Opioid pain medications may affect liver transplant patients' survival
Saint Louis University Health News Mar 15, 2017
In a recent paper published in the journal Liver Transplantation, researchers reported that the use of opioid pain medications may play a significant role in patient outcomes following liver transplantation, according to Saint Louis University nephrologist and senior author Krista Lentine, MD, PhD.
An analysis of nearly 30,000 patients undergoing liver transplantation in the United States between 2008 and 2014 found elevated death and organ loss rates in the first five years after transplantation among recipients with the highest use of opioid pain medications while on the waiting list.
Higher risks mainly emerged after the first transplant anniversary, a pattern that may in part reflect sustained opioid use. Sixty five percent of those with the highest level of opioid use on the waiting list continued moderate to high level use in the first year after transplantation.
The findings indicate that transplant candidates who require high levels of opioids should be carefully assessed and monitored before and after transplantation.
ÂConcerns for an epidemic of complications related to use of prescription opioids has not spared the population with end–stage liver disease, Lentine said. ÂRisks of opioid–related toxicities may be even greater in patients with organ failure, due to altered drug metabolism and excretion. First author and associate professor of surgery at Saint Louis University Henry Randall, MD, concurred, noting ÂMore work is needed to identify underlying mechanisms of mortality, determine the impact of decreasing opioid use before transplant, and design pain management strategies that improve patient outcomes.Â
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An analysis of nearly 30,000 patients undergoing liver transplantation in the United States between 2008 and 2014 found elevated death and organ loss rates in the first five years after transplantation among recipients with the highest use of opioid pain medications while on the waiting list.
Higher risks mainly emerged after the first transplant anniversary, a pattern that may in part reflect sustained opioid use. Sixty five percent of those with the highest level of opioid use on the waiting list continued moderate to high level use in the first year after transplantation.
The findings indicate that transplant candidates who require high levels of opioids should be carefully assessed and monitored before and after transplantation.
ÂConcerns for an epidemic of complications related to use of prescription opioids has not spared the population with end–stage liver disease, Lentine said. ÂRisks of opioid–related toxicities may be even greater in patients with organ failure, due to altered drug metabolism and excretion. First author and associate professor of surgery at Saint Louis University Henry Randall, MD, concurred, noting ÂMore work is needed to identify underlying mechanisms of mortality, determine the impact of decreasing opioid use before transplant, and design pain management strategies that improve patient outcomes.Â
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