Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06040307 |
Other study ID # |
2023-08 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 18, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
May 6, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
May 2024 |
Source |
Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
General anesthesia is a combination of hypnotic drugs to achieve unconsciousness and opioid
analgesics to ensure antinociception. An alternative approach to the intraoperative
administration of high potency opioids in order to achieve antinociception during surgery is
combining a general anesthesia with a regional anesthesia.
Modern general anesthesia aims to treat nociception induced by surgical stimulation while
avoiding an overdose of opioid analgesics and reducing side-effects of opioid administration.
Quality and safety of general anesthesia are of major clinical importance and can be improved
by adjusting the opioid analgesics to the optimal individual dose needed.
In the current clinical practice, the opioid dosage is usually chosen by clinical judgment.
Recently different monitoring devices estimating the effect of nociception during
unconsciousness have become commercially available. One of the first commercially available
nociception indices was the Surgical Pleth Index (SPI) derived by the CARESCAPE™B650 patient
monitor (GE Healthcare).
Until today, it remains unknown whether guiding sufentanil administration by SPI monitoring
affects the administered amount of intraoperative and postoperative opioid, immediate
postoperative pain in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU) and the quality of postoperative
recovery in patients with a combination of general and regional anesthesia. This study aims
to investigate whether guiding sufentanil administration by SPI monitoring - compared to
routine care - reduces intraoperative sufentanil consumption in patients having trauma and
orthopaedic surgery with a combination of general and regional anesthesia.
Description:
General anesthesia is a combination of hypnotic drugs and opioid analgesics. Modern general
anesthesia aims to treat nociception induced by surgical stimulation while avoiding an
overdose of opioid analgesics and reducing side-effects of opioid administration. Underdosing
of opioids during surgery can lead to nociception with increased sympathetic tone, elevated
levels of stress hormones, unintended patient movement due to nociception as well as
increased postoperative pain. On the other hand, overdosing of opioids can lead to negative
side effects such as nausea and vomiting, arterial hypotension, immunosuppression, prolonged
recovery times, postoperative delirium and an increase in postoperative pain by
opioid-induced-hyperalgesia. Anesthesiologists aim for a long-lasting perioperative
anesthesia while at the same time trying to reduce the intraoperative and postoperative
opioid administration.
An alternative approach to the intraoperative administration of high potency opioids in order
to achieve antinociception during surgery is combining a general anesthesia with a regional
anesthesia. However, the quality of regional anesthesia cannot be assessed during general
anesthesia by the anesthesiologist and patients cannot express pain themselves. Therefore,
anesthesiologists tend to administer a certain calculated opioid dose during the operation.
If this calculated opioid administration is essential for a sufficient anesthesia or an
unnecessary overdose cannot be assessed by the anesthesiologist. Until now there has been no
measurement tool that could estimate the effectiveness of regional anesthesia and the absence
of nociception during general anesthesia combined with a regional anesthesia.
In recent years, different monitoring devices estimating the effect of nociception during
unconsciousness have become commercially available. Such monitoring devices should help
physicians to choose the right dose of opioid analgesics during general anesthesia. Among
those, the Surgical Pleth Index (SPI) was one of the first commercially available nociception
monitoring devices. The SPI is derived by the CARESCAPE™B650 patient monitor (GE Healthcare)
and calculates an index value from normalized heart rate and pulse wave amplitude derived by
photoplethysmography. The index is presented on a scale from 0 (low sympathetic tone) to 100
(high sympathetic tone). Nevertheless, current literature is inconclusive about the impact of
nociception-monitor-guided opioid administration. So far, there is no definitive evidence on
anesthesia related outcome parameters like the administered amount of opioid, postoperative
short-term recovery, and long-term outcome. Besides, there has been no study evaluating the
assessment of the effectiveness of regional anesthesia during general anesthesia by
monitoring the intraoperative nociception with the SPI. If the SPI was able to assess
nociception, SPI guided opioid administration would prevent unnecessary opioid administration
during the operation and reduce the total dose of opioids. Reduction of the intraoperative
opioid dose would mean a clinically important benefit for patients against the background of
potential risks of opioid administration. Nevertheless, it remains unknown whether guiding
sufentanil administration by SPI monitoring effects the administered amount of intraoperative
and postoperative opioid, immediate postoperative pain in the postanesthesia care unit (PACU)
and the quality of postoperative recovery in patients with a combination of general and
regional anesthesia.
This prospective, randomized controlled trial aims to investigate whether guiding sufentanil
administration by SPI monitoring - compared to routine care - reduces intraoperative
sufentanil consumption in patients having trauma and orthopaedic surgery with a combination
of general and regional anesthesia. The hypothesis tested in the present study is that in
patients having trauma and orthopaedic surgery with a combination of general and regional
anesthesia guiding sufentanil administration of sufentanil guided by SPI monitoring reduces
intraoperative sufentanil consumption compared to routine care.