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Home/Large Joints and Extremities/IV or Oral Acetaminophen for THA? New Data From HSS
Large Joints and Extremities

IV or Oral Acetaminophen for THA? New Data From HSS

April 3, 2019 1 min read Premium comments

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IV or Oral Acetaminophen for THA? New Data From HSS
Source: Wikimedia Commons and Ministry of Information
#totalhiparthroplastySecondary#ivacetaminophen#oralacetaminophen

To examine the differences in managing pain between oral and intravenous acetaminophen, a team from Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS) in New York conducted a study of 154 total hip arthroplasty patients—some of whom received either IV or oral acetaminophen.

Their work, “IV vs. Oral Acetaminophen as A Component of Multimodal Analgesia After Total Hip Arthroplasty: A Randomized, Blinded Trial,” was published in the March 6, 2019 edition of The Journal of Arthroplasty.

For the study, each patient was randomized to either receive IV acetaminophen or oral acetaminophen. The HSS team then tracked the levels of pain with physical therapy on postoperative day one; opioid side-effects on postoperative day one and, finally, cumulative opioid use.

After looking at their data, the researchers did not find a difference in opioid side effects, pain scores, or opioid use between the two groups.

Co-author Geoffrey Westrich, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon at HSS explained the most important result from the study to OTW, “The most important result was that our multimodal pain management protocol had a very high patient satisfaction rating in both groups.”

“Our results demonstrated that there was no difference in Opioid Related Symptom Distress Scale scores, numerical rating pain scores with physical therapy, or mean oral morphine equivalents between the two groups.”

“Secondary outcomes, including time to discharge, other descriptions of pain outcomes, satisfaction, and cognitive effects were not different between groups.”

“Patient satisfaction was graded on a numerical rating scale from 1 to 10 (with 10 being the most satisfied) and both groups had a rating of 9 out of 10 indicating excellent patient satisfaction with our low opioid multimodal pain management protocol with oral and intravenous acetaminophen.”

Asked about the challenges facing multimodal anesthesia, he said, “It is really the variability in patients’ response to pain management. Some patients need no narcotics, some standard strength narcotics, and some more potent narcotics and we never know until after surgery. We just need to have a solid protocol and be prepared. Having said that, the utilization of a multimodal protocol, in general, requires less narcotics and attacks the pain pathways from different angles.”

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Discussion

14
DS
Dr. Sarah MitchellOrthopedic Surgeon · Mayo Clinic

This is a fascinating development. In my practice we've seen similar outcomes with the revised protocol. The key differentiator seems to be patient selection criteria. Has anyone else noticed the correlation with BMI thresholds?

8
JT
James Thornton, MDSpine Fellow · HSS

Great point. I'd push back slightly on the conclusion, the sample size in the cited study is too small to draw population-level inferences. That said, the directional signal is compelling and worth a larger RCT.

5
RP
R. PatelSports Medicine · Stanford

We implemented a similar approach last year. Early results are promising but we're still gathering 12-month follow-up data. Happy to share our protocol if anyone is interested.

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