PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Text message program shows 60 percent of opioid tablets unused after common procedures

2021-03-25
(Press-News.org) More than half of the opioid tablets prescribed for patients who underwent orthopaedic or urologic procedures went unused in a new study by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Using an automated text messaging system that regularly checked in with patients on their pain and opioid use, the study also showed that most opioids are taken within the first few days following a procedure and may not be necessary to manage pain even just a week following a procedure. The study was published today in JAMA Network Open.

"Through simple text messaging we highlight a method which gives clinicians the information they need to reduce prescribing and manage pain," said co-lead author Anish Agarwal, MD, a clinical innovation manager in the Penn Medicine Center for Digital Health and an assistant professor of Emergency Medicine. "We found that more than 60 percent of the opioid tablets prescribed went unused, which tracks with the team's preliminary studies. We can begin to use these data in multiple ways: One approach would be to look at trends in patient-reported use and tailor future prescribing to meet the anticipated pain for the majority of patients undergoing a specific procedure."

In response to the opioid crisis, using text messaging to keep track of how many prescriptions patients actually take after a procedure - and to potentially right-size the amount prescribed - is relatively new but growing in popularity. The traditional ways that clinicians track their patients' opioid use could use a boost.

"Right now, care teams rely heavily on patient recall, which they may not be able to remember in detail; phone calls, which require a lot of effort in making calls; or tracking from the health system ordering, which does not provide information from the patients themselves about how much they are using, and how much pain they are in," explained co-lead author Daniel Lee, MD, an assistant professor of Urology. "So with these older methods, either the data we are getting could be inaccurate, or the way we get the data is not scalable for an entire health system."

Using automated text messaging systems, then, provides the opportunity for large-scale, near-real-time polling of patients. But as an emerging method, it requires study.

With that in mind, Agarwal, Lee, co-author Eric Hume, MD, director of Quality and Safety and an associate professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, and senior author M. Kit Delgado, MD, an assistant professor of Emergency Medicine and Epidemiology, and their team set out to test the text messaging system. Over a span of several months in 2019, they enrolled patients who'd had common orthopaedic and urologic procedures, ranging from knee arthroscopy to hand fracture fixes and vasectomies to prostatectomies.

A little more than 900 patients - approximately 45 percent of those eligible - participated in the study. About 80 percent were orthopaedic patients and just under 20 percent had urological procedures. Participants were asked to rate their pain (on a scale of zero to 10), as well as if they felt able to manage that pain on the fourth day following their procedure. Subsequent texts went out on days seven, 14 and 21 to measure the change over time. Each of these texts also inquired about opioid tablet use which was matched to their initial prescription.

As time went on, the text messages showed that the average pain scores fell among patients of both classifications of procedures. At the same time, the ability to manage pain climbed, according to patients. However, this all seemed to be accomplished with fewer and fewer opioid pills, the study showed, and certainly far fewer than were prescribed. By day seven, most patients had actually stopped taking tablets (the average patient in the study took zero tablets by day seven).

The average Orthopaedic Surgery patient took six tablets across the entire study period, but had been prescribed 20. Among Urology patients, one tablet was the average amount used, compared to seven prescribed. The study showed that, across the board, 64 percent of patients didn't even use half of their prescription, and only 21 percent of Orthopaedic Surgery patients and 11 percent of Urology patients needed a refill a month out from their procedure.

"Having data on our prescription of opioids and the amount that was unused is eye-opening," said Hume. "This is so much more powerful and engaging than a generic message to reduce prescribing without an eye toward patient needs."

The team believes that knowing the difference between prescription rates and use, along with finding this reliable way to measure that difference, will be a game-changer in pain management for surgical procedures.

"The potential to translate these findings to tailor post-operative prescribing to patient needs and change national practice is high," said Delgado, who also serves as Co-Chair of the Penn Medicine Opioid Task Force. "This study has national implications, as it shows that patients only take a fraction of the amounts that we know are prescribed on average across the country. Previously we showed the median amount of opioid pills prescribed to be 40 tablets for knee arthroscopy and 20 tablets for prostate or bladder resections. We are in the process of rolling this automated text messaging platform to additional surgical groups within the health system and will continue to share our learnings to guide practice on a broader scale."

INFORMATION:

This study was partly funded by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA, grant number HHSF223201810209C).

Other authors include Brian Sennett, Zarina Ali, Ruiying Xiong, Jessica Hemmons, Evan Spencer, Dina Abdel-Rahman, Rachel Kleinman, Hannah Lacko, Annamarie Horan, Mary Dooley, and Samir Mehta.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pregnant women show robust immune response to COVID vaccines, pass antibodies to newborns

2021-03-25
BOSTON - In the largest study of its kind to date, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital and the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard have found the new mRNA COVID-19 vaccines to be highly effective in producing antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 virus in pregnant and lactating women. They also demonstrated the vaccines confer protective immunity to newborns through breastmilk and the placenta. The study, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (AJOG), looked at 131 women of reproductive age (84 pregnant, 31 lactating and 16 non-pregnant), ...

Forty-three percent of melanoma patients have chronic complications from immunotherapies

2021-03-25
Chronic side effects among melanoma survivors after treatment with anti-PD-1 immunotherapies are more common than previously recognized, according to a study published March 25 in JAMA Oncology. The chronic complications, which occurred in 43% of patients, affected the joints and endocrine system most commonly, and less often involved salivary glands, eyes, peripheral nerves and other organs. These complications may be long lasting, with only 14% of cases having been resolved at last follow-up. This finding contrasted with previously reported immunotherapy-related acute complications that affected visceral organs -- including the liver, colon, lungs and kidneys -- which were effectively treated with steroids. However, the vast ...

Moderate daily caffeine intake during pregnancy may lead to smaller birth size

2021-03-25
Pregnant women who consumed the caffeine equivalent of as little as half a cup of coffee a day on average had slightly smaller babies than pregnant women who did not consume caffeinated beverages, according to a study by researchers at the National Institutes of Health. The researchers found corresponding reductions in size and lean body mass for infants whose mothers consumed below the 200 milligrams of caffeine per day--about two cups of coffee--believed to increase risks to the fetus. Smaller birth size can place infants at higher risk of obesity, heart ...

The CNIO describe how embryonic stem cells keep optimal conditions for use in regenerative medicine

The CNIO describe how embryonic stem cells keep optimal conditions for use in regenerative medicine
2021-03-25
Scientists at the Proteomics Core Unit of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), headed by Javier Muñoz, have described the mechanisms, unknown to date, involved in maintaining embryonic stem cells in the best possible state for their use in regenerative medicine. Their results, published in Nature Communications, will help to find novel stem-cell therapies for brain stroke, heart disease or neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease. Naïve pluripotent stem cells, ideal for doing research Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are pluripotent cells that can grow ...

Detecting hidden signals

2021-03-25
Quantum holds the promise of increasing the power of sensing technologies. While the field of quantum sensing has shown a lot of potential for detecting very small signals, the ability to truly optimize these sensors has been thwarted by the complexity of control schemes. In a paper published on March 25 in Nature Partner Journals - Quantum Information, a research team based at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, explained how they applied two theoretical tools of quantum information to these types of extremely sensitive signal detection tasks. Their research suggests that honing this sensitivity to detect signals while rejecting background noise will enable the use of quantum ...

Does selfishness evolve? Ask a cannibal

Does selfishness evolve? Ask a cannibal
2021-03-25
HOUSTON - (March 25, 2021) - One of nature's most prolific cannibals could be hiding in your pantry, and biologists have used it to show how social structure affects the evolution of selfish behavior. Researchers revealed that less selfish behavior evolved under living conditions that forced individuals to interact more frequently with siblings. While the finding was verified with insect experiments, Rice University biologist Volker Rudolf said the evolutionary principal could be applied to study any species, including humans. In a study published online this week in Ecology Letters, Rudolf, longtime collaborator Mike Boots of the University of California, Berkeley, and colleagues showed they could drive the evolution of cannibalism in ...

Global evidence for how EdTech can support pupils with disabilities is 'thinly spread'

2021-03-25
An 'astonishing' deficit of data about how the global boom in educational technology could help pupils with disabilities in low and middle-income countries has been highlighted in a new report. Despite widespread optimism that educational technology, or 'EdTech', can help to level the playing field for young people with disabilities, the study found a significant shortage of evidence about which innovations are best-positioned to help which children, and why; specifically in low-income contexts. The review also found that many teachers lack training on how to use new technology, or are reluctant to do so. The ...

Should you take fish oil? Depends on your genotype

2021-03-25
Fish oil supplements are a billion-dollar industry built on a foundation of purported, but not proven, health benefits. Now, new research from a team led by a University of Georgia scientist indicates that taking fish oil only provides health benefits if you have the right genetic makeup. The study, led by Kaixiong Ye and published in PLOS Genetics, focused on fish oil (and the omega-3 fatty acids it contains) and its effect on triglycerides, a type of fat in the blood and a biomarker for cardiovascular disease. "We've known for a few decades that a higher level of omega-3 fatty acids in the blood is associated with a lower risk of heart disease," said Ye, assistant professor ...

Common Alzheimer's treatment linked to slower cognitive decline

2021-03-25
Cholinesterase inhibitors are a group of drugs recommended for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease, but their effects on cognition have been debated and few studies have investigated their long-term effects. A new study involving researchers from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden and published in the journal Neurology shows persisting cognitive benefits and reduced mortality for up to five years after diagnosis. Alzheimer's disease is a cognitive brain disease that affects millions of patients around the world. Some 100,000 people in Sweden live with the diagnosis, which has a profound impact on the lives of both them and their families. Most of those who receive a diagnosis are over 65, but there are some patients ...

Will COVID-19 vaccines need to be adapted regularly?

Will COVID-19 vaccines need to be adapted regularly?
2021-03-25
Influenza vaccines need to be evaluated every year to ensure they remain effective against new influenza viruses. Will the same apply to COVID-19 vaccines? In order to gauge whether and to what extent this may be necessary, a team of researchers from Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin compared the evolution of endemic 'common cold' coronaviruses with that of influenza viruses. The researchers predict that, while the pandemic is ongoing, vaccines will need to undergo regular updates. A few years into the post-pandemic period, however, vaccines ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Researchers characterize mechanism for regulating orderly zygotic genome activation in early embryos

AI analysis of urine can predict flare up of lung disease a week in advance

New DESI results weigh in on gravity

New DESI data shed light on gravity’s pull in the universe

Boosting WA startups: Report calls for investment in talent, diversity and innovation

New AEM study highlights feasibility of cranial accelerometry device for prehospital detection of large-vessel occlusion stroke

High cardiorespiratory fitness linked to lower risk of dementia

Oral microbiome varies with life stress and mental health symptoms in pregnant women

NFL’s Arizona Cardinals provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Northerners, Scots and Irish excel at detecting fake accents to guard against outsiders, Cambridge study suggests

Synchronized movement between robots and humans builds trust, study finds

Global experts make sense of the science shaping public policies worldwide in new International Science Council and Frontiers Policy Labs series

The Wistar Institute and Cameroon researchers reveals HIV latency reversing properties in African plant

$4.5 million Dept. of Education grant to expand mental health services through Binghamton University Community Schools

Thermochemical tech shows promising path for building heat

Four Tufts University faculty are named top researchers in the world

Columbia Aging Center epidemiologist co-authors new report from National Academies on using race and ethnicity in biomedical research

Astronomers discover first pairs of white dwarf and main sequence stars in clusters, shining new light on stellar evolution

C-Path’s TRxA announces $1 million award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

Changing the definition of cerebral palsy

New research could pave way for vaccine against deadly wildlife disease

Listening for early signs of Alzheimer’s disease #ASA187

Research Spotlight: Gastroenterology education improved through inpatient care teaching model

Texas A&M researchers uncover secrets of horse genetics for conservation, breeding

Bioeconomy in Colombia: The race to save Colombia's vital shellfish

NFL’s Colts bring CPR education to flag football to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Research: Fitness more important than fatness for a lower risk of premature death

Researchers use biophysics to design new vaccines against RSV and related respiratory viruses

New study highlights physician perspectives on emerging anti-amyloid treatments for Alzheimer’s disease in Israel

U of M research finds creativity camp improves adolescent mental health, well-being

[Press-News.org] Text message program shows 60 percent of opioid tablets unused after common procedures