Conference Coverage

Breast surgery may be a gateway to addictive medication use


 

FROM SABCS 2020

Prescribing: It’s complicated

C. Kent Osborne, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston

Dr. C. Kent Osborne

“I wonder if perhaps we should not be giving opioids at all to certain patients. For example, a mastectomy and implant reconstruction, oftentimes, surprisingly, that’s not a terribly painful procedure. But a TRAM [transverse rectus abdominis] flap or abdominal flap, that really is,” commented press conference comoderator C. Kent Osborne, MD, of Baylor College of Medicine in Houston.

“I’ve been surprised that a lot of my patients get the prescription, but they don’t even use the pills, and I wonder if the prescription is given just so that we’re not bothered at nighttime by somebody calling with pain,” Dr. Osbourne added.

Prescribing opioids for postoperative pain is complicated, Dr. Cogan said, noting that the study did not assess the specific type of reconstruction patients had.

“You don’t want people in pain. Even if they need just one or two pills, it’s still reasonable for them to have it, and we certainly don’t want to imply from our study that people shouldn’t be getting these prescriptions if they need them,” Dr. Cogan elaborated. “But once patients have them, don’t just leave them there in their home because other studies have shown that that’s when people really get addicted to these medications, when they use them later on for other reasons, or they keep using them just because they have them around.”

The risk for persistent use of controlled substances “is something that all physicians need to be aware of for their patients. This is something that we are missing,” maintained press conference comoderator Virginia Kaklamani, MD, DSc, of UT Health San Antonio.

“It’s easy to just give a prescription instead of arguing with a patient about why you are not going to give them a prescription,” Dr. Kaklamani said. “And ultimately ... pain is subjective. If a patient tells you they are in pain, you are, quote-endquote, a bad physician if you tell them they should not be in pain.”

Virginia Kaklamani, MD, DSc, of UT Health San Antonio Courtesy The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

Dr. Virginia Kaklamani

“We need to focus on other ways to deal with the pain, like physical therapy, sending patients to physical medicine and rehab physicians who are trained to help with symptoms from the surgery, with range of motion and all that; that can help with pain,” she recommended. “It’s much harder to do that, right, than to send a prescription in for a narcotic? But that easy answer is always the worst answer.”

This study was funded by the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Cogan declared no conflicts of interest. Dr. Osborne disclosed relationships with Wolters Kluwer, Lilly, Tolmar, and GeneTex. Dr. Kaklamani disclosed relationships with Amgen, AstraZeneca, Athenex, Celgene, Celldex, Daiichi, Eisai, Genentech, Genomic Health, Immunomedics, Novartis, Pfizer, Puma, and Seattle Genetics.

SOURCE: Cogan JC et al. SABCS 2020, Abstract GS3-08.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The scope of under- and overtreatment in older adults with cancer
AVAHO
Study advances personalized treatment for older breast cancer patients
AVAHO
Thermography plus software shows efficacy for breast cancer screening
AVAHO
Lower BP and better tumor control with drug combo?
AVAHO
‘Tour de force’ study reveals therapeutic targets in 38% of cancer patients
AVAHO
New estimates for breast cancer risk with HRT
AVAHO
One-month delay in cancer treatment linked to increase in mortality
AVAHO
Pembrolizumab approved for triple-negative breast cancer
AVAHO
Using telehealth to deliver palliative care to cancer patients
AVAHO
Pregnancy outcomes ‘favorable’ after BRCA breast cancer treatment
AVAHO