This is the first clinical practice guideline (CPG) from the American Academy of Pediatrics outlining evidence-based approaches to safely prescribing opioids for acute pain in outpatient settings. The central goal is to aid clinicians in understanding when opioids may be indicated to treat acute pain in children and adolescents and how to minimize risks (including opioid use disorder, poisoning, and overdose). The document also seeks to alleviate disparate pain treatment of Black, Hispanic, and American Indian/Alaska Native children and adolescents, who receive pain management that is less adequate and less timely than that provided to white individuals. There may also be disparities in pain treatment based on language, socioeconomic status, geographic location, and other factors, which are discussed.

The document recommends that clinicians treat acute pain using a multimodal approach that includes the appropriate use of nonpharmacologic therapies, nonopioid medications, and, when needed, opioid medications. Opioids should not be prescribed as monotherapy for children or adolescents who have acute pain. When using opioids for acute pain management, clinicians should prescribe immediate-release opioid formulations, start with the lowest age- and weight-appropriate doses, and provide an initial supply of 5 or fewer days, unless the pain is related to trauma or surgery with expected duration of pain longer than 5 days. Clinicians should not prescribe codeine or tramadol for patients younger than 12 years; adolescents 12 to 18 years of age who have obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, or severe lung disease; to treat postsurgical pain after tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy in patients younger than 18 years; or for any breastfeeding patient.

The CPG recommends providing opioids when appropriate for treating acutely worsened pain in children and adolescents who have a history of chronic pain; clinicians should partner with other opioid-prescribing clinicians involved in the patient’s care and/or a specialist in chronic pain or palliative care to determine an appropriate treatment plan. Caution should be used when treating acute pain in those who are taking sedating medications. The CPG describes potential harms of discontinuing or rapidly tapering opioids in individuals who have been on stable, long-term opioids to treat chronic pain.

The guideline also recommends providing naloxone and information on naloxone, safe storage and disposal of opioids, and direct observation of medication administration. Clinicians are encouraged to help caregivers develop a plan for safe disposal. The CPG contains 12 key action statements based on evidence from randomized controlled trials, high-quality observational studies, and, when studies are lacking or could not feasibly or ethically be conducted, from expert opinion. Each key action statement includes a level of evidence, the benefit-harm relationship, and the strength of recommendation.

This is the first American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) clinical practice guideline (CPG) on opioid prescribing in children and adolescents. CPGs provide recommendations to improve patients’ care and health outcomes. The process of the AAP for developing these guidelines is meticulous and time intensive. CPG development involves a thorough review of relevant research and close examination of the strength of the studies and other identified documents. The process also considers the benefits and risks of specific practices.

  Key Action Statement Table

Key Action Statement (KAS)Evidence QualityRecommendation Strength
KAS 1: Pediatricians and other pediatric health care providers (PHCPs) should treat acute pain using a multimodal approach that includes the appropriate use of nonpharmacologic therapies, nonopioid medications, and, when needed, opioid medications. Strong recommendation 
KAS 2: Pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe opioids as monotherapy for children and adolescents who have acute pain. Strong recommendation 
KAS 3: When prescribing opioids for acute pain in children and adolescents, PHCPs should provide immediate-release opioid formulations, start with the lowest age- and weight-appropriate doses, and provide an initial supply of 5 days or fewer, unless the pain is related to trauma or surgery with an expected duration of pain of more than 5 days. Recommendation 
KAS 4.1: When treating acute pain in children and adolescents younger than 12 years, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.2: When treating acute pain in adolescents 12–18 years of age who have obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, or severe lung disease, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.3: When treating postsurgical pain after tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy in children and adolescents younger than 18 years, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.4: When treating acute pain in people of any age who are breastfeeding, pediatricians and other PHCPS should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 5: When treating acute pain in children or adolescents who are taking sedating medications, such as benzodiazepines, pediatricians and other PHCPs should use caution when prescribing opioids. Strong recommendation 
KAS 6: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should provide naloxone and counsel patients and families on the signs of opioid overdose and on how to respond to an overdose. Recommendation 
KAS 7: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe storage and directly observed administration of medications to children and adolescents. Option 
KAS 8: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe disposal of unused medications, help caregivers develop a plan to safely dispose of unused medications, and, if possible, offer safe disposal in their practice setting. Strong recommendation 
KAS 9: When treating acute, worsened pain in children and adolescents with preexisting chronic pain, pediatricians and other PHCPs should prescribe opioids when indicated and partner with any other opioid-prescribing clinicians involved in the patient’s care and with specialists in chronic pain, palliative care, and/or other opioid stewardship programs to determine an appropriate treatment plan. Option 
A: Well-designed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or diagnostic studies on relevant population.
B: RCTs or diagnostic studies with minor limitations, overwhelmingly consistent evidence from observational studies.
C: Observational studies (case-control and cohort design).
D: Expert opinion, case reports, reasoning from first principles.
X: Exceptional situations where validating studies cannot be performed and there is a clear preponderance of benefit or harm. 
Key Action Statement (KAS)Evidence QualityRecommendation Strength
KAS 1: Pediatricians and other pediatric health care providers (PHCPs) should treat acute pain using a multimodal approach that includes the appropriate use of nonpharmacologic therapies, nonopioid medications, and, when needed, opioid medications. Strong recommendation 
KAS 2: Pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe opioids as monotherapy for children and adolescents who have acute pain. Strong recommendation 
KAS 3: When prescribing opioids for acute pain in children and adolescents, PHCPs should provide immediate-release opioid formulations, start with the lowest age- and weight-appropriate doses, and provide an initial supply of 5 days or fewer, unless the pain is related to trauma or surgery with an expected duration of pain of more than 5 days. Recommendation 
KAS 4.1: When treating acute pain in children and adolescents younger than 12 years, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.2: When treating acute pain in adolescents 12–18 years of age who have obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, or severe lung disease, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.3: When treating postsurgical pain after tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy in children and adolescents younger than 18 years, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 4.4: When treating acute pain in people of any age who are breastfeeding, pediatricians and other PHCPS should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol. Strong recommendation 
KAS 5: When treating acute pain in children or adolescents who are taking sedating medications, such as benzodiazepines, pediatricians and other PHCPs should use caution when prescribing opioids. Strong recommendation 
KAS 6: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should provide naloxone and counsel patients and families on the signs of opioid overdose and on how to respond to an overdose. Recommendation 
KAS 7: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe storage and directly observed administration of medications to children and adolescents. Option 
KAS 8: When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe disposal of unused medications, help caregivers develop a plan to safely dispose of unused medications, and, if possible, offer safe disposal in their practice setting. Strong recommendation 
KAS 9: When treating acute, worsened pain in children and adolescents with preexisting chronic pain, pediatricians and other PHCPs should prescribe opioids when indicated and partner with any other opioid-prescribing clinicians involved in the patient’s care and with specialists in chronic pain, palliative care, and/or other opioid stewardship programs to determine an appropriate treatment plan. Option 
A: Well-designed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or diagnostic studies on relevant population.
B: RCTs or diagnostic studies with minor limitations, overwhelmingly consistent evidence from observational studies.
C: Observational studies (case-control and cohort design).
D: Expert opinion, case reports, reasoning from first principles.
X: Exceptional situations where validating studies cannot be performed and there is a clear preponderance of benefit or harm. 

CPGs have traditionally been developed by physicians and researchers, long viewed as the experts in clinical care. Only recently have caregivers and patients been incorporated into this process. Many professional organizations seek the involvement of caregivers and patients in their work; however, it can be challenging to determine how best to engage families, draw on their perspectives and experiences, and authentically involve them in the process. Nonetheless, this task is critical: studies have shown that involving patients and caregivers improves guidelines.1–4 

The involvement of caregivers and patients can help identify areas that are important to those with lived experiences, highlight real-world barriers to care, increase the legitimacy and trustworthiness of the guideline, improve adherence to clinical recommendations, and disseminate guidelines to communities of interest.

When I was initially approached about participating in this AAP subcommittee, I was both excited and hesitant. I am a caregiver and care partner. Like many, I am an accidental health care advocate because of my family’s experience with pediatric pain. My advocacy has spanned 23 years; caring for patients’ pain and access to appropriate opioid prescribing have been a large focus of my advocacy. I have witnessed the misapplication of pain treatment guidelines and the unintended harms that families experienced.

I wanted to be part of this subcommittee’s work to ensure inclusion of the perspectives of those with lived experiences, and my initial hesitancy to take part was due, in part, to worries about tokenism. Although intentions to include patients and caregivers are often well-meaning, too often, people with lived experience are only symbolically invited and neither fully valued nor truly immersed in the work. As a caregiver and advocate, I am often critical of how the work of medical organizations impacts patients and their families. After witnessing the subcommittee members’ work and being genuinely engaged and centered in the CPG development process, I now have immense respect for the process and every member of the subcommittee.

The subcommittee leaders demonstrated thoughtful, dedicated, and compassionate guidance. They ensured inclusivity of all voices and encouraged questions and respectful debate throughout every conversation. They did not shy away from hard discussions. They consistently sought to understand how scenarios might impact children and families and committed to authentically and meaningfully engaging those with lived experiences. I am grateful to this group and feel immense comfort that these are the leaders in caring for our children and youth.

The responsibilities of this subcommittee were substantial. As a result of previous misapplications of other pain management guidelines, there is intense scrutiny on the issue of opioid prescribing nationally. Various interested groups—including patients, caregivers, government entities, politicians, special interest groups, and advocates—are all presently weighing in on this subject. I knew that the subcommittee and our work would be examined by all these stakeholders.

The subcommittee members hold varied expertise related to opioids and represented a broad perspective of views related to prescribing. Subcommittee members respectfully challenged each other, presented concerns, and engaged in fruitful debates that were grounded in the singular focus to improve care of children and families, all while minimizing risk. The members’ commitment, care, and compassion were evident in every discussion the group engaged in. The discussion of the benefits and risks was nuanced, carefully examining various aspects to ensure that children would not suffer under the misapplication of guidelines, as has happened to adults with pain.

It is with gratitude and respect that the first AAP clinical practice guideline on opioids prescribing in children and adolescents is introduced. The development of this CPG not only adhered to all necessary criteria but also stemmed from the subcommittee’s desire and commitment to improve care for all children and families by merging the best clinical recommendations with the human aspects of lived experience.

With great admiration and appreciation,

Beth Larson-Steckler

Care partner, advocate, Co-Founder Childhood Pancreatitis Foundation

Pain is among the most common symptoms that prompt children, adolescents, and families to present for medical care.5–7  As a medication class, opioids have long had a beneficial role in the management of some pediatric patients’ pain, particularly when that pain is severe. Since the turn of the century, however, rates of opioid use disorder (OUD), poisoning, and overdose have increased dramatically among children and adolescents in the United States.8–15  Rates of pediatric opioid prescribing have decreased since a peak in the early 2010s.14–16  Against the backdrop of a worsening national opioid-related overdose crisis, some might interpret this change as a positive one. Yet, this widespread decrease in opioid prescribing to pediatric patients likely includes reductions not only in inappropriate but also in appropriate opioid use to treat severe pain that is not fully responsive to other interventions.17–19 

In other words, one potential repercussion of clinicians prescribing fewer opioids is the undertreatment of pain. Because pain can adversely impact physical and psychosocial functioning, withholding opioids in situations in which they might be needed could lead to broader negative consequences for some children and adolescents.18,20 

It is critical for clinicians to understand when opioids may be indicated and how to safely prescribe them in a manner that minimizes the risk for OUD, poisoning, and overdose. The central goal of this document, the first CPG from the AAP on the subject, is to outline evidence-based approaches to safely prescribing opioids and treating pediatric pain.

An additional goal of this CPG is to ensure equitable treatment of pediatric pain. Studies highlight that Black, Hispanic, and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) individuals receive both less adequate and less timely pain management than that provided to white individuals— even when they experience similar levels of pain.21–25  Contributing factors include implicit bias on the part of treating clinicians, long-standing systemic racism in health care settings, patients’ mistrust of clinicians and health systems, cultural differences in experiencing and reporting pain, and language barriers.21,26,27 

Additionally, children and adolescents with physical, developmental, or intellectual disabilities may be less likely to receive effective pain management when clinicians do not carefully assess their pain, particularly if a child or adolescent is unable to communicate their pain verbally; this risk is compounded because many scales used for measuring pain were developed for individuals without disabilities.28  Additional disparities may also exist according to socioeconomic status or geographic location, among other factors.22  Inequitable treatment of pain leads to significant distress for children and families, worsened health outcomes, and higher costs of care.29  Throughout, this CPG aims to promote equity with respect to the treatment of pain, including the use of opioids.

This CPG is written for pediatricians and other pediatric health care providers (PHCPs) who prescribe opioids to children and adolescents under age 21 in outpatient settings. The term “pediatricians and other pediatric health care providers” includes pediatric primary care and subspecialty physicians; other specialty physicians (eg, child and adolescent psychiatrists, anesthesiologists, pain specialists, palliative care); and other clinicians who care for children and adolescents with pain, including prescribers (eg, emergency medicine physicians, surgeons, dentists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, etc) and nonprescribers (eg, assistants, nurses, psychologists, social workers, etc). This CPG focuses on acute pain (ie, pain lasting <1 month) rather than subacute (1–3 months), chronic pain (>3 months), or palliative and end-of-life pain.19 

This CPG makes an evidence-based recommendation to provide opioids when it is appropriate for treating acutely worsened pain in children and adolescents with a history of chronic pain. The CPG also highlights the potential harms of discontinuing or rapidly tapering opioids in individuals who are on stable, prolonged use of opioids to treat chronic pain. These harms include worsening mental health and/or driving individuals to seek opioids through the illicit drug market.19,30–32 

This CPG does not directly address opioid prescription in pediatric palliative care and for patients at end-of-life. These children and adolescents often have clinical conditions for which opioids are indicated, often at escalating doses. The CPG does not directly speak to this patient population. This CPG does acknowledge, however, that there are patients on palliative care with chronic pain whose opioid stewardship should be managed in similar ways to other patients with chronic pain.

This CPG acknowledges that illicitly manufactured fentanyl—rather than prescription opioids—is currently the most common cause of poisoning and overdose deaths of children and adolescents.10,33,34  Fentanyl-related deaths among adolescents 10 to 19 years of age increased by 182% between 2019 and 2021; 83.9% of adolescent overdose deaths in that time frame involved IMFs.33  Nonetheless, during the 2000s and early 2010s, it is likely that inappropriate opioid prescribing contributed to the rising rates of negative opioid-related outcomes.15,35–39  Indeed, use of prescription pain medication may lead to OUD in a small percentage of individuals and may progress to subsequent use of more potent opioids—including fentanyl.35,37,40,41  As many as 5% of adolescents who are exposed to opioids for postoperative analgesia may be at risk for persistent opioid use.39  Thus, the CPG balances the need for effective pain management with opioids, when indicated, with the potential risks of this medication class.

The CPG contains 12 key action statements (KASs). These recommendations are based on evidence from RCTs; high-quality observational studies; and expert opinion, when studies are lacking or could not feasibly or ethically be conducted. The evidence base was amassed from an extensive systematic literature review; where appropriate, this incorporates best practices from other high-quality clinical guidelines and position statements from other professional societies and government agencies. (See Methodology and the accompanying technical report.42 )

The subcommittee acknowledges that clinicians and health care systems have contributed—albeit often from a desire to relieve the suffering of patients in pain—to a national opioid-related addiction and overdose crisis through excessive opioid prescribing. Further, in an overcorrection, clinicians and health care systems have subsequently withheld opioids from some individuals and left pain insufficiently treated—again, often in a genuine attempt to reduce addiction and harm. Throughout, clinicians and health systems have contributed to inequities by race, ethnicity, and other factors. It is the subcommittee’s hope that this CPG leads to optimal treatment of acute pain in children and adolescents and simultaneously helps clinicians to minimize and navigate any risk for opioid-related harms.

According to the American Society of Addiction Medicine, defined as “a primary, chronic, neurobiologic disease, with genetic, psychosocial, and environmental factors influencing its development and manifestations. [Addiction] is characterized by behaviors that include one or more of the following: impaired control over drug use, compulsive use, continued use despite harm, and craving.”43  The term addiction commonly refers to a moderate or severe substance use disorder and, in the case of opioid addiction, a moderate or severe opioid use disorder (see “opioid use disorder,” below).

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is commonly used to treat severe pain in the hospital setting, the perioperative period, or attributable to trauma. Fentanyl is approximately 100 times more potent than morphine; hence, when used outside medical settings, small amounts can lead to severe, rapid respiratory depression and death by overdose within minutes.44  Medical fentanyl is available by prescription and used for severe, chronic pain management. Illicitly manufactured fentanyl is a common contaminant in counterfeit prescription opioids, which mimic drugs like oxycodone or alprazolam, as well as in drugs like heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.

The use of more than modality to treat pain. This includes but is not limited to pharmacologic medications targeting different receptors and body sites (eg, topical medications) and nonpharmacologic modalities to treat pain.

Use of an opioid in a way not intended or prescribed. In isolation, nonmedical opioid use may not constitute a diagnosis of opioid use disorder but may meet criteria for an opioid use disorder if other symptoms of a disorder are present (see definition below).

A class of pain-relieving drugs that include prescription medications as well as illicit heroin. Prescribed opioids include: codeine, fentanyl, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, methadone, morphine, oxycodone, oxymorphone, tramadol, and others. Fentanyl that is widely available throughout the United States in the illicit market is, typically, not medical-grade; instead, it is illicitly manufactured (see definition above).

A characteristic set of physiologic changes that occur following prolonged use of opioids, including tolerance and withdrawal. Physiologic dependence by itself is not an opioid use disorder. According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, tolerance and withdrawal must be accompanied by other symptoms of a substance use disorder (ie, loss of control over use, and/or negative consequences resulting from use) to constitute a diagnosis of opioid use disorder (OUD).45 

A medical condition in which someone uses opioids (either prescription opioids or illicit opioids) in a manner that becomes compulsive, involves loss of control, and continues despite negative consequences, as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition.45  Frequent use of opioids (eg, in the treatment of chronic pain) alone is not an OUD; an OUD requires loss of control surrounding use and/or negative consequences resulting from use. (For example, an individual with chronic pain who takes opioids daily for their pain and whose functioning improves as a result likely does not have an OUD unless they have lost control over their use or are experiencing negative consequences.)

An overdose results from the use of an excessive amount of a drug and can result in serious injury or death. Opioids cause overdose by interrupting the body’s natural drive to breathe. Highly potent opioids such as fentanyl are more likely to cause an overdose than other opioids, particularly if an individual uses them at the same time as other sedating substances and respiratory depressants, such as alcohol or benzodiazepines.

According to the International Association for the Study of Pain, defined as “an unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with, or resembling that associated with, actual or potential tissue damage.”46  Pain is commonly defined as “acute” (lasting less than 1 month), “subacute” (lasting between 1 and 3 months), or “chronic” (lasting more than 3 months).

For the purpose of this CPG, pediatricians and other PHCPs refers to a qualified medical provider operating within their scope of practice and providing clinical care to children and adolescents. Examples include physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants.47 

Before the start of the CPG process, a task force was convened to explore the need for a CPG on opioid prescription in children. In recognition of the fact that no such guidance currently existed, the task force decided to proceed with development of this CPG.

Opioids are a mainstay of medical practice and have long had a role in the management of severe acute pain. With opioid-related overdose deaths reaching unprecedented levels in recent years, patients, families, clinicians, and health systems have been concerned about when and how best to prescribe opioids. Recognizing the need for clear guidance on best approaches to treating pain and prescribing opioids, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) developed this practice guideline to provide an overview of the safety, efficacy, effectiveness, and potential risks (including for unintentional ingestion, diversion, misuse, overdose, and addiction) of opioids for acute pain management. It is primarily directed at clinicians who prescribe opioids to children and adolescents younger than 21 years in outpatient settings. 
Opioids are a mainstay of medical practice and have long had a role in the management of severe acute pain. With opioid-related overdose deaths reaching unprecedented levels in recent years, patients, families, clinicians, and health systems have been concerned about when and how best to prescribe opioids. Recognizing the need for clear guidance on best approaches to treating pain and prescribing opioids, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) developed this practice guideline to provide an overview of the safety, efficacy, effectiveness, and potential risks (including for unintentional ingestion, diversion, misuse, overdose, and addiction) of opioids for acute pain management. It is primarily directed at clinicians who prescribe opioids to children and adolescents younger than 21 years in outpatient settings. 

Staff from the AAP formed a CPG writing subcommittee in 2019, with membership that included 2 chairs; 2 methodologists; a variety of pediatric primary and tertiary care providers; and pediatric experts in pain medicine, emergency medicine, surgery, palliative care medicine, adolescent and addiction medicine, and implementation science. In addition, the subcommittee included a parent representative and a representative from the AAP Partnership for Policy Implementation. Members’ potential conflicts of interest were identified and considered; no conflicts prevented subcommittee members from participating in the CPG development process.

After its formation, the subcommittee defined its scope of work with input from AAP leadership (see box).

After a kickoff meeting in October 2021, the group met virtually monthly throughout the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. The group met in-person for a 2-day meeting in November 2022 to review the literature and develop proposed key action statements (KAS). At this meeting, the subcommittee received education on the components of a KAS and an outline of the KAS development process using BridgeWiz (a software platform designed to support and document the KAS development process).48,49 

For additional information on the methodology, please see the accompanying technical report.42 

The opioids guideline panel engaged 2 health librarians to assist in searches of PubMed and Embase. The search protocol was developed in the fall of 2021. The initial PubMed query was conducted in March 2022, and an additional search was conducted in June 2023 to identify more recent publications. A subsequent Embase search was completed in July 2022 to identify additional studies published outside the United States.

The literature review was designed to answer 2 overarching PICOT (population, intervention, comparison group, outcome, timeframe) questions. The PICOT framework defines which patients, interventions, comparisons, outcomes, and timeframes are of interest to identify studies for inclusion in the systematic review.50 

The first PICOT question focused on opioid prescribing to children for acute pain in the outpatient setting, compared with other pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic treatments or different opioids. The question assessed multiple outcomes, including: short-term safety, short-term efficacy and effectiveness, persistent postoperative or postprocedural pain (≥2 weeks later), unintentional ingestion, diversion, misuse, excess opioid medication, opioid-related overdose, and incident or recurrent OUD (within 1 year of prescription).

The second PICOT question focused on individual-, family-, or health systems-level interventions that aimed to increase outpatient or ambulatory opioid prescribing safety to children, compared with standard practice. The question’s outcomes were: excess opioids after a prescription or risk of unintentional ingestion, diversion, misuse, opioid-related overdose, or addiction.

See the technical report for detailed information on the PICOT questions, search terms and strategy, review process, and data extraction.42 

All studies were required to include children up to 18 years of age. Studies could also include young adults up to 21 years of age, if this population was stratified from older adult participants, as long as children younger than 18 years were also included in the study.

Studies needed to focus on children with acute pain prescribed an opioid for use in the home setting. Studies were excluded that:

  • assessed opioids that were only administered within emergency department, urgent care, or inpatient settings (eg, intranasal fentanyl);

  • did not measure an outcome in the home setting;

  • assessed opioids administered for management of neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome; or

  • assessed opioids administered for acute episodes of pain related to chronic medical conditions (eg, cancer, palliative care, sickle cell disease).

The evidence tables based on the above PICOT questions and search were presented at the in-person meeting (November 2022). In summary, few RCTs were identified that related to the safety and efficacy of opioids in children with acute pain. Most of the RCTs addressed pain related to surgery or trauma and did not examine opioid prescriptions that originated in an office-based outpatient setting. Similarly, few studies assessed individual-, family-, or health systems-level interventions to increase safe outpatient opioid prescribing. Hence, the RCTs and systematic reviews only covered a small portion of the PICOT questions. As a result, many of the KASs are based on expert opinion and observational studies.

The subcommittee generated a series of priority KASs at the in-person meeting. At that meeting, participants raised additional, clinically relevant questions that had not been addressed specifically in the original literature review. In response, the methodologists supplemented the original literature search with additional specification terms. The resulting studies were rescreened and rereviewed to identify new, relevant studies.42 

Evidence grades for each KAS were determined on the basis of the AAP grading matrix (Fig 1). When the scientific evidence is at least “good” in quality and demonstrates a preponderance of benefits over harms (or vice versa), the KAS provides a “strong recommendation” or “recommendation.” Clinicians should follow a strong recommendation unless there is a clear and compelling rationale for an alternative approach; clinicians are prudent to follow a recommendation but are advised to remain alert to new information and be sensitive to patient preferences.

FIGURE 1

AAP grading matrix.

FIGURE 1

AAP grading matrix.

Close modal

Integrating evidence quality appraisal with an assessment of the anticipated balance between benefits and harms leads to a designation of a strong recommendation, recommendation, option, or no recommendation. “Option” is a “may” statement that is typically applied when there is a balance between risks and benefits of an intervention or when the evidence is weaker, but there is still a perceived benefit (eg, the intervention is likely to help but there is lack of evidence support). Compared with “option,” with “no recommendation,” there is lack of support either for or against an intervention.

Once the evidence level was determined, an evidence grade was assigned. AAP policy stipulates that the evidence supporting each KAS be prospectively identified, appraised, and summarized and an explicit link between quality levels and the grade of recommendation be defined.

The evidence supporting the recommendations is graded from “A” to “D,” with “A” being the highest:

  • Grade A: consistent level A studies;

  • Grade B: consistent level B or extrapolations from level A studies;

  • Grade C: level C studies or extrapolations from level B or level C studies;

  • Grade D: level D evidence or troublingly inconsistent or inconclusive studies of any level; and

  • Level X: not an explicit level of evidence as outlined by the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine. This level is reserved for interventions that are unethical or impossible to test in a controlled or scientific fashion and for which the preponderance of benefit or harm is overwhelming, precluding rigorous investigation.

A level X was assigned when a KAS reflected existing regulatory body guidance or clinical guidelines (eg, Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC]). When it was not possible to identify sufficient evidence, recommendations are based on the consensus opinion of the subcommittee members.

Opioid prescribing is relatively common in pediatric practice. In 2018, 8.9% of adolescents 15 to 19 years of age had received at least 1 new prescription for opioid medication in the preceding year.51  Among children younger than 18 years, approximately 6.7% had filled an opioid prescription from a medical care provider, and 1.2% had filled an opioid prescription from a dental visit.52  Surgery was the most common reason a child or adolescent received an opioid prescription, with dentists and surgeons writing 61.4% of opioid prescriptions for children and adolescents younger than 21 years.53 

Most children, adolescents, and young adults who receive an opioid prescription do not progress to developing an OUD or experience an overdose.35  One-year prevalence rates for developing an OUD following an opioid prescription in children, adolescents, and young adults range from 0.3% to 5.8%.35,37 

Risk factors for OUD or overdose include prescriptions for long-acting opioids, high daily doses, and prescriptions with a duration of 1 week or longer.35,36  Additionally, individuals with unaddressed mental health concerns (eg, depression, anxiety, trauma) or prior substance use (eg, nicotine, alcohol, cannabis) are at elevated risk for OUD, poisoning, or overdose.54 

In the years following appropriate prescription opioid use, the risk of misusing opioids is increased through early adulthood, even for adolescents who have little experience with drugs and who disapprove of illegal drug use.40  Additionally, nonmedical prescription opioid use (ie, use of opioids in a manner not directed by a clinician) early in adolescence is associated with heroin use in later adolescence and young adulthood.40,41,55  Notably, young children may also be at-risk of prescription opioid poisoning when an adult caregiver receives an opioid prescription.56 

The risks of prescription opioid use in children must, however, be weighed against the clinical need for appropriate pain management. Pain is a central concern for parents; for example, when a parent learns that their child will undergo surgery, their most common concern is to control the child’s postoperative pain.57  Children who undergo multiple invasive procedures are at risk for post-traumatic stress disorder58  because pain can be a contributing factor for post-traumatic stress disorder in patients who undergo invasive procedures or surgery.59  Injury and trauma can also precipitate severe acute pain that often requires timely, effective pain management. Thus, any clinical intervention that seeks to minimize excess opioid prescribing must be balanced by patient and/or caregiver satisfaction with pain management.60  This approach is consistent with the World Health Organization’s Analgesic Ladder.61 

Opioids are an integral part of acute pain management.63  Uniquely among pain medications, opioids have no apparent ceiling effect to the amount of pain they can control. Unfortunately, opioid analgesia is associated with adverse effects that include constipation, pruritus, nausea and vomiting, sedation, respiratory depression, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, opioid tolerance, opioid dependence and addiction, and death.

KAS 1:

Pediatricians and other PHCPs should treat acute pain using a multimodal approach that includes the appropriate use of nonpharmacologic therapies, nonopioid medications, and, when needed, opioid medications. (Evidence quality: B; recommendation strength: strong recommendation.)

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeB
Benefits Potential for more diverse strategies for pain control, improved patient psychological well-being from understanding both pain and its treatment, improved knowledge of pain management, and enhanced skills for pain management in future episodes. 
Risks, harms, costs Complexity in prescribing and educating. There is a risk from polypharmacy. Variable workforce ability to provide multimodal care. Lack of trust in nonpharmacologic options may delay their effective use. This distrust may result in reliance on ineffective pain control methods and/or delay in effective pain control, which may result in patients feeling not heard or not listened to if their pain is not appropriately addressed. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 8, 39, 62 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeB
Benefits Potential for more diverse strategies for pain control, improved patient psychological well-being from understanding both pain and its treatment, improved knowledge of pain management, and enhanced skills for pain management in future episodes. 
Risks, harms, costs Complexity in prescribing and educating. There is a risk from polypharmacy. Variable workforce ability to provide multimodal care. Lack of trust in nonpharmacologic options may delay their effective use. This distrust may result in reliance on ineffective pain control methods and/or delay in effective pain control, which may result in patients feeling not heard or not listened to if their pain is not appropriately addressed. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 8, 39, 62 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Because a small percentage of adolescents who are exposed to opioids for postoperative analgesia are at risk for persistent opioid use,39  it is important to optimize opioid prescribing for postoperative and other acute pain conditions.64  It is also important to maximize pain management through nonpharmacologic and nonopioid analgesics.65 

Although opioids are an important tool for acute pain relief, not all acute pain requires opioids. Recent studies and expert consensus suggest that even conditions that have traditionally been thought to require opioids—such as tonsillectomy, third molar surgery, and acute fractures—may have equally effective analgesia with fewer side effects using acetaminophen and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) alone.66–69  On the basis of these and other findings, the recently published “Guidelines for Opioid Prescribing in Children and Adolescents After Surgery” from the American Pediatric Surgical Association highlight that opioids are not necessary following many common pediatric surgeries.62 

For a patient with mild-to-moderate pain, the PHCP should start nonopioid medications and treatment. These strategies should be optimized before considering an opioid. If the patient has severe pain or severe pain is anticipated, an opioid can be started at the same time as nonopioid analgesics. The use of opioids should be reassessed regularly and weaned as tolerated.

Children and adolescents with physical, developmental, or intellectual disabilities may express their pain differently from individuals without disabilities and may also be unable to fully verbally communicate their pain experience. PHCPs should take time to carefully assess pain in this population.28  Family members and others who know the child or adolescent well (including other clinicians) can provide additional information to guide pain management. Behavioral pain assessment scales (which commonly incorporate parent and caregiver input) are available to PHCPs and have been validated in individuals with neurocognitive impairment. These are provided in a separate AAP clinical report, “Pain Assessment and Treatment in Children With Significant Impairment of the Central Nervous System.”28 

The optimal approach starts with educating patients and their families on nonpharmacologic strategies. It is important that this education describes realistic expectations for patients and their families; this includes not promising the absence of pain but, rather, the goal of keeping pain at a tolerable level. PHCPs should carefully counsel patients and families that some pain may persist even despite effective treatment; this approach can help set patients’ and families’ expectations and help alleviate stress and anxiety, which can, in turn, worsen pain.

Nonpharmacologic analgesic strategies include but are not limited to ice or heat; massage; transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; keeping the injured area above heart level to minimize swelling; music therapy; cognitive behavioral therapy; acupuncture; age-appropriate relaxation or distraction strategies; and complementary therapies, such as reiki, therapeutic touch, and aromatherapy.70 

Key among nonopioid analgesics are acetaminophen and NSAIDs. Unless there is a specific contraindication to their use (eg, allergy), acetaminophen and NSAIDs should be the primary pharmacologic strategy for the expected duration of healing and can be used around the clock, if needed, when treating acute pain—depending on the severity of pain or clinical situation.8 

Topical agents (eg, lidocaine, capsaicin, acetaminophen) can also be helpful nonopioid analgesics for certain types of pain. For select patients, regional analgesia may provide opioid sparing analgesia in the postoperative period for acute pain. Patients who have accompanying neuropathic pain may benefit from gabapentinoids and/or antidepressants; those with muscle spasm may benefit from muscle relaxants.

Chronic medical conditions, such as sickle cell disease or cancer—which come with frequent or recurrent episodes of acute pain—should, ideally, be managed by the pediatrician in consultation with a pain management specialist.

When treating pain, PHCPs should carefully consider that data show that Black, Hispanic, and AI/AN individuals are less likely than white individuals to receive timely and effective pain management (including with opioids), even after accounting for the level of pain across a range of pain conditions—many of which result in severe acute pain.21–25  Children, adolescents, and families whose primary language is not English may also have difficulties communicating pain to their PHCP. There are likely other disparities in pain treatment by socioeconomic status because multimodal pain treatment often requires the input of an interdisciplinary team that may not be available to individuals who lack health insurance or who cannot afford to pay out-of-pocket for uncovered services. Additionally, geographic disparities likely exist because such interdisciplinary care may not be available in rural areas.22 

Given that untreated pain is associated with physical impairment and psychological distress, these numerous disparities have critical implications for the child or adolescent’s recovery and functioning. Opioid overuse, as discussed earlier in this CPG, can also potentially contribute to harm, but PHCPs should, regardless, be aware that longstanding, historic disparities in pain treatment exist and are unjust and should work within their health systems to develop pain treatment protocols that ensure equitable pain treatment (see “I. Barriers and Recommendations for Implementation of the CPG’s Recommendations,” which discussed health-system implementation approaches).

KAS 2:

Pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe opioids as monotherapy for children and adolescents who have acute pain (Evidence  quality: B; recommendation strength: strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeB
Benefits Minimization of opioid prescribing. Decreased community opioid use, adverse side effects, conversion to chronic use. Opioids, when prescribed in combination with other medications, allow lower doses and may decrease side effects of the other medications. Use of other medications in combination with opioids could potentially decrease opioid side effects. 
Risks, harms, cost Potential for decreased pain control and patient/family satisfaction. Potential for additional appointments or reevaluation. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 62, 66, 69 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeB
Benefits Minimization of opioid prescribing. Decreased community opioid use, adverse side effects, conversion to chronic use. Opioids, when prescribed in combination with other medications, allow lower doses and may decrease side effects of the other medications. Use of other medications in combination with opioids could potentially decrease opioid side effects. 
Risks, harms, cost Potential for decreased pain control and patient/family satisfaction. Potential for additional appointments or reevaluation. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 62, 66, 69 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Opioids should be reserved for patients who are experiencing moderate-to-severe pain despite the use of the strategies described above.8  There are multiple pain scales that can be used to assess pain in children. These include scales for nonverbal children, children of different ages and developmental stages, and children with developmental and intellectual disabilities.71 

To minimize risk to patients and society, opioids should not be used alone for analgesia. There is evidence for equal analgesia with NSAIDs alone for some injuries and procedures (eg, inguinal hernia repair, tonsillectomy, third molar extraction, among other procedures62,69 ) and equal or superior analgesia—with fewer opioid side effects—with combination therapies of acetaminophen, NSAIDs, and opioids after more painful procedures.66  As a result, opioid monotherapy is virtually never appropriate in pediatric care.

Observational studies have shown that many opioid prescriptions are dispensed in patients and contexts associated with elevated risk of overdose. Chua et al assessed prescription claims from a national, commercial insurance database and found that 46% of roughly 4 million pediatric opioid prescriptions were high risk because of duration longer than 3 or 7 days, prescription of codeine or tramadol, prescription above ≥50 morphine milligram equivalents per day, or a prescription overlapping with benzodiazepine use.53 

KAS 3:

When prescribing opioids for acute pain in children and adolescents, PHCPs should provide immediate-release opioid formulations, start  with the lowest age- and weight-appropriate doses, and provide an initial supply of 5 days or fewer, unless the pain is related to trauma or surgery  with an expected duration of pain of more than 5 days (Evidence quality: C; recommendation strength: recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeC
Benefits Minimizing amount of surplus opioids in the community. Consistency of guidance in prescribing (equity). Addresses the need for reevaluation and refills and conditions for which long-term use will be needed. Motivates communication. Immediate formulations have lower potential side effects, and lower potential to misuse. 
Risks, harms, cost Risk of inadequate pain management. Potential increased need for frequent refills and/or reevaluations. There is a need for accurate weight for prescribing, and accurate weight may not be available in all settings. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Recommendation. 
Key references 53, 72, 73 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeC
Benefits Minimizing amount of surplus opioids in the community. Consistency of guidance in prescribing (equity). Addresses the need for reevaluation and refills and conditions for which long-term use will be needed. Motivates communication. Immediate formulations have lower potential side effects, and lower potential to misuse. 
Risks, harms, cost Risk of inadequate pain management. Potential increased need for frequent refills and/or reevaluations. There is a need for accurate weight for prescribing, and accurate weight may not be available in all settings. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Recommendation. 
Key references 53, 72, 73 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Additionally, not all opioid prescriptions are needed or fully used. Studies of children and adults who undergo surgery show that many patients do not use all of their prescribed opioids and that prescribing a smaller quantity of opioids postoperatively is associated with reduced opioid use without increased pain scores or refill requests.73–84  Observational data highlight that factors associated with postoperative use of opioids (which, in some cases, may be clinically warranted) among adolescents may include older age, surgery type (in particular, posterior spinal fusion), and higher patient-reported pain at discharge.76 

KAS 3 provides best practices for how to prescribe opioids when needed. PHCPs who prescribe opioids to children should offer opioid treatment of pain control when:

  • “severe pain” exists (often defined as pain scores of 7–10);

  • severe pain is expected to occur and is not expected to respond adequately to nonpharmacologic and nonopioid pain control alone;

  • opioids are expected to be an effective method for pain control; and

  • the source of pain is known.

Observational studies suggest that the risk of OUD, poisoning, and overdose is minimized when opioids are prescribed at the lowest effective dose for age and weight, and for the shortest duration needed to control pain.35,37,39,54 

Opioid doses are typically weight based for children and adolescents <50 kg (eg, for oxycodone, 0.1 to 0.2 mg/kg per dose every 4 to 6 hours) and given in fixed doses for those ≥50 kg (eg, for oxycodone, 5 to 10 mg every 4 to 6 hours).85  For children and adolescents who are obese, PHCPs may consider consulting with a pharmacist to determine the appropriate dose because hydrophilic opioids (eg, oxycodone, morphine) should initially be dosed based on ideal body weight, whereas lipophilic opioids (eg, methadone) should initially be dosed based on total body weight.

In many states, laws limit the maximum number of days an initial opioid prescription can be dispensed (eg, 3, 5, or 7 days). Typically, a duration of 5 days or fewer is sufficient for many types of acute pain; if refills are needed to provide coverage for a longer duration of pain treatment, PHCPs can discuss this with families during follow-up. PHCPs might consider longer durations for some types of pain (eg, following surgeries known to be associated with prolonged pain), but these are likely to be relatively uncommon in general outpatient pediatric practices. Additionally, PHCPs should avoid treating acute pain with long-acting opioid formulations; instead, they should use immediate-release formulations, which are associated with a lower risk of OUD and overdose.35,36 

A recent analysis of commercial health insurance administrative claims found that mandated use of PDMPs at the state level was associated with a reduction in opioid prescriptions to adolescents and young adults as well as decreased opioid-related overdoses.86  If a PHCP notes concerning findings within the prescription drug monitoring program, they should initiate a conversation with the patient and family rather than immediately making a determination not to prescribe opioids. For example, a patient who has filled opioid prescriptions at multiple different pharmacies may have done so because opioid supplies ran low or may have multiple prescribers if their access to care has been inconsistent or changed because of insurance.

As with any medication, PHCPs should counsel parents on the potential adverse effects of opioids, including constipation; pruritis; nausea and vomiting; sedation; respiratory suppression; and/or the possibility of tolerance, dependence, addiction, or death. Voepel-Lewis et al showed that parents who were given such risk information improved their decisions to appropriately hold pain medications if adverse effects occurred, without any detriment to pain management.72 

In addition, the subcommittee recommends that all patients and caregivers of patients with pain or expected pain be provided with written educational and instructional materials on nonpharmacologic therapies and nonopioid and opioid medications. Evidence indicates that providing these materials improves pain control and reduces opioid prescribing.60,87–89  Educating patients and families on multimodal, nonpharmacologic approaches to pain control, risks of opioid use, and existing data surrounding pain duration and severity can facilitate shared decision-making and temper expectations if patients and families specifically request opioid prescriptions to manage and treat pain.

KAS 4.1:

When treating acute pain in children and adolescents younger than 12 years, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine  or tramadol (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding inadequate pain control, respiratory depression, and death attributable to genetically variable codeine metabolism. Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control, increased cost (given low cost of codeine), lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Role of patient and parent preferences For patients who had been previously managed well with limited side effects or have no access to other medications, the guideline group considered that tramadol or codeine may need to be used, but this need should be diminishing in frequency over time. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation 
Key references 90 − 94 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding inadequate pain control, respiratory depression, and death attributable to genetically variable codeine metabolism. Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control, increased cost (given low cost of codeine), lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Role of patient and parent preferences For patients who had been previously managed well with limited side effects or have no access to other medications, the guideline group considered that tramadol or codeine may need to be used, but this need should be diminishing in frequency over time. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation 
Key references 90 − 94 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

On April 20, 2017, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) assigned its strongest warning, a contraindication, restricting the use of codeine and tramadol medicines in children younger than 12 years.90  The contraindication includes the use of either codeine or tramadol to treat pain, including pain occurring after surgery, such as tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy.91–93  Single-ingredient codeine medications and all tramadol-containing products are FDA approved only for use in adults. With respect to children 12 to 18 years of age, given the extensive FDA warnings and contraindications against codeine and tramadol, it may be easiest for PHCPs to generally avoid these medications in those younger than 18 years.

Unfortunately, even after this contraindication was issued, codeine and tramadol prescriptions have remained common.53  This continued prescribing may stem from PHCPs’ belief that, because these opioids are lower potency than others (eg, oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine), they are safer and less likely to contribute to addiction or overdose. Contraindication was based on the medications’ serious risks, however, including slowed or difficult breathing and death; these risks are greatest in children younger than 12 years. Adverse event reports submitted to the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System include deaths in children younger than 18 years even after a single dose of these medications.90  In a 2015 randomized control trial, Friedrichsdorf et al demonstrated that, among children 4 to 15 years of age undergoing tonsillectomy, oversedation was common with codeine regimens, and itching was common among tramadol regimens.94 

KAS 4.2:

When treating acute pain in adolescents 12 to 18 years of age who have obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, or severe lung disease, pediatricians and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: Strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding inadequate pain control, respiratory depression, and death attributable to genetically variable codeine metabolism. Codeine may have inadequate pain control for some patients (eg, depending on codeine metabolism). Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control, increased cost (given low cost of codeine), lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Role of patient and parent preferences For patients who had been previously managed well with limited side effects or have no access to other medications, the guideline group considered that tramadol or codeine may need to be used, but this need should be diminishing in frequency over time. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 93, 95 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding inadequate pain control, respiratory depression, and death attributable to genetically variable codeine metabolism. Codeine may have inadequate pain control for some patients (eg, depending on codeine metabolism). Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control, increased cost (given low cost of codeine), lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Role of patient and parent preferences For patients who had been previously managed well with limited side effects or have no access to other medications, the guideline group considered that tramadol or codeine may need to be used, but this need should be diminishing in frequency over time. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 93, 95 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Building on the FDA contraindication noted above, an FDA warning was added to drug labels of codeine and tramadol in 2018. (Codeine is an opioid and prodrug that is used to treat mild to moderate pain in adults; tramadol is an opioid with serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor activity that is used to treat moderate to severe pain in adults.) The FDA warning recommends against their use in adolescents between 12 and 18 years of age with obesity or who are at risk for breathing issues, such as those with obstructive sleep apnea or underlying severe lung disease.90  Cytochrome P450 isoenzyme 2D6 (CYP2D6) genotype plays a role in adverse events, as ultra-rapid metabolizers of substrates of CYP2D6 convert codeine in the individual’s body too quickly into potentially dangerously high levels of morphine (the active form of codeine), which contributes to life-threatening or fatal respiratory depression.93,95 

KAS 4.3:

When treating postsurgical pain after tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy in children and adolescents younger than 18 years, pediatricians  and other PHCPs should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: Strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding death and respiratory depression. Codeine may have inadequate pain control for some patients (eg, depending on codeine metabolism). Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine, medications may be more difficult to access at a pharmacy. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 91, 96, 97 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Avoiding death and respiratory depression. Codeine may have inadequate pain control for some patients (eg, depending on codeine metabolism). Alignment of health care with federal guidelines. 
Risks, harms, costs Lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine, medications may be more difficult to access at a pharmacy. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 91, 96, 97 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

As noted above, the FDA contraindicates the use of codeine or tramadol to treat pain after a child has a tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy.90–92  Between 1969 and 2016, there were 9 reported cases of respiratory depression related to tramadol use, including 3 fatalities.90  The American Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery also recommends against tramadol following these procedures.97 

In the United States each year, nearly 300 000 cases of tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy are performed in children younger than 15 years.98  Pain is the leading cause of morbidity following these procedures. This pain can lead to decreased oral intake and dehydration and, potentially, bleeding complications from dry mucous membranes.

Several studies have demonstrated that nonopioid medications provide safe and effective analgesia for patients undergoing tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy.91,96  Liu and Ulualp reviewed records for more than 500 children younger than 18 years who received alternating doses of acetaminophen and ibuprofen post-tonsillectomy.99  They found that this regimen was associated with effective pain control in most children and was not associated with increased bleeding rates.100 

Other clinical trial data suggest, however, that bleeding may be slightly increased with administration of NSAIDs in the post-tonsillectomy setting; thus, acetaminophen may be the preferred first-line medication in some clinical settings.101  Nonpharmacologic pain management strategies can also be employed, such as distraction, acupuncture, and cold or heat application.102,103  When opioids are needed for severe pain following tonsillectomy or adenoidectomy not fully responsive to nonopioid medications (or if medication allergies preclude the use of acetaminophen or NSAIDs), pediatricians and other PHCPs should consider opioids other than codeine or tramadol, including, for example, oxycodone or hydrocodone.

KAS 4.4:

When treating acute pain in people of any age who are breastfeeding, pediatricians and other PHCPS should NOT prescribe codeine or tramadol (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: Strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Eliminating the potential for codeine and tramadol to be transmitted through human milk. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control. For patients requiring an opioid, they would require a stronger opioid. Lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 104, 105  
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Eliminating the potential for codeine and tramadol to be transmitted through human milk. 
Risks, harms, costs Inadequate pain control. For patients requiring an opioid, they would require a stronger opioid. Lack of provider familiarity with alternative pain medications, more difficult to prescribe medications that are scheduled differently from codeine. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 90, 104, 105  
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Active metabolites of both codeine and tramadol can be found in human milk.106–108  Numerous cases of excessive sleepiness and breathing issues have been documented among breastfed infants who are exposed to these medications through human milk.109  For this reason, the FDA issued a warning that breastfeeding is not recommended when taking codeine or tramadol.90  The risks of central nervous system depression to the breastfeeding parent and the breastfed infant have been acknowledged by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and in AAP recommendations for managing neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome.105,110,111  Some have called into question the need to avoid codeine during breastfeeding, but given current FDA recommendations, this CPG also recommends that breastfeeding people should avoid codeine.112 

Along with the risks of medication error or adverse effects of opioids, there is notable risk for poisoning and overdose through unintentional or intentional ingestion; this risk exists when a child or adolescent is prescribed an opioid, as well as when a household contact is prescribed one.10,115–118  PHCPs who prescribe opioids should, therefore, incorporate strategies to reduce this risk. Additionally, PHCPs should be aware that poisonings and overdoses disproportionately impact Hispanic and AI/AN individuals and should work with their health systems to ensure equitable provision of these strategies. This section focuses on key prevention strategies, including necessary considerations to minimize the risk for opioid poisoning and/or overdose for children and their families.

KAS 5:

When treating acute pain in children or adolescents who are taking sedating medications, such as benzodiazepines, pediatricians and other  PHCPs should use caution when prescribing opioids (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: Strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Prevention of avoidable respiratory depression; decreased risk of death; avoidance of oversedation. 
Risks, harms, cost Potential for increased pain, decreased sleep quality and quantity, impact on mental health. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Intentional vagueness There are other medications that interact with opioids; this list is not intended to be inclusive but, rather, to highlight medications with severe potential for adverse events. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 19, 36, 113, 114 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Prevention of avoidable respiratory depression; decreased risk of death; avoidance of oversedation. 
Risks, harms, cost Potential for increased pain, decreased sleep quality and quantity, impact on mental health. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Intentional vagueness There are other medications that interact with opioids; this list is not intended to be inclusive but, rather, to highlight medications with severe potential for adverse events. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 19, 36, 113, 114 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

As noted, there is an increased risk of opioid overdose when adolescents and adults are coprescribed opioids and benzodiazepines or other sedating and/or respiratory depressant medications.36,119,120  Concomitant use of opioids and sedating medications can lead to significant sedation, respiratory depression, and death. This danger drove the FDA to add a boxed warning to the drug labeling of opioids and benzodiazepines in 2016, alerting clinicians to the danger of coprescribing these medication classes.114  Further, in 2022, the CDC recommended that clinicians who care for adults should use caution when coprescribing opioids and benzodiazepines.19 

KAS 6:

When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should provide naloxone and counsel patients and families on the signs of opioid  overdose and on how to respond to an overdose (Evidence quality: X; recommendation strength: Recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Potential to destigmatize opioid use. A universal recommendation may decrease disparities for patients who get opioid prescription on availability. Increased potential for patients to stay alive and to reverse an overdose. Comfort using medication given the option to reverse; increased reversal agents in the community. 
Risks, harms, cost Costs of medication. Inconvenience of prescribing and/or obtaining naloxone. Potential for precipitation of pain crisis or withdrawal, increased fear of opioids. Potential community shortage of naloxone. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Recommendation. 
Key references 19, 121 − 124 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeX
Benefits Potential to destigmatize opioid use. A universal recommendation may decrease disparities for patients who get opioid prescription on availability. Increased potential for patients to stay alive and to reverse an overdose. Comfort using medication given the option to reverse; increased reversal agents in the community. 
Risks, harms, cost Costs of medication. Inconvenience of prescribing and/or obtaining naloxone. Potential for precipitation of pain crisis or withdrawal, increased fear of opioids. Potential community shortage of naloxone. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Recommendation. 
Key references 19, 121 − 124 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

In rare pediatric cases, concomitant prescribing may be appropriate. Clinicians should, however, exercise caution and also coprescribe naloxone when coprescribing opioids and sedating medications to children and adolescents. Notably, the FDA has clarified that individuals (including adolescents) who have an OUD and may need buprenorphine or methadone (opioid agonists that are used in the treatment of OUD) should, nonetheless, receive these medications even if they are already receiving benzodiazepines but that care should be used when coprescribing these medications.114 

Naloxone is an opioid antagonist that is highly effective at reversing opioid overdoses. In pharmacies and community settings, naloxone is most commonly available as a 4-mg nasal spray, a dose that is typically large enough to reverse an opioid-related overdose, including overdose attributable to illicit fentanyl.125,126  It should be noted that this dose and formulation is different from that commonly used in hospital settings.

Despite its lifesaving benefits and safety profile, naloxone remains underprescribed.127  In 2020, the FDA recommended that health care professionals who prescribe opioids should discuss naloxone with all patients receiving such a prescription.121  The FDA further recommended that health care professionals consider prescribing naloxone to patients who are at risk for opioid overdose (eg, patients with a history of opioid overdose or substance use disorder; those taking benzodiazepines or other sedating medications) and patients who live with others who are at risk for poisoning or overdose, including children. The 2022 CDC guidelines for prescribing opioids to adults also recommended that providers offer naloxone when prescribing opioids and educate patients on overdose prevention and naloxone use.19 

In line with FDA and CDC guidance, the subcommittee recommends that naloxone be provided to children who are prescribed opioids. PHCPs who are unfamiliar with naloxone can receive training to expand their understanding; the CDC provides such training resources.128  The AAP’s HealthyChildren.org site also has useful resources to which providers can refer parents.129 

Recognizing Opioid Overdose
Opioid overdose is life threatening and requires immediate emergency attention. Recognizing the signs of opioid overdose is essential to saving lives. Call 911 immediately—and if available, provide naloxone—if a person exhibits ANY of the following symptoms:
• Their face is extremely pale and/or feels clammy to the touch.
• Their body goes limp.
• Their fingernails or lips have a purple or blue color.
• They start vomiting or making gurgling noises.
• They cannot be awakened or are unable to speak.
• Their breathing or heartbeat slows or stops. 
Recognizing Opioid Overdose
Opioid overdose is life threatening and requires immediate emergency attention. Recognizing the signs of opioid overdose is essential to saving lives. Call 911 immediately—and if available, provide naloxone—if a person exhibits ANY of the following symptoms:
• Their face is extremely pale and/or feels clammy to the touch.
• Their body goes limp.
• Their fingernails or lips have a purple or blue color.
• They start vomiting or making gurgling noises.
• They cannot be awakened or are unable to speak.
• Their breathing or heartbeat slows or stops. 

As discussed earlier in this CPG, PHCPS should counsel patients and caregivers about the benefits and potential adverse effects of opioids when prescribing to children and adolescents. Such interventions may improve caregiver knowledge and safe opioid administration.122  In addition, it is essential that PHCPs counsel children, adolescents, and their families on the signs of an opioid overdose (see Box123 ) and instruct families on how to respond to an opioid overdose, including calling for emergency services and administering naloxone.124,130–133 

Some families may encounter challenges in obtaining naloxone because of cost. Therefore, clinicians should work to ensure that families can obtain naloxone, including by prescription or through a state standing order, by direct provision to the patient, or from community health resources. To increase access to naloxone, the FDA approved the nasal spray formulation for over-the-counter (OTC) availability in 2023.134  Beginning in August 2023, it has increasingly become available in community pharmacies for OTC purchase. However, the cost is $45 for a kit with 2 nasal sprays, which may be prohibitive for many families; thus, PHCPs should continue to help families obtain naloxone with little or no out-of-pocket cost (eg, through a prescription covered by insurance with little or no copay or through free distribution in the community).

KAS 7:

When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe storage and directly observed administration  of medications to children and adolescents (Evidence quality: D; recommendation strength: Option).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeD
Benefits Education may lead to safer storage; reduced risks of unintentional ingestion, misuse, overdose, and diversion. Appropriate dosing and monitoring of medications may allow for detection of diversion. 
Risks, harms, cost Patients may worry about having the medication in their homes. Safe storage options may be unavailable and/or cost prohibitive, generating financial considerations and tradeoffs. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits. 
Strength of recommendation Option 
Key references 135 − 138 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeD
Benefits Education may lead to safer storage; reduced risks of unintentional ingestion, misuse, overdose, and diversion. Appropriate dosing and monitoring of medications may allow for detection of diversion. 
Risks, harms, cost Patients may worry about having the medication in their homes. Safe storage options may be unavailable and/or cost prohibitive, generating financial considerations and tradeoffs. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits. 
Strength of recommendation Option 
Key references 135 − 138 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Although prescription opioids are commonly found in homes where children live, they are often improperly stored.137,139  Additionally, adolescents who are prescribed opioids often report that they have unsupervised access to these medications.140  Safe medication storage is an important strategy to prevent poisonings in children; it is especially critical for opioids, which can be life threatening if young children ingest them, even in small amounts. Additionally, safe storage may prevent adolescents from diverting and engaging in nonmedical use of opioids. Caregivers should be educated on storage of opioids in a secure (ie, locked) location that is inaccessible to children and adolescents.

National efforts, such as the CDC’s Up and Away campaign, emphasize the importance of safe medication storage and provide resources for families.135  Safe storage education138  and the provision of medication lock boxes have demonstrated improvement in reported caregiver medication storage practices.136,141  PHCPs should counsel caregivers on these strategies. They should also recommend that caregivers directly observe the administration of opioids to children and adolescents to ensure that medications are taken as prescribed10  because doing so may prevent unintentional poisoning, diversion, and nonmedical opioid use.

KAS 8:

When prescribing opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should educate caregivers about safe disposal of unused medications, help  caregivers develop a plan to safely dispose of unused medications, and, if possible, offer safe disposal in their practice setting (Evidence quality: A;  recommendation strength: Strong recommendation).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeA
Benefits Education may lead to safer disposal. It may result in a reduced risk of unintentional ingestion, misuse, overdose, and diversion; as well as reduce community opioid availability and future inappropriate use. 
Risks, harms, cost Premature disposal of medications; potential environmental impact; cost of disposal or disposal programs. Patients may be reluctant to agree to return medications; there may be inconvenience and stigma of using a disposal program. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 142 − 147 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeA
Benefits Education may lead to safer disposal. It may result in a reduced risk of unintentional ingestion, misuse, overdose, and diversion; as well as reduce community opioid availability and future inappropriate use. 
Risks, harms, cost Premature disposal of medications; potential environmental impact; cost of disposal or disposal programs. Patients may be reluctant to agree to return medications; there may be inconvenience and stigma of using a disposal program. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Strong recommendation. 
Key references 142 − 147 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Data highlight that adolescents who engage in nonmedical prescription opioid use (ie, use of an opioid medication in a manner not recommended by a PHCP) most commonly obtained leftover opioids from their own prescription or that of a family member or friend.148  Up to 78% of parents and caregivers do not report safe disposal of their child’s opioid prescription.143  Pairing opioid disposal education with safe disposal methods increases the likelihood that a parent or caregiver will dispose of their children’s leftover opioids promptly after use and decreases planned retention of unused opioids.149,150 

PHCPs should not only educate families about the need for safe disposal but also recommend ways to safely dispose of unused opioids.147  Additionally, health care facilities and pharmacies are encouraged to leverage on-site resources and infrastructure to facilitate safe disposal in the same location where families receive an opioid prescription.

The FDA now requires opioid manufacturers to make available prepaid return-mail envelopes at outpatient pharmacies so patients can send back unused medication with no charge.151  Prescription opioids can also be safely disposed of via a Drug Enforcement Administration-registered receptacle,152  takeback events,144  mail-in programs,142  or through the use of an envelope containing drug-deactivating chemicals.145,146  The FDA recommends take-back programs as being the preferred method for disposal, followed by flushing.153  The FDA maintains a list of medications that can be flushed down the toilet; many commonly used prescription opioids are on this list.154  However, given the potential impact of this practice on the environment and water supplies, flushing medications should only be used when take-back or other disposal options are unavailable.

Chronic pain is common in children and adolescents.155,161,162  Frequent headaches occur in up to 15% of adolescents, and functional abdominal pain occurs in 13.5% of children and adolescents.155  Low back pain and widespread muscular pain are also common in adolescents, as are other conditions that may be marked by chronic pain, such as occurs with endometriosis.155  Some chronic conditions that PHCPs commonly encounter (eg, headache, migraine, abdominal pain) should generally not be treated with opioids; in these cases, opioid treatment might mask a more serious underlying diagnosis, and nonopioid medications are often more effective at providing symptomatic relief. Hence, in general, these pain syndromes should not be treated with opioids.

KAS 9:

When treating acute, worsened pain in children and adolescents with preexisting chronic pain, pediatricians and other PHCPs should  prescribe opioids when indicated and partner with any other opioid-prescribing clinicians involved in the patient’s care and with specialists in  chronic pain, palliative care, and/or other opioid stewardship programs to determine an appropriate treatment plan (Evidence quality: D;  recommendation strength: Option).

Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeD
Benefits Improved pain management, mental health outcomes, trust in health system. Reduced stigma, avoidance of biases, promotion of collaboration in pain management. 
Risks, harms, cost Risk of overtreatment, oversedation, and overprescribing. Potential for misprescribing or incorrect prescribing. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Option 
Key references 31, 155 − 160 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 
Aggregate Evidence Quality GradeD
Benefits Improved pain management, mental health outcomes, trust in health system. Reduced stigma, avoidance of biases, promotion of collaboration in pain management. 
Risks, harms, cost Risk of overtreatment, oversedation, and overprescribing. Potential for misprescribing or incorrect prescribing. 
Benefit-harm assessment Preponderance of benefits over harms. 
Strength of recommendation Option 
Key references 31, 155 − 160 
For details on the derivation of the recommendation strength, see Methodology, Data Synthesis and Analysis, above. 

Nonetheless, some patients with chronic pain from these conditions may already be prescribed opioids that they are using daily or near-daily to control their pain. Other pediatric patients may receive frequent opioid prescriptions for the management of pain from chronic diseases, such as sickle cell disease, osteogenesis imperfecta, or epidermolysis bullosa, or in relation to a physical disability associated with pain.

Some of these children and adolescents may need surgery (either related or unrelated to their underlying condition), experience trauma, or have worsened acute pain during their treatment of chronic pain. As a result, some patients who are already on opioids may require additional support for severe, worsened pain. It is often more difficult to provide this group of patients with adequate analgesia compared with those without preexisting chronic pain. Not only are children and adolescents with chronic pain more likely to require higher doses of opioids to manage acutely worsened pain, but they also may have central sensitization to pain and nociception that make them likely to experience increased pain from surgery or trauma. Individuals with developmental or intellectual disabilities may be unable to fully verbally communicate their pain.28 

In each of these cases, PHCPs should manage pain in close coordination with family members, caregivers, and other clinicians who know the child or adolescent well and can provide further information on the extent of pain the child or adolescent is likely experiencing.

It is important to maintain these patients’ baseline opioid dosing and add additional opioids that are appropriate to the degree of injury. Hence, when treating children and adolescents with chronic pain and who are on long-term, stable treatment with opioids, PHCPs should not discontinue or rapidly taper opioids.163,164 

Difficulties in providing adequate analgesia occur whether the patient is already on opioid analgesia.156  As noted above, patients with chronic pain may require more analgesics, whether they are already taking opioids. They may also need to use them for a longer period of time than would be expected for patients without chronic pain.

For patients who have already been prescribed opioids, it is important that PHCPs contact the prescribing clinician so that they are aware of the need for additional use and any needed prescriptions. In some cases, individuals prescribed long-term opioids may have an “agreement” that prevents them from seeking opioids from other providers, thus making clear communication with their primary opioid provider critical to ensure that children and adolescents are not unfairly punished for seeking acute pain management from a different clinician.

In the perioperative context, patients should also continue taking any nonopioid analgesics (eg, antidepressants, antiepileptic medications used for pain management). If this is not possible (such as when, for example, the patient is nil per os), substitution of an intravenous form or a similarly acting medication should be made when needed. N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists (such as ketamine) and mixed opioid agonist or N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists (such as methadone) may improve the effectiveness of opioids in perioperative pain management by minimizing or reversing opioid tolerance.160 

Regional analgesia, if possible, can be a powerful technique to provide profound analgesia for chronic pain patients. When no regional block is available, intravenous lidocaine and cyclooxygenase inhibitors (such as acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or ketorolac) may be useful in improving analgesia. Finally, nonpharmacologic pain management can also provide additional analgesia. Although such interventions are often not the province of many outpatient PHCPs, PHCPs are often called on to provide recommendations for pain management and can recommend that specialists consider these options.

One specific instance potentially requiring daily opioid agonists is in the care of adolescents with an OUD who receive buprenorphine or methadone.165  In general, it is important to discuss pain management goals when working with a patient with OUD. Although, as discussed earlier in this CPG, opioids are not needed for most common procedures and injuries, some patients with an OUD may nonetheless require opioids. Patients on buprenorphine may be able to use increased doses to manage their pain. Alternatively, individuals on buprenorphine or methadone can receive short-acting opioid medications that are administered in addition to their medications for OUD.166 

Patients with OUD who are on oral naltrexone (an opioid antagonist) who may need opioids postoperatively should discontinue the medication 48 to 72 hours before planned surgery; patients on long-acting injectable naltrexone may consider switching to the oral formulation at least 1 month before surgery and then discontinue the medication 48 to 72 hours before planned surgery.167  Some individuals with OUD may wish to avoid opioids entirely.157 

Regardless, close collaboration of PHCPs with addiction treatment providers can be critical to developing an ideal pain management plan. Throughout, the goal should be to support ongoing OUD treatment and recovery, while also ensuring appropriate pain control (including the use of opioids, after a careful consideration with patients and families about the relative benefits and risks).

In summary, patients who have been on long-term opioids deserve special consideration. In some cases, their care may be complex enough that it is appropriate for PHCPs to consult with a pediatric pain medicine specialist.156  Throughout, when treating children and adolescents with chronic pain and on long-term, stable treatment with opioids, pediatricians and other PHCPs should not discontinue or rapidly taper opioids. It is critical that PHCPs distinguish between frequent prescription opioid use, which for many individuals with chronic pain involves controlled, stable opioid doses and results in improved function, and an opioid use disorder, which is defined by loss of control surrounding opioid use and worsened daily functioning.45  Where they exist, opioid stewardship programs with collaboration with pharmacists and other health care providers can also help with challenges and barriers. Discontinuation and tapers of individuals on stable, long-term opioid doses are associated with adverse outcomes, including untreated pain, worsened mental health, suicide, and reliance on illicit opioids for pain management (eg, illicitly manufactured fentanyl, heroin).31,32,110,158,159,168 

Successfully and sustainably implementing this CPG into practice requires careful consideration of barriers and facilitators. Common barriers to implementation at the practice- and provider-levels include insufficient training, time, and resources; resistance to change; and implicit bias. Evidence indicates that clinical decision support (CDS) can be delivered through electronic health record (EHR) systems to overcome some of the barriers related to knowledge, time, and resources. EHR systems designed to automate opioid prescriptions have been successfully used to improve opioid prescribing practices by automating age- and weight-appropriate dosing and setting a default number of doses and/or days in the prescription based on the specific clinical scenario.88,169 

Additionally, CDS can ensure the appropriate use of opioid and nonopioid medications, as well as encourage the coprescription of naloxone.170  CDS can be leveraged to prevent nonrecommended practices, such as codeine and tramadol prescribing; routine prescribing of opioids with benzodiazepines; and discontinuation of opioids in patients who are on long-term opioid treatment of chronic pain.

It is important to emphasize that well-designed EHR systems may not be able to overcome the well-documented disparities in opioid prescribing and dosing that are related to implicit bias.25,26  The subcommittee strongly recommends that practices and providers monitor opioid metrics by health equity measures, such as race and ethnicity, preferred language, and insurance status. Practices and providers should intervene when disparities are identified. Implicit bias training and engagement of communities experiencing disparities are key improvement strategies.171 

There is a lack of RCTs comparing the efficacy of opioids to nonopioids in managing pain outside of the orthopedic and postoperative tonsillectomy populations. For this reason, it is important that implementation strategies consider local setting- and condition-specific pathways, provider feedback, and monitoring and reporting of balancing measures to providers and caregivers.

Local pathways can include setting- and condition-specific guidance on when to prescribe opioids, which specific opioids and formulations to prescribe, how much to prescribe, which nonopioid medications to prescribe, and what nonpharmacologic therapies to recommend. Provider and institutional comparative feedback has been successfully used to reduce opioid prescribing.60,88,172,173  Balancing measures—such as phone calls, refills, emergency department return visits, readmissions, and pain control at home—should be monitored and reported.60,87,88,169,170,174 

The subcommittee recommends that all patients and caregivers of patients with pain or expected pain be provided with educational and instructional materials on nonpharmacologic therapies and nonopioid and opioid medications. Evidence indicates that providing these materials improves pain control and reduces opioid prescribing.60,87–89 

Brief scenario-tailored education has, however, been shown to be more effective than routine education in improving the safe disposal of opioids and caregiver recognition and response to excess sedation.122,149,150  Additionally, direct provision of disposal bags has been shown to be superior to education in improving the safe disposal of opioid medications.147,149  Finally, policy-level facilitators can support the successful implementation of this CPG into practice. At the local and state levels, policy makers can promote the provision of safe disposal locations and boxes. At the federal level, the recent FDA approval of naloxone nasal spray for OTC, nonprescription may improve the accessibility of this medication; education by providers regarding its use and recommendations that families obtain it will still be essential, however.134,175 

The evidence base is growing rapidly for best approaches to treat pediatric pain and prevent OUD, poisoning, and overdose, and the guidelines in this CPG are based on the highest quality research available at the time of writing. Nonetheless, there are significant gaps and an urgent need for future research on a range of topics relevant to pediatricians and other PHCPs.

These gaps and opportunities are described in detail in the accompanying technical report; some of the most important considerations are listed below.

  • High-quality clinical trials to establish the ideal dosing and duration of treatment with opioids. Clinical trials to date have examined a relatively small number of the currently available, approved opioid medications in pediatric populations. How opioids (eg, oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine, etc) compare regarding efficacy (ie, pain control), tolerability (ie, medication side effects), and safety (ie, risk of OUD, poisoning, and overdose) is poorly understood, with the result that opioid choice is often a matter of clinician preference or common institutional practices. The ideal dose, dosing schedule, and duration of treatment also requires better understanding. Throughout, clinical endpoints (eg, at what pain level can opioids be safely stopped or tapered) should be developed with guidance from patients and family members.

  • High-quality clinical trials of opioids, nonopioid medications, and nonpharmacologic approaches. There are a very small number of randomized controlled trials that compare opioid and nonopioid medications, such as NSAIDs and acetaminophen. More studies are needed to more clearly guide multimodal approaches to pain management. These studies should include an examination of how nonopioid medications (not only oral NSAIDs and acetaminophen, but also other oral and nonoral medications, including topical treatments) and nonpharmacologic treatments should be best combined to avoid or minimize opioid use. In examining these questions, researchers should study a range of conditions; studies to date have often focused on narrowly defined pain conditions, such as pain following a specific procedure or injury.

  • Studies in outpatient settings, particularly primary care. Clinical trials of pediatric pain are commonly conducted in postoperative settings or in emergency departments or other inpatient hospital wards. Data on managing pain in outpatient settings, in which cases patients and family members monitor pain symptoms at home (rather than a clinician at the bedside), are scarce. Additionally, many studies use restrictive selection criteria, often excluding children with comorbidities, such as disabilities or mental health conditions. Because some of these children and adolescents may experience more severe distress from pain and have the greatest need for support, studies that include them in outpatient settings are greatly needed.

  • Clinical trials of pharmacogenetic and other genetic or molecular information to guide opioid prescribing. Increasingly, precision medicine—in which treatment is optimized through the use of personalized information, including genetic and molecular profiling—is likely to help guide pain management decisions. Pharmacogenetics, for example, could guide decisions about which opioid formulation, dose, and dosing schedule is likely to be most appropriate for an individual patient based on their likely response to the medication. Genetic data (including, for example, polygenetic risk scores) might also help identify an individual’s likely risk of experiencing an adverse reaction to an opioid or of developing an OUD. Further studies, however, are needed to understand how such information might impact clinical outcomes and how pediatricians and PHCPs should incorporate it into pain management decisions and counseling of patients and families.

  • Studies of the cumulative impact of opioid exposure during childhood and adolescence. A large body of research has identified brain structure and function changes occurring in association with frequent or heavy use of potentially addictive substances (eg, nicotine, alcohol, and cannabis). Treating pain is a clinical priority, and opioids should be used for severe acute pain that otherwise would be insufficiently controlled. Nonetheless, in a small percentage of individuals, opioids can precipitate an OUD. Relatively little is known about the biological and psychological consequences of short- and long-term opioid exposure—and repeated treatment episodes—during critical periods of child and adolescent development; such information would help pediatricians and PHCPs counsel patients and families about potential risk.

  • Examination of institutional policies that enhance or hinder appropriate opioid prescribing practices. There is significant institutional variability in analgesic use. Although this CPG was focused on outpatient settings, as an example of such variability, a recent study of opioid prescribing for critically ill infants found that in the US Northeast, in 2 hospitals, fewer than one-half of infants received an opioid during their hospitalization, but in 3 other hospitals, more than 80% of infants received an opioid, and such variability was not fully explained by differences in clinical need.176  Policies at the state, local, and health-system levels all impact opioid prescribing. Some policies likely improve appropriate opioid prescribing in the aggregate (eg, limiting initial opioid prescriptions to several days and prohibiting excessively long durations of opioids). However, such policies might also prevent some individuals from receiving opioids for longer periods of time when they may be needed (eg, pain management after an especially painful surgical procedure, or in the treatment of chronic pain) and could result in children and adolescents experiencing uncontrolled pain and distress. Studies are needed to understand how such prescribing policies—which are often designed with adult populations in mind—might help or hurt pediatric populations. Such studies could guide future clinical practice guidelines and the development of evidence-based prescribing policies at state, local, and health-system levels. Within health care systems (including outpatient clinics and hospitals), quality improvement incentives are also likely to guide pediatricians’ and PHCPs’ prescribing practices through the use of direct feedback and monitoring and reporting of balancing measures.

Despite the need for these studies, the evidence base and understanding of current best clinical practices was sufficiently strong to support the key action statements in this CPG. Still, pain research in children and adolescents has lagged behind that for adults, and clinical trials and high-quality observational studies addressing the knowledge gaps raised above are urgently needed. Throughout, particularly as researchers conduct clinical trials and assess the impact of institutional policies, researchers must be vigilant and identify instances of undertreated pain and ensure that children and adolescents are not treated differently on the basis of race, ethnicity, or other sociodemographic factors.

Clinicians’ approaches to pain management have changed dramatically in the last 2 decades. At the turn of the century, prevailing narratives on pain treatment supported the liberal use of opioids. Common narratives included, for example, that pain is “the fifth vital sign,” and that individuals who are in pain cannot develop an addiction when prescribed an opioid.

As prescription opioids increasingly became involved in US overdose deaths, the proverbial pendulum swung widely, and many clinicians and health systems inflexibly began refusing to offer opioids for pain—even in cases when these prescriptions were likely indicated.

This CPG acknowledges that these narratives and practices have harmed children and families across the country; the document seeks to provide a sensible path forward. Pain should be treated using multimodal approaches that include opioids when appropriate. This treatment should adhere to best practices to minimize the risk for OUD, poisoning, and overdose.

This CPG also acknowledges the longstanding inequities that have impacted the treatment of pediatric pain for many individuals, particularly communities of color. These disparities have negative health and mental health impacts on families. PHCPs should monitor health equity measures (ie, race, ethnicity, preferred language, insurance status) and intervene whenever disparities are identified.

PHCPs are experts at treating medical conditions with social and behavioral considerations. Because of this, PHCPs are exceptionally well-positioned to balance the benefits of effective pain management with the potential risks of prescribing opioids when they are indicated. This subcommittee strongly believes that it is time for the pediatric workforce to promote rational and equitable pain management. It is the subcommittee’s sincere hope that this CPG will help PHCPs optimize the care of children, adolescents, and families across the United States.

Scott E. Hadland – Chair

Rita Agarwal – Vice-Chair

Sudha R. Raman – Lead Methodologist

Michael J. Smith – Methodologist

Stephen R. Daniels – CPG Coach

Lisa Humphrey – Section on Hospice and Palliative Medicine

Lorraine I. Kelley-Quon – American Pediatric Surgical Association

Jeremy Michel – Partnership for Policy Implementation

Mehul V. Raval – Section on Surgery

Leslie Walker-Harding – Committee on Substance Use and Prevention

Michael Webb – Section on Oral Health

Scott Wexelblatt – Section on Hospital Medicine

Robert T. Wilder – Society for Pediatric Pain Medicine

Amy Bryl – Implementation Scientist

Madeline H. Renny – Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine

Beth Larson-Steckler – Family Representative

Susan K. Flinn, MA – Medical Writer

Suzanne Emmer – Senior Director, Quality Initiatives

Kymika Okechukwu, MPA – Senior Manager, Evidence-Based Medicine Initiatives

Cordarrell Nunnery, CAPM – Project Manager, Evidence-Based Medicine Initiatives

Pia Daniels, MPH, PMP – Manager, Committees and Sections

The guidance in this report does not indicate an exclusive course of treatment or serve as a standard of medical care. Variations, taking into account individual circumstances, may be appropriate.

All clinical practice guidelines from the American Academy of Pediatrics automatically expire 5 years after publication unless reaffirmed, revised, or retired at or before that time.

COMPANION PAPER: A companion to this article can be found online at www.pediatrics.org/cgi/doi/10.1542/peds.2024-068753.

This document is copyrighted and is property of the American Academy of Pediatrics and its Board of Directors. All authors have filed conflict of interest statements with the American Academy of Pediatrics. Any conflicts have been resolved through a process approved by the Board of Directors. The American Academy of Pediatrics has neither solicited nor accepted any commercial involvement in the development of the content of this publication.

FUNDING: No external funding.

FINANCIAL/CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES: Dr Michael Smith has disclosed a direct to institution financial relationship with Pfizer as a site PI. Dr Scott Wexelblatt has disclosed a financial relationship with Abbott Nutrition as a speaker and a financial relationship with Sanofi as a speaker. Any other disclosures were reviewed and determined not relevant to the work related to the clinical practice guideline on prescribing opioids in children and adolescents. Disclosures are reviewed and mitigated through a Conflict-of-Interest process that consists of reviewing pertinent information which is then used to decide what action is required to maintain content integrity. There may be instances where no action is necessary. This process has been approved by the AAP Board of Directors.

AI/AN

American Indian/Alaska Native

CDC

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

CDS

clinical decision support

CPG

clinical practice guideline

EHR

electronic health record

FDA

US Food and Drug Administration

KAS

key action statement

NSAID

nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug

OUD

opioid use disorder

PHCP

pediatric health care providers

RCT

randomized controlled trial

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