Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trial
Official title:
Preventive Application Of Lidocaine Patch In Adjunction To Intravenous Morphine Analgesia For Management Of Post-Thoracotomy Pain: Results Of A Randomized, Double Blind, Placebo Controlled Study
Thoracotomy is one of the most painful surgical incision. Uncontrolled acute
post-thoracotomy pain reducing deep breathing exercises and secretion clearance increased
the incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications including atelectasis, hypoxemia, and
postoperative pulmonary infections. Thus, an effective analgesia is crucial in order to
reduce perioperative morbidity and hospitalization time and also to prevent chronic
post-thoracotomy pain.
Thoracic epidural analgesia and thoracic paravertebral analgesia are currently the standard
strategies for thoracic surgery but the difficult of performing them in all patients and
their potential complications are all factors that limit their use. Systemic administration
of opioids is the simplest and common strategy to provide analgesia but it may be associated
with several undesirable effects, such as respiratory depression, sedation, nausea,
constipation and vomiting.
In the recent years, preventive analgesia is become one of the most promising strategy of
postoperative pain control. It is based on the concept of administering analgesic drugs
before the occurrence of nociceptive input in order to prevent central sensitization. The
efficacy of preemptive analgesia is unclear and there is no a consensus on its efficacy on
controlling pain after thoracic procedure.
Pain following thoracotomy has a multifactorial genesis including surgical incision,
intercostal nerve injury, pleural inflammation, and damage of pulmonary parenchyma and of
diaphragm. Thus, a multimodal analgesia that intercepts the signalizing at numerous
locations could be more effective than a single strategy targeting one site along the pain
pathway.
Thus, in the present study, the clinical hypothesis was that the preemptive analgesia of the
skin using a new tool as the Lidocaine patch 5% would improve the analgesic effects of
systemic morphine analgesia for controlling post-operative pain following thoracotomy.
This was an unicenter, double-blinded, placebo controlled, parallel-group, prospective study
conducted at Thoracic Surgery Unit and Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit of Second
University of Naples from January 2013 to May 2015.
All consecutive patients undergoing undergoing anatomical resection by standard lateral
thoracotomy for treatment of non small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) were randomly assigned to
Lidocaine or Placebo group in 1:1 ratio and no changes to methods after trial commencement
as type of randomization or eligibility criteria were attended.
For patients assigned to active group, Lidocaine patch 5% (Lidoderm®, Endo Pharmaceuticals
Inc, Malvern, PA, USA) measuring 10 x 14 cm and containing 700 mg of Lidocaine, was applied
to cover the planned skin incision, marked with a pen by surgeon. Patch was applied for 12
hours during the night, removed for the subsequent 12 hours during the day, and then a new
patch was applied at the same level the night after. This process was continued for 3 days
before thoracotomy. In the control group, a placebo patch, that was identical in appearance
to the active patch but did not contain Lidocaine, was applied in the same manner for the
same time. The pain service, surgical team, and patients were all blinded to treatment group
assigned.
All patients received the same anesthetic protocol. All operations were performed in the
early morning just after that the patch was removed. The general anesthesia was inducted
with i.v. midazolam 0.05 mg/kg, i.v. fentanyl 1-1.4 µg/Kg, i.v. propofol 2.5 mg/kg, i.v. and
rocuronium bromide 0.6 mg/kg. The patient was maintained with desflurane 4-6%, sulfentanil
0.5-1 micro/Kg, rocuronium bromide 0.6-0.8 mg/Kg, based on heart rate and blood pressure
stability. A selective ventilation was performed with a double-lumen endobronchial tube in
all cases and no additional analgesics were injected during surgery.
All patients had the same length of skin incision and a standard muscle-sparing lateral
thoracotomy. The latissimus dorsi muscle and the underlying serratus anterior muscle were
spared and the chest was entered over the top of the unresected and unshingled sixth rib. A
standard Finocchietto chest retractor was then placed and slowly opened to avoid rib
fracture. After completion of the appropriate anatomical lung resection, a single 28 F chest
drainage was systematically placed in pleural cavity. The same chest closure was performed
in all patients in a standard manner using intracostal sutures.
Patient was extubated in the operating room and transferred to the surgical ward. The
postoperative analgesia was performed with intravenous morphine administered through Patient
Controlled-Analgesia (Automed 3300, AceMedical Co.) delivery. Morphine 1 mg was given for
each request and continuous infusion was at a rate of 1 mg/h. Both groups had a 10 min
lockout period and a safe higher limit of 20 mg in 4 hours. If VAS scores exceeded 4/10
scores, rescue analgesia was intravenously administered according to a standardized
institutional protocol for pain treatment until the pain was relieved to a level falling
below a VAS score < 4. Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) was continued for up to 2 days,
until patients could tolerate oral opioid medications and/or anti-inflammatory analgesics.
However, these medications were not considered in the analysis.
The intergroup differences were assessed in order to evaluate whether the pre-emptive
analgesia obtained with Lidocaine patch would have effects on pain scores (primary
end-point), consumption of analgesics, recovery of respiratory function and peripheral
painful pathways (secondary end-points).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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