Colorectal Cancer Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pain Relief After Colorectal Surgery: Single-shot Spinal Combined With Painbuster® vs Painbuster® Alone. A Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial
Limiting surgical stress and managing postoperative pain are well understood to influence
recovery and outcome from major surgery for colorectal cancer and both are fundamental
aspects of enhanced recovery protocols.
Traditional approaches for dealing with these problems such as epidural or patient
controlled intravenous opioid analgesia are associated with problems that may be detrimental
to postoperative recovery and surgical outcome. As a result there is evidence in the
literature of increasing interest in alternative techniques such as intrathecal anaesthesia
or continuous wound infusion of local anaesthetic, however nobody has examined the effect of
combining the techniques or their impact on the surgical stress response.
We intend to compare patients undergoing major resections for colorectal cancer receiving
intrathecal anaesthesia in combination with a wound infusion of local anaesthetic with those
receiving a continuous wound infusion alone. We will examine the surgical stress response
and postoperative pain control in addition to objective measures of postoperative recovery.
We suggest that our approach will attenuate the surgical stress response and provide optimal
pain control that will ultimately translate in improved recovery and outcome following
surgery for colorectal cancer.
This is a pilot randomised controlled trial
Hypotheses -
Following colorectal surgery, spinal anaesthesia combined with a continuous infusion of
local anaesthetic into the surgical wound provides
1. better pain relief
2. a reduced stress response
when compared to the use of continuous infusion of local anaesthetic into the surgical wound
alone.
Patients undergoing surgical resection for colorectal cancer will be randomised to receive
either
1. A single shot of spinal anaesthesia plus a continuous infusion of local anaesthetic
into the surgical wound or
2. Continuous infusion of local anaesthetic into the surgical wound
Spinal Anaesthesia
The spinal anaesthetic (SA) with be placed after commencement of general anaesthesia this
will ensure the patients remain blinded to the intervention. SA will be performed in the
lateral position using a midline approach. L3/4 interspace will be identified using
Tuffier's as the anatomical landmark. After confirmation of correct placement using a 25G
Whitacre needle, 12.5 mg of hyperbaric Bupivacaine in a mixture with 500mcg Diamorphine will
be injected intrathecally.
Infusion of local anaesthetic
The catheter through which the infusion of local anaesthetic will be given, will be placed
by the surgeon at the end of the procedure in a location determined by the surgical
approach. A bolus dose of 20ml 0.25% L-Bupivacaine will be injected down the catheters prior
to the connection of the elastomeric pump which will also contain 270ml 0.25% L-Bupivacaine
General anaesthesia will be managed in the same way for both groups
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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