# Post-discharge opioid prescribing after surgery in the United States: a population-based analysis of specialty variation and prescribing intensity

**Authors:** Adriana C. Panayi, Dany Y. Matar, Thomas Schaschinger, Tobias Niederegger, Jule Brandt, Iman Ghanad, Dennis P. Orgill, Gabriel Hundeshagen

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.lana.2026.101456 · 2026-03-13

## TL;DR

This study examines how opioid prescriptions vary by surgical specialty in the U.S., finding that most patients receive opioids after surgery, with differences linked to specialty and recovery patterns.

## Contribution

The study identifies specialty-specific variation in post-discharge opioid prescribing and its association with early postoperative outcomes.

## Key findings

- 683,828 (72.3%) of 945,505 surgical patients received opioid prescriptions at discharge.
- Orthopedic and neurosurgical procedures had the highest odds of high-intensity opioid prescribing.
- Patients receiving opioids had shorter hospital stays and fewer complications, suggesting stable clinical status.

## Abstract

The transition from hospital to home after surgery is a vulnerable period, yet post-discharge opioid prescribing varies widely across surgical specialties. This study aimed to characterize these prescribing patterns and evaluate their implications for early postoperative outcomes.

We performed a retrospective cohort study using the 2024 American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS-NSQIP) database. Adult surgical patients who survived to discharge and had complete discharge analgesic data were included. Opioid prescribing was characterized by daily morphine milligram equivalents (MME), cumulative dose, duration, route, dosing frequency, and renewals. Multivariable regression adjusted for demographics, comorbidities, specialty, operative characteristics, and outcomes.

Among 945,505 surgical patients, 683,828 (72.3%) were discharged with an opioid prescription. Prescribing varied by specialty and procedure, with a mean daily dose of 44.8 MME (Standard deviation, SD 122.1), mean duration of 4.2 days (SD 3.3), and prescription renewals in 28,385 (4.2%) patients. Patients discharged with opioids had shorter hospital stays (2.0 vs 3.3 days; p < 0.001) and lower rates of complications (7.7% vs 11.0%; p < 0.0001), reflecting preferential prescribing among clinically stable patients. Surgical specialty and anesthesia type were the strongest predictors of prescribing intensity, with higher odds of high-intensity prescribing following orthopedic (adjusted Odds Ratio, aOR 6.79, 95% Confidence Interval, CI 6.64–6.93) and neurosurgical procedures (aOR 5.66, CI 5.50–5.83), and spinal anesthesia (aOR 2.27, CI 2.21–2.33; all p < 0.001).

Despite national efforts to reduce opioid use, most surgical patients continue to receive opioids at discharge, with specialty-specific variation. Differences in early postoperative outcomes should be interpreted as markers of clinical selection and recovery trajectory rather than evidence of opioid-related benefit. Procedure-specific, recovery-informed prescribing guidelines are needed to minimize avoidable opioid prescribing while ensuring adequate analgesia.

None.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** morphine (MESH:D009020)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999286/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12999286