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Perioperative opioid use in paediatric inguinal hernia patients: A systematic review and retrospective audit of practice

articles · StayCurrentMD · Mar 13, 2022
Abstract

Background

: Opioids play a major role in postoperative pain management in children, but their administration remains an under-investigated topic. This study aimed to describe perioperative opioid prescribing practices for paediatric inguinal hernia patients in the literature and at The Royal Children's Hospital (RCH) in Melbourne, Australia.

Material/Method

: A systematic review of English articles (published from 2009-2019) was conducted on paediatric (0-18y) inguinal hernia patients who received a postoperative or discharge opioid prescription, or both. The review was combined with a retrospective audit of RCH patients. Demographic, surgical, and analgesic details were collected from the electronic medical records.

Results

: Fifteen studies (n=1166; combined mean age 4.93y) met the systematic review criteria. The percentage of patients receiving opioids postoperatively overall ranged from 3.33%-100%, and doses ranged from 0.07-0.35 mg/kg oMEDD. At the RCH, perioperative opioid use was analysed from 150 inguinal hernia patients (male – 113, median age – 3 months old). Postoperatively, 26 (17.3%) patients received opioids. The most commonly administered opioids were fentanyl (0.04-0.60 mg/kg oMEDD) in the post-anaesthesia care unit and oxycodone (0.14-0.40 mg/kg oMEDD) in the first 24 hours postoperatively. Older age at surgery, female sex and absence of regional anaesthesia were significantly associated with higher risk of total opioid use. No patients received an opioid prescription at discharge.

Conclusion

: There is demonstratable variability in opioid prescribing practices for paediatric inguinal hernia patients as described in the literature. At our institution opioids were not used frequently in postoperative period.

Level of Evidence

: Level IV

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