Three narcotic pain pill bottles are shown. A few white pills spill out of a prescription bottle.
Saving unneeded narcotic pain pills for a rainy day when you might be in pain may be adding to the nation’s opioid epidemic. (For Spectrum Health Beat)

Surgery patients are usually prescribed opioids to ease postoperative pain, but more than two-thirds end up with leftover narcotics and don’t get rid of them, according to a new report.

Moreover, most patients who have the extra opioid pills don’t lock them away, but leave them accessible to possible abuse by others, the researchers said.

“We were surprised to find that the number was as high as it was,” said lead researcher Dr. Mark Bicket. He is an assistant professor of anesthesiology and critical care medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Saving unneeded narcotic pain pills for a rainy day when you might be in pain may be adding to the nation’s opioid epidemic, the study authors suggested.

That’s because unused narcotics may end up in the hands of people who misuse or sell them, said Dr. Gary Deutsch. He is a surgical oncologist at Northwell Health Cancer Institute in Lake Success, N.Y. Deutsch was not involved with the new study, but was familiar with the findings.

The 2015 National Survey on Drug Use and Health found that nearly 4 million Americans took opioids (such as Oxycontin or Percocet) for non-medical reasons every month.

More than 2 million people in the United States are addicted to prescription painkillers, according to federal reports.

Opioids do, however, have their place in managing pain after surgery, Bicket said.

“Opioid medications for pain after surgery are an essential treatment,” he said. “We have evidence that there are patients who legitimately need these medications.”

For their report, Bicket and his colleagues reviewed six previously published studies that included a total of more than 800 patients who had various types of surgery.

Across the six studies, 67 percent to 92 percent of patients said they had unused narcotic painkiller pills. Moreover, 42 percent to 71 percent of the pills prescribed weren’t taken, according to the patient reports.

Most patients stopped or didn’t use the pills because their pain was under control, and 16 percent to 29 percent said they didn’t take them because of the side effects.

In two studies that looked at how unused painkillers were stored, 73 percent to 77 percent of the participants said their prescription opioids were not kept in locked containers, which is recommended by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Most patients intended to keep their unused pills, and only about 9 percent of the patients said they planned to get rid of their pills using the recommended FDA procedures, Bicket’s team found.

According to the American Academy of Family Physicians, all opioids should be stored in their original packaging inside a locked cabinet, lockbox or a location where others can’t easily get to them.

In addition, many communities have programs to help dispose of unused narcotics, Bicket said. These include take-back programs run by local hospitals or the police.

“Opioids are something to be concerned about given the current opioid crisis,” Bicket said.

 

The report was published online in the journal JAMA Surgery.