Labor Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Programmed Intermittent Epidural Bolus for Labor Analgesia During First Stage of Labor: A Sequential Allocation Trial to Determine the Optimum Interval Time Between Boluses of a Fixed Volume of 5 ml of Bupivacaine 0.125% Plus Fentanyl 2 mcg/ml
Until recently, at Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH), epidural analgesia for labor pain was
delivered with a pump that could only provide continuous infusion of the freezing medication
in combination of pushes of medication activated by the patient, a technique called patient
controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA). In the last decade or so, the literature has suggested
that this continuous infusion of medication is not as effective as previously thought, and
suggested that instead of continuous infusion we should use intermittent programmed pushes.
The investigators now have devices that are able to do that. Programmed intermittent
epidural bolus (PIEB) is a new technological advance based on the concept that boluses of
freezing medication in the epidural space are superior to continuous epidural infusion
(CEI). Recently the epidural pumps at MSH were reprogrammed to deliver bolus of medication
at regular intervals (PIEB), in addition to what the patient can deliver herself (PCEA).
Studies have shown that delivering analgesia in this manner prolong the duration of
analgesia, reduce motor block, lower the incidence of breakthrough pain, improve maternal
satisfaction and decrease local anesthetic consumption. The investigators have recently
concluded a study at MSH using PIEB where excellent results were observed. However, in that
study, some patients exhibited higher than necessary sensory blocks. The investigators
believe that the technique can be optimized by using the same interval of the previous study
with smaller volumes of the intermittent boluses. Optimizing the technique, may allow the
investigators to be able to reduce even further the amount of medication used by each
patient.
The hypothesis of this study is that there is an optimal volume of the PIEB bolus at a fixed
interval of 40 minutes of 0.0625% bupivacaine plus fentanyl 2mcg/ml that will provide 90% of
women the necessary drug requirements during first stage of labor (EV90), thus avoiding
breakthrough pain and need for PCEA or physician intervention. We hypothesize that this
effective volume will be between 7 and 12 mL (6.6 mg/hr to 11.3 mg/hr of bupivacaine).
Studies involving programmed intermittent epidural bolus (PIEB) to date have provided an
analgesic regimen that delivered an amount of local anesthetic that was below the patient's
requirement per hour, as the studies were done in the context of an association with patient
controlled epidural anesthesia (PCEA) as a rescue technique. As a result, PCEA requests were
frequent and therefore these studies have not been able to truly understand the pharmacology
of the bolus technique in the PIEB regimen, as the PCEA utilized by patients added an extra
component to the regimen.
At Mount Sinai Hospital, PIEB devices have been recently introduced. Currently our standard
epidural mixture is bupivacaine 0.0625% with fentanyl 2mcg/ml. Based on previous research
done by the investigators, the current epidural regimen consists of 10 ml PIEB at 40 minute
intervals, with PCEA boluses of 5 ml and a lock out interval of 10 minutes, for a maximum of
20 ml of the epidural mixture per hour.
In this study, the investigators will vary the volume of the bolus (7-12 mL) of bupivacaine
0.0625% with fentanyl 2mcg/ml. PCEA bolus of 5mL of the same solution will also be
available. The goal is to establish the ideal PIEB volume that will be effective for our
patient population.
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