Pain, Postoperative Clinical Trial
Official title:
Liposomal Bupivacaine Versus Bupivacaine for Postoperative Analgesia Following Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery.
The aims of the study are to compare the effectiveness and postoperative outcomes of liposomal bupivacaine vs plain bupivacaine following video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. The investigators' hypothesis is that liposomal bupivacaine will decrease the postoperative pain and will be associated with more favorable postoperative outcomes when compared to plain bupivacaine following video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery.
Pain management remains a primary concern for many patients following thoracic surgery.
Suboptimal analgesia leads to numerous postoperative complications like reduced cardiac,
respiratory and gastrointestinal functions, more septic and thromboembolic complications,
increased incidence of developing chronic pain states, increased mortality in high-risk
patients with multiple comorbidities, and many others.
Opioids have a distinct role in the postoperative analgesia. Although opioids have
positively affected surgery for decades, they are associated with a number of potentially
severe side effects including prolonged ileus, nausea, vomiting, central nervous system and
respiratory depression, development of hyperalgesia, and the risk of dependency and abuse.
These adverse effects increase the overall cost of treatment for these patients and can
potentially result in longer hospital stays.
Local infiltration and regional blocks of local anesthetics are increasingly utilized during
thoracic surgery procedures as an alternative to epidural analgesia. Bupivacaine is widely
used for intercostal nerve blocks but its utility is limited by its short duration of action
(<6 hours). Perineural catheters for continuous infusion of bupivacaine have been used to
overcome this limitation but the need of expensive pumps and the risk of significant
complications associated with the use of catheters (i.e. infection, septicemia,
intravascular migration etc) has limited its use.
Encapsulation of local anesthetics into liposomes is a novel method which extends drug
delivery. The use of multivesicular liposomes has been shown to provide a slow and steady
release of local anesthetics for several days after nonvascular administration. Liposomal
bupivacaine is a novel formulary of bupivacaine, is designed for a single-dose local
infiltration into the surgical site and produces postsurgical analgesia for up to 72-96
hours.
Liposomal bupivacaine is not currently licensed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for
peripheral nerve block but has been approved for single-dose infiltration into the surgical
site. However, it has been shown in two retrospective studies of patients with open
thoracotomies for lung, pleural or mediastinal pathologies that liposomal bupivacaine
intercostal nerve blockade is associated with increased pain control and decreased length of
hospital stay compared to thoracic epidural analgesia.
This is a single-blind randomized prospective research study comparing pain control and
postoperative outcomes following intercostal neural blockade with liposomal bupivacaine
versus plain bupivacaine plus epinephrine during video-assisted thoracoscopic surgical
procedures. Eligible patients would be all patients aged older than 18 years who undergo a
video-assisted thoracoscopic lung resection at Massachusetts General Hospital. Pregnant
women, prisoners, emergent cases, patients under 18 years, and patients with chronic pain,
documented alcohol or drug abuse and allergies to bupivacaine will be excluded from this
study.
Primary end point will be self-reported pain score on a visual analog scale from 0 to 10 at
postoperative day #1. By utilizing a mean difference in self-reported pain scores of 1 point
with a standard deviation of 2.5 points, a sample size of 100 patients per group would be
needed for a power (beta) of 0.8 and probability level (alpha) of 0.05. All patients would
be enrolled at Massachusetts General Hospital.
The video-assisted thoracoscopic surgeries and intercostal nerve blockade with plain
bupivacaine plus epinephrine or liposomal bupivacaine will be performed by all thoracic
surgeons at Massachusetts General Hospital. In the operating room after induction of general
anesthesia patients will be positioned in a lateral decubitus position, prepared and draped
in a sterile fashion. Under thoracoscopic guidance, a posterior intercostal nerve block will
be performed with liposomal bupivacaine (13.3 mg/ml) or 0.5% bupivacaine with 1%
epinephrine. In the liposomal bupivacaine group, a total dose of 266 mg of liposomal
bupivacaine (one 20 ml vial of 13.3 mg/ml) per patient will be diluted to a total volume of
40 ml using 20 ml normal saline. In the bupivacaine group 20 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine with 1%
epinephrine will be diluted to a total volume of 40 ml using 20 ml normal saline. From those
40 ml, 30 ml will be used for the posterior intercostal nerve block and 10 ml will be
injected locally into the surgical wounds.
If immediate postoperative pain scores were rated 4/10 or greater, an intravenous patient
controlled analgesia device will be provided with hydromorphone 0.2 mg every 10 minutes or
nonopioid analgesics as needed. No narcotics will be given in the spinal space. Oral
metoclopramide or ondansetron will be given as needed to combat the side effects of the
narcotics.
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