Arterial Catheterization Clinical Trial
Official title:
Lidocaine/Tetracaine Patch (Rapydan) for Topical Anaesthesia Before Arterial Access: A Double-blind, Randomized Trial
Arterial catheterization is painful and is associated with patient stress and anxiety. Analgesia is usually provided by subcutaneous injection of local anesthetic. An alternative is topical anaesthesia, such as Rapydan which is a novel topical anesthetic patch containing 70 mg each of lidocaine and tetracaine. We therefore tested the hypothesis that Rapydan patch analgesia is non-inferior to subcutaneous local anesthetic.
Many clinical procedures including arterial and venous punctures, percutaneous venous
catheter insertion, lumbar puncture, and dermatological procedures are associated with pain
and consequent patient discomfort.1-2 With the exception of venopuncture, arterial puncture
is the most common invasive procedure performed on critically ill patients. Also, it is
often necessary before induction of anaesthesia for invasive measurements of blood pressure
and collection of arterial blood samples in patients undergoing major cardiac surgery.
Injection of local anesthetics before insertion causes intra-dermal turgor and can trigger
local vasoconstriction, both of which reduce puncture success rate.
An alternative approach is to use topical anesthesia for percutaneous procedures. However,
intact skin presents a significant barrier to topical anesthetic preparations. Therefore,
topical anesthetic preparations typically must be applied under occlusive dressings for
45-60 minutes before vascular access — which is often longer than is clinically practical.
Rapydan (also known as Synera in the United States) is a novel topical anesthetic patch that
contains 70 mg each of lidocaine and tetracaine. The central area of each Rapydan patch
consists of a Controlled Heat Assisted Drug Delivery pod which is designed to allow for
application just 20 minutes before percutaneous procedures. However, the efficacy of Rapydan
topical analgesia has yet to be quantified for the more intense pain resulting from arterial
puncture. We thus compared routine analgesia (subcutaneous injection with 0.5 ml of 1%
lidocaine) with heated lidocaine/tetracaine patches. Specifically, we tested the hypothesis
that lidocaine/tetracaine patch analgesia is non-inferior to that provided by subcutaneous
lidocaine injection for insertion of arterial catheters.
Ninty patients undergoing elective major cardiac surgery were included in this prospective,
double blind clinical trial. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either a
lidocaine/tetracaine patch, followed by subcutaneous injection 0.5 ml of normal saline
solution or placebo patch, looking identically to the Rapydan patch and subsequent
subcutaneous injection of 0.5 ml of lidocaine 1%. Pain during arterial catheterization using
100-mm-long visual analog scale (VAS) was the primary outcome. Other outcomes were pain
during anesthetic/saline injection and plasma tetracaine concentrations.
VAS pain scores during arterial puncture were comparable in both groups and Rapydan was
non-inferior to subcutaneous lidocaine. Pain scores at the time of subcutaneous injection
were significantly lower (better) in patients assigned to the lidocaine/tetracaine patch
than to lidocaine (P = 0.001). Plasma tetracaine concentrations never exceeded the detection
limit of 25 ng/ml at any time in any patient.
Both the lidocaine/tetracaine patch and subcutaneous injection of lidocaine provided
comparable pain control during arterial catheter insertion. Subcutaneous lidocaine caused
discomfort during injection whereas the lidocaine/tetracaine patch required placement 20
minutes before the procedure. Given adequate time, the patch provided better overall
analgesia by obviating the need for subcutaneous infiltration.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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