID

36425087

PMCID

PMC9580049

Abstract

To describe opioid use for a first upper extremity fracture in a cohort of patients who did not have recent opioid use.

DESIGN: Descriptive epidemiological study.

SETTING: Emergency Department, Hospital.

PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: We obtained health administrative data records of adults presenting with a first adult upper extremity fracture from 2013 to 2017 in Ontario, Canada. We excluded patients with previous fractures, opioid prescription in the past 6 months or hospitalization >5 days after the fracture.

INTERVENTION: Opioid prescription.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS: We identified the proportion of patients filling an opioid prescription within 7 days of fracture. We described this based on different upper extremity fractures (ICD-10), Demographics (age, sex, rurality), comorbidity (Charlson Comorbidity Index, Rheumatoid arthritis, Diabetes), season of injury, and social marginalization (Ontario Marginalization Index-a data algorithm that combines a wide range of demographic indicators into 4 distinct dimensions of marginalization). We considered statistical differences (P<.01) that reached a standardized mean difference of 10% as being clinically important (standardized mean difference [SMD] ≥ 0.1).

RESULTS: From 220,440 patients with a first upper extremity fracture (50% female, mean age 50), opioids were used by 34% of cases overall (32% in males, 36% in females, P<.001, SMD ≥ 0.1). Use varied by body region, with those with multiple or proximal fractures having the highest use: multiple shoulder 64%, multiple regions 62%, shoulder 62%, elbow 38%, wrist 31%, and hand 21%; and was higher in patients who had a nerve/tendon injury or hospitalization (P<.01, SMD ≥ 0.1). Social marginalization, comorbidity, and season of injury had clinically insignificant effects on opioid use.

CONCLUSIONS: More than one-third of patients who are recent-non-users will fill an opioid prescription within 7 days of a first upper extremity fracture, with usage highly influenced by fracture characteristics.Level of Evidence: Level II.


Language: en

Keywords

epidemiology; opioid; fractures; upper extremity

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