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Intravenous acetaminophen improves outcomes after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement

Intravenous acetaminophen improves outcomes after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement Intravenous acetaminophen improves outcomes after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement
Intravenous acetaminophen improves outcomes after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement Intravenous acetaminophen improves outcomes after transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement

Complications with opioid-based postoperative pain management have led to guideline recommendations for a multimodal analgesia strategy incorporating nonopioid agents. 

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Key take away

The transapical approach (TA) is an established access substitute for the transfemoral method in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) for the symptomatic aortic valve stenosis treatment. This retrospective study pointed out that the patients who received intravenous acetaminophen used significantly fewer morphine equivalents on and had a shorter median length of stay.

Background

Complications with opioid-based postoperative pain management have led to guideline recommendations for a multimodal analgesia strategy incorporating nonopioid agents. The opioid-sparing effect of intravenous acetaminophen in patients undergoing transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement was evaluated.

Method

A multimodal pain management method that comprised intravenous acetaminophen was retrospectively evaluated in 43 patients undergoing transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement between November 2012 and March 2014. Before intravenous acetaminophen formulary availability, 23 patients received standard postoperative pain management interventions including intravenous narcotics and oral narcotics/acetaminophen. After intravenous acetaminophen availability, 20 patients received intravenous acetaminophen (4 g/d, ≥4 doses) and supplemental intravenous and non-acetaminophen oral narcotics. Daily narcotic dose (standardised to morphine equivalents), drug cost, and hospital length of stay were compared among groups.

Result

Baseline characteristics were similar between intravenous acetaminophen (n = 20) and nonintravenous acetaminophen (n = 23) patients including the Society of Thoracic Surgery mortality risk (10.5% vs 9.0%). The median number of intravenous acetaminophen doses was 6.5 (interquartile range = 4.0-18.5), with a median cost per patient of US $221 (interquartile range = $136-$629). Patients who received intravenous acetaminophen used significantly fewer morphine equivalents on postoperative day 0 compared with patients not receiving intravenous acetaminophen (22.5 vs 45.0 morphine equivalents, P = 0.03) and had a shorter average length of stay (5.0 vs 7.0 days). After adjusting for the Society of Thoracic Surgery risk, intravenous acetaminophen continued to be associated with a reduction in median postoperative length of stay [-1.9 days (95% confidence interval = -0.9 to -8.2 days)].

Conclusion

A multimodal pain management strategy incorporating intravenous acetaminophen in patients undergoing transapical transcatheter aortic valve replacement was associated with reductions in narcotic use on the day of surgery and overall length of stay.

Source:

Innovations

Article:

Intravenous Acetaminophen Improves Outcomes After Transapical Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement.

Authors:

Molund M et al.

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