Status of inpatient pain therapy using the example of a general and abdominal surgery normal ward – a prospective questionnaire study to review a pain therapy algorithm (“real-world data”)

Author:

Brinkers Michael1,Istel Mandy2,Kretzschmar Moritz1,Pfau Giselher1,Meyer Frank3

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pain Therapy, Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine , University Hospital at Magdeburg , Magdeburg , Germany

2. Department of Cardiology , University Hospital at Magdeburg , Magdeburg , Germany

3. Department of General, Abdominal, Vascular and Transplant Surgery , University Hospital at Magdeburg , Magdeburg , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives The mean pain intensity for inpatient consultations, for example in cancer patients, is known. However, the proportion of necessary consultations in the total volume of patients of a ward or a hospital, the general pain intensity in a surgical ward and the relationship between pain medication, length of stay and therapeutic success are unknown. The aim of the study was to examine surgical patients in a single normal ward subclassified into various groups (−/+ surgery, ICU stay, cancer, consultation for pain therapy etc.) during half a year with regard to their pain. For this purpose, the pain score (NAS) was recorded daily for each patient during the entire hospital stay and the change was assessed over the clinical course. Methods In 2017, all consecutive new admissions to a normal ward of general surgery at a university hospital (“tertiary center”) were monitored over half a year according to a standardized procedure. Pain severity (measured by the “Numeric rating scale” [NRS] respectively “Visual analogue scale” [VAS]) from admission to discharge was recorded, as well as the length of stay and the administered medication. Patient groups were sub-classified as surgery, intensive care unit, cancer and pain consultation. An algorithm in two parts (part 1, antipyretics and piritramide; part 2, WHO-scheme and psychotropic drugs), which was defined years before between surgeons and pain therapists, was pursued and consequently used as a basis for the evaluation of the therapeutic success. Results 269 patients were included in the study. The mean pain intensity of all patients at admission was VAS 2.2. Most of the groups (non-cancer, intensive care unit [ICU], non-ICU, surgical intervention (=Operation [OP]), non-OP, pain intensity greater than VAS 3) were significantly reduced in pain at discharge. An exception in this context was patients with cancer-associated pain and, thus, initiated pain consultation. Conclusions Since three quarters of the consultation patients also reported cancer pain, it might be possible that the lack of treatment success in both the consultation and cancer groups is associated with cancer in these patients. However, it can be shown that the successfully treated groups (without ICU-based course) had a mean length of stay from 4.2 ± 3.9 up to 8.4 ± 8.1 days (d), while the two unsuccessfully treated groups experienced a longer stay (mean“cancer”, 11.1 ± 9.4 d; mean“consulation”, 14.2 ± 10.3 d). Twenty-one consultation patients, in whom it had been intended to improve pain intensity, could not be successfully treated despite adapted therapy – this can be considered a consequence of the low number of patients. Since the consultation patients were the only patient group treated with part 2 of the algorithm, it can be concluded that part 1 of the algorithm is sufficient for a mean length of stay up to 9 days. For all patients above this time point, a pain consultation with adaption of medical treatment should be considered.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Surgery

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