Association between opioid usage and rectal dysfunction in constipation: A cross-sectional study of 2754 patients

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Abstract

Background: Opioid use has reached epidemic proportions. In contrast to the known effect of opioids on gut transit, the effect on rectal sensorimotor function has not been comprehensively investigated. Methods: Cross-sectional (hypothesis-generating) study of anorectal physiology studies in 2754 adult patients referred to a tertiary unit (2004-2016) for investigation of functional constipation (defined by “derived” Rome IV core criteria). Statistical associations between opioid usage, symptoms, and anorectal physiological variables were investigated. Opioids were sub-classified as prescriptions for mild-moderate or moderate-severe pain. Key Results: A total of 2354 patients (85.5%) were classified as non-opioid users, 162 (5.9%) as opioid users for mild-moderate pain, and 238 (8.6%) for moderate-severe pain. Opioids for moderate-severe pain were associated with increased symptomatic severity (Cleveland Clinic constipation score 18.5 vs 15.1; mean difference 2.9 [95%-CI 2.3-3.6]; P

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Vollebregt, P. F., Hooper, R. L., Farmer, A. D., Miller, J., Knowles, C. H., & Scott, S. M. (2020). Association between opioid usage and rectal dysfunction in constipation: A cross-sectional study of 2754 patients. Neurogastroenterology and Motility, 32(7). https://doi.org/10.1111/nmo.13839

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