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Clinical Trial Summary

Patients will be randomized the day of surgery upon presentation to the operating room to either a treatment group (PECSII/SAP blocks with bupivacaine HCl plus liposomal bupivacaine) or a control group (PECSII/SAP blocks with bupivacaine HCl plus preservative free normal saline) using secure web-based randomization. Assignments will be based on computer-generated code. Clinicians will not be blinded to the intervention, but all outcomes will be assessed by research personnel who are blinded to the group assignment.


Clinical Trial Description

Anesthetic care will be performed in a usual manner in Cleveland Clinic thoracic surgical patients. This includes the use of standard ASA monitors and may include the use of arterial or central venous pressure monitoring, trans-esophageal echocardiography, and lung isolation using a bronchial blocker or a double lumen endotracheal tube. Medication administration for induction and maintenance of anesthesia will also be consistent with usual care and will include intravenous opioids such as fentanyl and hydromorphone. Intravenous lidocaine boluses will not be administered upon induction of anesthesia. Pressure control ventilation will be utilized with a tidal volume not exceeding 6-10 ml/kg ideal body weight during two-lung ventilation and 5-7 ml/kg ideal body weight during one-lung ventilation. A conservative fluid management strategy will be employed in all cases. Patients not extubated at the end of the procedure will be sedated with propofol. Surgical procedures will be performed in their usual manner. The anatomic basis for chest wall analgesia has been described in detail previously. The investigators describe the conduct of the blocks as used for VATS procedures at the investigator's institution. The patients randomized to the treatment group will all receive PECSII and serratus blocks containing bupivacaine HCl and liposomal bupivacaine. The control group will receive PECSII and serratus blocks with bupivacaine HCl adjusted to a similar volume. The PECS/serratus blocks will be performed with the patient under the general anesthesia and before incision. If this is not possible due to surgical urgency, the block will be placed at end of surgery. Patients will be positioned supine, and prepped and draped in a sterile fashion. An ultrasound probe will be placed just below the clavicle in the mid-clavicular line. For the PECS II block, the probe will be scanned inferiorly and laterally until the plane between the pectoralis minor and serratus muscle is identified. The serratus muscle can be clearly seen coursing over the ribs, while the intercostal muscles are seen in the interspaces between the ribs. Once the plane is identified the needle is again advanced in an "in-plane" fashion. Once the needle location is confirmed by normal saline hydro-dissection, a 15-20 cc of local anesthetic solution is administered into the space. With the patient in a supine position, a back roll will be placed under the operative side to achieve a slightly lateral tilt. The arm is abducted to expose the costal margin. The positioning and prepping is done prior to the PECS block to avoid repositioning. The ultrasound probe is scanned laterally from the pectoralis to the axillary region at approximately the level of the 5th rib. The plane between the serratus muscle and the latissimus dorsi muscle is identified and the needle advanced in an "in-plane" fashion until the tip is between the muscles (superficial SAP block). A small bolus of 0.5 cc of normal saline is used for hydro-dissection of the tissue planes to confirm that the needle is not intramuscular. The needle is then aspirated every 5 cc as 40 cc of local anesthetic solution is deposited into the plane. As these are field blocks, adequate volume of infiltration is important in achieving optimal analgesia. The LA used for the blocks will be a 0.5% bupivacaine HCL, not to exceed 2.5mg/kg or up to 150mg. The LA solution can be diluted with preservative free normal saline for smaller patients to allow for appropriate volume of injection. Typically the block has duration of action of less than 12 hours after infiltration.34 Treatment patients will also be given liposomal bupivacaine (EXPAREL, Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. San Diego, CA) in a dose of 266 mg in 20 ml can be safely combined with bupivacaine HCL at a ratio not exceeding 2:1, but cannot be combined with other local anesthetics due to the concern of rapid release of encapsulated bupivacaine and subsequent local anesthetic toxicity.35 Control patients will have preservative free normal saline mixed with 0.5% bupivacaine HCL and all patients will have a total block solution volume of 60 ml. Liposomal bupivacaine dosing is not weight based and the full 266-mg bottle can be administered to adult thoracic patients. A maximum of 150mg bupivacaine HCl can be mixed with Exparel. This equates to one 30-mL bottle of 0.5% bupivacaine HCl or two (2) bottles of 0.25% bupivacaine HCl. If a higher volume of the LA is needed a 10 ml of normal saline can be added to the mixture of bupivacaine HCL and liposomal bupivacaine. Thus patients ≥60 kg will receive 150 mg of bupivacaine HCL, while patients weighing <60 kg need to have the bupivacaine dose calculated but can still receive full 20 ml of Exparel. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03731221
Study type Interventional
Source The Cleveland Clinic
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase Early Phase 1
Start date November 1, 2018
Completion date December 31, 2024

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