Evaluating Routine Opioid Use during Acute Respiratory Failure
Project Number7R01HL151607-05
Former Number5R01HL151607-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderWALKEY, ALLAN J. Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationUNIV OF MASSACHUSETTS MED SCH WORCESTER
Description
Abstract Text
ABSTRACT / PROJECT SUMMARY
In “Evaluating Routine Opioid Use during Acute Respiratory Failure”, we propose to study the prescribing
practices and long-term ramifications of the routine use of opioids among patients with acute respiratory failure
who require mechanical ventilation in the United States. Exposure to prescription opioids may produce opioid-
related complications, leading healthcare organizations to increasingly recommend non-opioid alternatives to
pain treatment. In contrast to opioid minimization strategies within other healthcare settings, critical care
guidelines recommend opioids as the first-line treatment for discomfort that associated with use of a mechanical
ventilator. Currently, prescribing patterns for opioids among the approximately 1 million patients in the United
States who receive support from a mechanical ventilator for acute respiratory failure are unclear. In addition,
changes in opioid prescribing in response to critical care guidelines that recommend opioids as first line pain
treatment during mechanical have not been described. Importantly, links between opioids prescribed during
mechanical ventilation and long-term opioid use and opioid-related complications remain unexplored. We will
use existing longitudinal electronic health record data from complementary sources to efficiently evaluate opioid
prescribing patterns and opioid-associated outcomes after critical illness. We have assembled a team with a
record of collaboration and expertise in the epidemiology of opioid use, use of electronic health record data to
study outcomes after critical illness, and observational research methodology. Our study will benchmark clinical
practice for opioid use during acute respiratory failure, and provide insights into the potential risks and benefits
of a common, but understudied practice of routine opioid use during mechanical ventilation. Results from our
proposal will inform future therapeutic recommendations, and guide the design and conduct of future randomized
trials investigating opioid-limited analgesia in the intensive care setting.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
Rising complications of opioid use prompted the United States Department of Health and Human Services to
declare opioid overdoses a nationwide public health emergency in October 2017. In contrast to most areas of
medicine in which guidelines suggest reductions in opioid prescriptions, opioid medications are recommended
for patients who require mechanical ventilators for breathing assistance during respiratory failure. The current
proposal will fill large gaps in knowledge to provide national estimates regarding the use of opioids for patients
with acute respiratory failure who require mechanical ventilation, and to assess connections between high doses
of opioids prescribed during mechanical ventilation and long-term opioid-related adverse events.
No Sub Projects information available for 7R01HL151607-05
Publications
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