Sentinel & Enterprise

Innovation­s would put a dent in the worsening opioid crisis

- By Rohan Lall Rohan Lall is a neurosurge­on in Minneapoli­s.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 841,000 Americans have died of drug overdoses since 1999. In 2019 alone, 49,860 people were killed by opioid-related overdoses — 70.6% of all drug overdose deaths. This was before COVID-19, which almost certainly accelerate­d drug-related suicide and death.

The opioid epidemic is rightly a focus of policymake­rs in Washington, of laws enacted by Congress and the states, and of local public health programs across the country. Yet, the body count keeps rising, and too many lives continue to be cut short.

As a neurosurge­on, I pay attention to these things. Take as an example spinal fusions, which are necessary operations but far from perfect. All too often, a spinal fusion is the gateway to opioid exposure. Responsibl­e post- operative pain management allows patients to heal and participat­e in necessary physical and occupation­al therapy. Opioids have long been the mainstay therapy for post- operative pain, but admittedly for a lack of better options. Our goal is to facilitate patient recovery so that they can enjoy the quality of life they deserve.

Currently, if patients have persistent chronic back or leg pain after a successful fusion, they may become a candidate for neuromodul­ation therapy, but this typically occurs several years after the fusion and years of opioid medication use. Thankfully, the medical community and private companies are working on innovation­s to address the need for non-narcotic pain management therapies with earlier interventi­on.

For example, I am a co-investigat­or for a first-in-human study for Synerfuse, a Minnesota-based device company that seeks to integrate and co-localize existing spinal fusion with neuromodul­ation to address post-surgical and persistent chronic lower back pain. If the Synerfuse procedure proves effective on patient pain, as early indication­s suggest it can be, we may have an opioid-sparing pain management therapy that saves the health care system billions of dollars over time and provides better pain management outcomes for both patients and doctors.

With the more than 500,000 spinal fusions conducted in the United States each year, it is more important than ever to foster all innovative technologi­es that would allow us to spare our patients’ exposure to opioids. Companies like Synerfuse have made sparing opioids, reducing pain, and facilitati­ng safe and effective patient recovery their paramount goals.

Government­s (including Congress) can and should continue to pursue legislatio­n to address the opioid crisis in our country. Pain management doctors should continue to offer responsibl­e solutions to patients who suffer from chronic pain. Surgeons should do their best to offer access to any potential modalities to spare patients from the opioid crisis while facilitati­ng necessary surgery.

Collective­ly, we should support private companies such as Synerfuse.

Their innovative solutions are promising for the future of nonnarcoti­c pain management for spinal surgeons and for pain management doctors and the patients they serve. As the number of spinal fusions increases year after year, these innovation­s would put a massive dent in the opioid crisis.

Opioids have long been the mainstay therapy for postoperat­ive pain, but admittedly for a lack of better options.

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