Opioid-free Laparoscopic Appendectomy: Quality Improvement Project.

Journal: Pediatric Quality & Safety
Published:
Abstract

This quality improvement project has tracked postoperative measures for more than 5 years as we implement an opioid-free laparoscopic appendectomy protocol. We used statistical process control charts to analyze real-world data captured from the medical record. Outcome measures included postanesthesia care unit (PACU) length of stay (LOS), 24-hour maximum pain scores, PACU intravenous opioid medication administration, hospital LOS, and postoperative day 1 morphine milliequivalent requirement. We monitored this family of measures in all appendectomy patients as our team adopted the opioid-free protocol; in addition, we rationally subgrouped patients into the opioid-receiving group versus the opioid-free group. A total of 2,483 pediatric laparoscopic appendectomies were performed between January 1, 2017, and June 30, 2023. Starting in 2017, we encouraged anesthesia providers to follow an opioid-free protocol for laparoscopic appendectomy. By October 2019, a ~50% adoption rate of intraoperative opioid-free anesthetic management had occurred. In total, 1,486 patients received opioids and 997 patients did not (opioid-free). No special cause variation was observed for the measured outcomes, including maximum 24-hour pain scores or PACU rescue opioid administration. We did notice reduced hospital LOS in addition to a reduced postoperative day 1 morphine milliequivalent requirement in the opioid-free group. This quality improvement project implemented an opioid-free laparoscopic appendectomy protocol for pediatric patients without adversely affecting pain scores, rate of PACU rescue opioids, or hospital LOS.

Authors
Kelsey Mitchell, Hilary Hoffman, David Liston, Jeffrey Hamilton, Daniel Low
Relevant Conditions

Appendectomy