MedPath

Opioid Education in Total Knee Arthroplasty

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Opioid Abuse
Post Operative Pain
Opioid Use
Opioid Misuse
Arthropathy of Knee
Interventions
Other: Opioid education in person
Other: Opioid education via video
Registration Number
NCT05593341
Lead Sponsor
Hospital for Special Surgery, New York
Brief Summary

The goal of this experimental study is to compare different education intervention on opioid education for patients undergoing total knee arthroplasty. The specific research questions to address are:

1. Does perioperative education pathway reduce opioid refill requests?

2. Is education pathway that focuses on pain management provided in-person and via video in repeated sessions more effective than current standard of care education consisting of a single exposure given as part of a broader preoperative presentation covering multiple topics?

3. Is there a difference between education provided in-person vs video?

4. Does perioperative education improve compliance with multimodal analgesia?

5. Does perioperative education improve appropriate opioid storage?

6. Does perioperative education improve appropriate opioid disposal?

Enrolled patients will be assigned at random to one of 3 study groups. Group 1 (control): Patients are referred to the hospital's standard 1-hour virtual patient education webinar prior to surgery.

Group 2 (in-person): Patients will receive two in-person education sessions (1st session before surgery and 2nd session after surgery). Patients will also receive portable document format (pdf) handouts about opioid and pain management.

Group 3 (video): Patients will receive two video education sessions (1st session before surgery and 2nd session after surgery). Patients will also receive pdf handouts about opioid and pain management.

Detailed Description

Patients undergoing surgery are frequently unaware of how to properly use opioids for pain management which may result in poor compliance with pain regimens, worse pain control and functional outcomes, and improper storage and disposal. There is evidence that educational interventions in various formats may improve pain and promote proper opioid handling. In addition, multimodal analgesia has been shown to be effective in total joint arthroplasty, and setting appropriate expectations may reduce anxiety, postoperative recovery time, and post surgical acute pain.

The current education process at HSS involves patient referral to a virtual webinar which is optional. Pain topics are covered within a broader 50-minute presentation on numerous topics related to surgery. Information on pain topics may be difficult to process and retain because it is a single exposure that is combined with multiple unrelated topics, and there is no repetition or reference provided. The aim of this study is to explore how a comprehensive educational pathway focusing on aspects of pain control and proper opioid use with repeated sessions will affect outcomes after total knee arthroplasty by comparing three groups - 1) patients who attend the virtual webinar, 2) an in-person session with a portable document format (PDF), and 3) a video session with PDF.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
42
Inclusion Criteria
  • Age between age 18 and 80 years old
  • Undergoing primary total knee replacement surgery at Hospital for Special Surgery
  • English speaking
Exclusion Criteria
  • History of chronic opioid use (continuous opioid use for 3 or more months)
  • Opioid use within the past 3 months
  • Contraindication to NSAIDs or acetaminophen
  • Contraindication or allergy to opioids
  • Contraindication to any study medications (i.e., fentanyl, ketamine, versed, acetaminophen, ketorolac, zofran, decadron)
  • Discharge to rehab or skilled nursing facility (opioids are not prescribed by HSS providers)
  • Contraindication or refusal to receive neuraxial anesthesia or peripheralnerve blocks (PNB)
  • Revision surgery
  • Ambulatory surgery
  • Patients who are pregnant

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
In-person and PDFOpioid education in personPatients will receive two in-person education sessions (1st session before surgery and 2nd session after surgery). Patients will also receive pdf handouts about opioids and pain management.
Video and PDFOpioid education via videoPatients will receive two video education sessions (1st session before surgery and 2nd session after surgery). Patients will also receive pdf handouts about opioids and pain management.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Opioid refill at POD 30Post operative day (POD) 30

Patients will be asked if they have refilled their opioid prescription and the number of opioid refills.

Opioid refill at POD 60Post operative day (POD) 60

Patients will be asked if they have refilled their opioid prescription and the number of opioid refills.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rates of compliance with multimodal regimenPost-operative day 1, Post-operative day 7, Post-operative day 14

Patients will keep "pain diary" to record use of each medication (acetaminophen, NSAIDs, and opioid). Compliance will be defined as the percentage of prescribed medication (acetaminophen or NSAID) that is actually taken.

Rates of proper opioid storagePost-operative day 7

Patients will be asked to report how they are storing their opioids (i.e., stored "locked and hidden").

Hospital length of stayFrom the time patient enters the post-anesthesia care unit (PACU entry) until the time patient is discharged from the hospital (discharge time), assessed up to 168 hours (1 week)

The total amount of time spent in-patient following their surgery.

Numerical Rating ScalePost-operative day 0, Post-operative day 1, Post-operative day 7, Post-operative day 14

Patients are asked to report a number between 0 and 10 that best measures their pain intensity. Zero represents 'no pain at all' whereas 10 represents 'the worst pain ever possible'.

Patient's health and recovery status following their surgeryPre-operative (when patient is in the holding area being prepped for surgery), Post-operative day 1, Post-operative day 7, Post-operative day 14

A survey titled: quality of recovery 15 (QoR15) is a patient- reported outcome measure measuring quality of recovery after surgery and anesthesia.

Each of the following question on the survey will be assessed on a 0-10 scale, with 0 meaning "none of the time" and 10 meaning "all of the time".

How have you been feeling in the last 24 hours?

1. Able to breathe easily

2. Been able to enjoy food

3. Feeling rested

4. Have had a good sleep

5. Able to look after personal toilet and hygiene unaided

6. Able to communicate with family or friends

7. Getting support from hospital doctors and nurses

8. Able to return to work or usual home activities

9. Feeling comfortable and in control

10. Having a feeling of general well-being

Have you had any of the following in the last 24 hours?

11. Moderate pain

12. Severe pain

13. Nausea or vomiting

14. Feeling worried or anxious

15. Feeling sad or depressed

Opioid consumptionPost-operative day 0, Post-operative day 1, Post-operative day 7, Post-operative day 14

The amount of opioid consumption by the patient (in oral morphine equivalents).

Rates of proper opioid disposalPost-operative day 21

Patients will be asked to report how they are disposing of their unused opioids (i.e., reporting they dispose using one of the accepted proper disposal methods).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hospital for Special Surgery

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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