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Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

Administration of morphine as boluses or via a patient controlled analgesic device (PCA) has been the standard practice for donors after nephrectomy.

However, administration of morphine is far from being ideal analgesic as it does not provide optimal dynamic pain relief after major surgery, consistently demonstrate little effect on surgical stress response and organ dysfunction with high incidences of postoperative nausea/vomiting, respiratory depression and sedation. Several studies demonstrated perioperative intravenous lignocaine infusion can improve post-operative pain scores and morphine consumption in abdominal surgery.

The aim of this study is to identify the effectiveness of intra-operative lignocaine infusion in lowering postoperative pain and reduce postoperative morphine consumption in patients who undergo laparoscopic donor nephrectomy.


Clinical Trial Description

Hypothesis:

Patients who receive intravenous lignocaine infusion as a multimodal analgesic technique will require less morphine postoperatively with lower pain scores on the visual analogue scale (VAS).

Methodology The main clinical study is a randomized double blinded control trial that will start after ethics approval from UMREC and registration at Clinical Trial Registry. All adults undergoing elective laparoscopic donor nephrectomy will be recruited in this double-blinded randomised controlled trial. After obtaining their informed consent, patients will be shown the visual analogue score (VAS) as the post-operative pain assessment and their baseline pain scores obtained. Instructions are also given for patient controlled analgesic (PCA) device using morphine for post-operative pain control.

Randomisation and blinding:

There will be two groups - lignocaine and control. Randomization will be based on a computer generated random number and sealed in opaque envelopes. On the day of surgery, one of the investigators who must not be involved in the care of the case, opens the envelope to follow the allocated group number and prepare either lignocaine or normal saline solutions. Both syringes are labelled with the assigned number only and handed to the attending anaesthesiologist in charge of the surgery. The patient as well as the attending anaesthetic team is blinded to the allocated group. Similarly, post-operative observers who collect the required data will be blinded.

Sample size:

Sample size is calculated based on a pilot study. A power analysis revealed that 15 patients in each group is required to detect a difference of 6 mg between the morphine consumption of the two groups for a power of 80% and and a level of statistical significance at 5%. To provide adequate power for additional analysis, we planned to enrol 20 patients in each group with further allowance for 10% drop out for the per protocol analysis.

Conduct of anaesthesia All patients are administered general anaesthesia with 2mcg/kg of fentanyl, 2-3mg/kg of propofol and 0.6mg/kg of rocuronium for induction, intubated and maintained with desflurane in oxygen-air mixture to MAC of 1.0-1.3. Haemodynamic parameters are measured with standard monitoring and kept within 10% of baseline. All management of ventilation, temperature control and fluids will be done according to institutional protocol for renal transplant.

Study drug protocol 2 groups - Control OR Lignocaine group. Lignocaine group: After induction, securing airway and intravenous lines, patients are turned lateral into the lateral decubitus nephrectomy position. Once the correct position is achieved and haemodynamic status is stable, a slow bolus of 1.5mg/kg of 1% lignocaine is given over 15 min before the start of surgery, followed by an infusion at 1.5mg/kg/hr for the lignocaine group. If the patient's BMI is >30, the ideal body weight (IBW) is used to calculate the bolus and infusion dose at a maximal rate of 100mg/hr for a wide margin of safety.

Control group: An equivalent volume of normal saline is given.

Multimodal analgesia All patients will receive

- 0.05-0.1 mg/kg of intravenous morphine intra-operatively.

- One gram of intravenous paracetamol and 40mg of intravenous parecoxib (30min before end of surgery) unless contraindicated.

- Anti-emetics - dexamethasone 4mg and IV ondansetron 4mg

- 20-30 mls of plain bupivacaine 0.5% (not exceeding 2mg/kg) will be infiltrated subcutaneously

In the recovery room, the PCA device is set to deliver 1mg bolus of morphine without a baseline infusion, lockout period of 5 min and maximum of 30mg morphine in 4 hours.

- The time to first PCA use is noted.

- Pain scores using VAS will be recorded at 30 min, 1 hour, 6 hours, 12 hours and 24 hours post-operatively.

- Other symptoms such as sedation, nausea, vomiting, light headedness, perioral numbness, and pruritus are reported if it occurs during the first postoperative day.

In the ward, oral paracetamol 1g 6hourly and oral celecoxib 200mg 12hourly will be prescribed for administration in the ward. Total IV morphine consumption at the end of the 24 hours are recorded.

Demographic data, medical history, physical examination, pre- and postoperative laboratory results for renal function (eGFR and creatinine clearance) will be collected prospectively. All post-operative pain scores/ satisfaction scores/ complications will be reviewed and recorded by a blinded observer.

4 blood samples will be taken from every recruited patient - baseline pre-op, before nephrectomy, after nephrectomy and 24 hours post-op. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04052867
Study type Interventional
Source University of Malaya
Contact Pui San Loh, MBBS, MMed
Phone 012-2268285
Email lohps@ummc.edu.my
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 17, 2019
Completion date July 31, 2021

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