10-year trends in benzodiazepine, opioid, and concurrent use in hip and knee arthroplasty: a nationwide cohort study from the Netherlands

Publication date

2025-10-10

Authors

Yepes-Calderón, Manuela
Nelissen, Rob G H H
Bouvy, MarcelISNI 0000000055088944
Rosendaal, Frits L
Van Steenbergen, Liza N
Dahan, Albert
Gademan, Maaike G J

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Concurrent benzodiazepine-opioid use is discouraged. We aimed to examine trajectories of benzodiazepine, opioid, and concurrent use following hip and knee arthroplasties for osteoarthritis (HA-OA, KA) and hip arthroplasty for fracture (HA-fracture). METHODS: In this nationwide cohort study, the Dutch Arthroplasty Register (LROI) was linked to the Dutch Foundation for Pharmaceutical Statistics (SFK). We evaluated the proportion of patients with ≥ 1 medication dispensation in the year pre- and post-procedure and the prescribing physicians. Concurrent use was defined as ≥ 7 days overlap of benzodiazepine and opioid exposure. RESULTS: We included 109,238 HA-OA, 17,464 HA fracture, and 113,306 KA. Between 2013 and 2021, the risk difference of postoperative benzodiazepine use was -7.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] -8.1 to -6.2%), while postoperative opioid use increased by 29.7% (CI 28.5-30.8%). Among HA-OA, from 2013 (4,391 arthroplasties) to 2021 (12,905 arthroplasties), the percentage of preoperative benzodiazepine users went from 18% to 13%, and postoperative from 23% to 14%. In contrast, preoperative opioid use changed from 25% to 33% and postoperative from 36% to 69%, In 2021, 6% of HA-OA, 11% of HA fracture, and 9% of KA received a concurrent dispensation in the first post-procedure year, predominantly in the first quarter. Orthopedic surgeons prescribed 29% (~18,732 prescriptions) of initial concurrent dispensations; subsequent prescriptions were mainly from general practitioners. CONCLUSION: From 2013-2022 in the Netherlands, benzodiazepine use decreased while opioid use increased among arthroplasty patients. Concurrent use remained frequent, despite safety recommendations against co-prescribing.

Keywords

Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Analgesics, Opioid/therapeutic use, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee, Benzodiazepines/therapeutic use, Cohort Studies, Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Osteoarthritis, Hip/surgery, Pain, Postoperative/drug therapy, Practice Patterns, Physicians'/trends, Registries

Citation

Yepes-Calderón, M, Nelissen, R G H H, Bouvy, M L, Rosendaal, F L, Van Steenbergen, L N, Dahan, A & Gademan, M G J 2025, '10-year trends in benzodiazepine, opioid, and concurrent use in hip and knee arthroplasty : a nationwide cohort study from the Netherlands', Acta Orthopaedica, vol. 96, pp. 771-779. https://doi.org/10.2340/17453674.2025.44755