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Table 2 Recommendations from guidelines, their level of evidence and their strength

From: Strategies aimed at preventing long-term opioid use in trauma and orthopaedic surgery: a scoping review

Author (Sponsor), year, country

Population

Recommendations

Level of evidence

System-Based

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

Patients should be assessed for risk factors for persistent opioid use prior to the initiation of opioid therapy and during therapy to develop and coordinate the pain treatment plan with the health care team.

Recommended (GRADE)

 Kent (ASER, POQI, 2021, USA [115]

Surgery

Suggested

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Expert consensus

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

 The committeee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126] a

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Chou (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Clinicians should conduct a preoperative evaluation to guide the intraoperative pain management plan. It should include: assessment of medical and psychiatric comorbidities, concomitant medications, history of chronic pain, substance abuse, and previous postoperative treatment regimens and responses.

Strong recommendation, low-quality evidence

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

Opioid tolerance should be diagnosed preoperatively. Referral to an addiction specialist should be made in the presence of opioid-tolerance.

Expert consensus

 Mai, 2015, USA [119]

Musculoskeletal injuries

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

Doses of prescribed controlled substances should be verified via the relevant state Prescription Drug Monitoring Program (PDMP), or by contacting the original prescriber or dispensing pharmacist.

Strong recommendation, low-level of evidence

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

Expert consensus

 Mai, 2015, USA [119]

Musculoskeletal injuries

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Chou (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Facilities in which surgery is performed should provide clinicians with referral options to a pain specialist for patients with inadequately controlled postoperative pain or at high risk of inadequately controlled postoperative pain (e.g. opioid-tolerant, history of substance abuse)

Strong recommendation, low-quality evidence

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Expert consensus

 Sodhi, 2020, USA [130]

TJA

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

 Mai, 2015, USA [119]

Musculoskeletal injuries

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

If pain persists beyond 3 months, or if opioid misuse by patient is suspected, the patient should be referred to a transitional/chronic pain clinic or pain management specialist.

No level of evidence

The trauma center should provide a pain management service or resources to act as an expert consultant within the trauma service.

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

The patient’s outpatient opioid prescriber should be identified and be contacted to anticipate discharge needs and to coordinate postoperative opioid tapering.

Recommended (GRADE)

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

For patients using illicit opioids, or patients misusing prescription opioids, follow-up should be coordinated with acute pain services (or addiction medicine or psychiatry depending on resources) for inpatients, and with the patient’s prescriber for outpatients, to ensure that there is only 1 prescriber for patients on medication-assisted therapy.

Strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

Prescribers, to the extent possible, should develop and/or support the implementation of a support system to inform clinical decisions regarding opioid prescription in the electronic medical record.

Strong recommendation, low-level of evidence

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Kent (ASER, POQI), 2021, USA [115]

Surgery

Persistent postoperative opioid use occurs when a patient interacts with numerous health care providers and institutions. Addressing system-based characteristics may be more instrumental in tapering persistent opioid use than clinical decision making. Public health initiatives, policies, and legislation at the local, state, and federal levels aimed at safe opioid prescribing should be evaluated with subsequent recommendations for further improvements that target all health care system components.

Strongly recommended

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

Expert consensus

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

Complex opioid and non-opioid management should be reimbursed with the time and resources required for patient education; safe evaluation; risk assessment; re-evaluation; and integration of alternative and non-opioid modalities.

Expert consensus

Pharmacological - Opioid Prescription Practices

 Wainwright (ERAS Society), 2020, UK [132]

TJA

Add opioids only in the setting of suboptimal analgesia after first-line administration of nonopioid options or when the benefits outweigh the risks

Strongly recommend, High level of evidence

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

Recommended (GRADE)

 Anger (PROSPECT), 2021, USA [127]

TJA

Expert consensus

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI,

 Franz (DMGP), 2019 Germany [129]

SCI

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

No level of evidence

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

The prescriber should use the lowest opioid effective dose for the shortest time period possible.

Strongly recommended, high-quality evidence

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

Recommended (GRADE)

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

Expert consensus

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

The prescriber should avoid opioid dose escalation.

Recommended (GRADE)

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

Expert consensus

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

Have a protocol for safe de-escalation of analgesics as quickly as possible.

No level of evidence

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

Promptly investigate the cause of increasing pain rather than responding by increasing the analgesic dose or adding new medications

No level of evidence

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

Prescribe precisely - Commonly written prescriptions with ranges of dose and duration can allow tripling of daily dose to levels consistent with adverse events.

Strongly recommended, low-level evidence

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

Avoid long-acting opioids in the acute phase.

Strongly recommended, moderate-quality evidence

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

Expert consensus

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

Benzodiazepines should not be prescribed in conjunction with opioids because of the significant risks posed by inconsistent sedation and the potential for misuse.

Strongly recommended, high-quality evidence

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

Expert consensus

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Patients should receive a prescription based on their opioid consumption in the hospital during the previous 24 hrs that should be written during the discharge process.

Expert consensus

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

Discharge prescriptions should separate opioids and nonopioid analgesics to make opioid tapering easier.

No level of evidence

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

Strongly consider tapering the patient off opioids as the acute pain episode resolves.

Expert consensus

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

The prescription for opioid-containing tablets should have an expiry date of 30 days from the date of discharge

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

A part-fill or prescription refill should be given to patients with an expected moderate or long-term recovery to reduce the number of opioid tablets distributed at one time.

Expert consensus

 Hsu, 2019, USA [46]

Trauma

The prescription and continued use of opioids should be based on expected functional recovery, pain, opioid use and adverse events. Complete and regular evaluations are therefore necessary.

Strong recommendation, low-quality evidence

 Chou (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Expert consensus

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

 Mai, 2015, USA [119]

Musculoskeletal injuries

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

The patient has to be physically present when the initial prescription for a controlled substance is made. No new prescriptions are made or refilled if the patient has not been seen and examined within the prior 30 days.

Expert consensus

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Patients should be discharged with a prescription for the following adjunct pain medications, unless contraindicated: Acetaminophen, NSAIDS

Expert consensus

 Fillingham (AAHKS, ASRA, AAOS, Hip society, Knee society), 2020, USA [127]

TJA

 Sodhi, 2020, USA [130]

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Anger (PROSPECT), 2021, USA [127]

TJA

Postoperative NSAID are recommended for their analgesic and opioid-sparing effect.

High-quality evidence

 Wainwright (ERAS Society), 2020, UK [132]

TJA

Strong recommadation, moderate – high level of evidence

 Fischer (PROSPECT), 2008, UK [124]

TKA

Low level of evidence

 Ftouh (NICE), 2011, UK [123]

Hip fracture

NSAID should not be used for pain management after a hip fracture because of their poor risk to benefit ratio

Expert consensus

Educational

 Hsu, 2019, USA [47]

Trauma

Health service departments should support opioid education efforts for prescribers and patients.

Strongly recommended, moderate-quality evidence

 Anger (PROSPECT), 2021, USA [127]

TJA

Patients should be provided education in the pre-operative period.

High-quality evidence

 Wainwright (ERAS Society), 2020, UK [132]

TJA

Strong recommendation, low level of evidence (GRADE)

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Patients should receive written and verbal information prior to discharge on the safe storage and disposal of unused opioids.

Expert consensus

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

 Hsu, 2019, USA [47]

Surgery

Clinicians should provide education to all patients and / or family and/or primary caregivers:

• On treatment options for pain management, the plan and goals for pain management and the pain treatment plan, including analgesic tapering after hospital discharge.

• To fill the prescription only if their pain is not adequately managed with other therapies or if they are having difficulty completing activities of daily living secondary to pain.

• On the risks and benefits of alternatives to chronic opioid therapy.

Strong recommendation, low-quality evidence

 Clarke, 2020, Canada [116]

Surgery

Expert consensus

 Trexler, 2020, USA [131]

TBI

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

No level of evidence

 Chou (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Patients chronically prescribed opioids before surgery should be instructed:

• On how to taper opioids to their target maintenance dose

• On who will prescribe controlled substances after surgery and discharge from hospital.

Strong recommendation, low-quality evidence

 Soffin, 2017, USA [118]

Orthopedic surgery

Expert consensus

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

Use apps for biopsychosocial treatments to inform physicians, providers, and patients on evidence-based and effective pain management treatments for various chronic pain syndromes more effectively.

Expert consensus

Multimodal

 Chou (APS3, ASRA4, ASA5), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Nonopioid therapy should be the first-line of treatment and multimodal analgesia should be used as opposed to opioid monotherapy for pain control. Therapies can be pharmacological or nonpharmacological.

Strong recommendation, high-quality evidence

 Wainwright (ERAS Society), 2020, UK [132]

TJA

 Hsu, 2019, USA [47]

Trauma

Strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 Edwards (ASER, POQI), 2019, USA [117]

Patients on preoperative opioids

Strongly recommended(GRADE)

 Galvagno (EAST, TAS), 2016, USA [122]

Blunt thoracic trauma

Conditionally recommended, very-low quality evidence

 Wu (ASER), 2019, USA [123]

Surgery

Expert consensus

 Wu (ASER), 2019, USA [123]

Surgery

Patients should be discharged home with a comprehensive multimodal analgesia care plan aiming to minimize or avoid post-discharge opioid use.

Expert consensus

 Chou et al. (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Health professionals should consider gabapentin or pregabalin as components of multimodal analgesia.

Strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

For neuropathic pain, as first-line therapy, consider anticonvulsants (gabapentin, pregabalin, carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine), SNRIs (duloxetine, venlafaxine), TCAs (nortriptyline, amitriptyline), and topical analgesics (lidocaine, capsaicin).

Expert consensus

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

 Chou (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Health professionals should consider ketamine as a component of multimodal analgesia in adults.

Weak recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 Fischer (PROSPECT), 2008, UK [124]

TKA

Cooling and compression techniques should be used for postoperative analgesia, based on limited procedure-specific evidence, for a reduction in pain scores and analgesic use.

Low level of evidence

 Chou et al. (APS, ASRA, ASA), 2016, USA [48]

Surgery

Health professionals should consider transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) as an adjunct to other pain management strategies.

Weak recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 Washington State AMDG, 2015, USA [120]

All patients

In addition to medication, therapies should include physical activation and behavioral health interventions (such as cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness, coaching, patient education, and self-management).

Expert consensus

 Hsu et al., 2019, USA [47]

Trauma

Strong recommendation, moderate-quality evidence

 U.S. Department of Health ad Human Services (Task Force), 2019, USA [121]

All patients

Consider complementary and integrative health approaches, including acupuncture, mindfulness meditation, movement therapy, art therapy, massage therapy, manipulative therapy, spirituality, yoga, and tai chi, in the treatment of acute and chronic pain, when indicated.

Expert consensus

 The committee on trauma of the ACS, 2020, USA [126]

Trauma

Nonpharmacologic pain management strategies are recommended as adjuncts for pain and anxiety management in trauma to minimize opioid use and chronic pain development

No level of evidence

  1. Abbreviations: ACS American College of Surgeons, AMDG Agency Medical Directors’ Group, APS American Pain Society, ASA American Society of Anesthesiologists, ASER American Society for Enhanced Recovery, ASRA American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, EAST Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma, GRADE Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation, NICE National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, POQI Perioperative Quality Initiative, TAS Trauma anesthesiology society, Task Force Pain Management Best Practices Inter-agency Task Force, TJA Total joint. Arthroplasty, TKA Total knee arthroplasty
  2. aThis source does not describe any method for classifying the level of evidence of recommendations