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Continuous Local Anesthetic and Steroid Infusion in Abdominal Surgery

Efficacy of the Intralesional Infusion of Local Anesthetic and Steroids After Major Abdominal Surgery: a Randomized Double Blind Phase III Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02002663
Acronym
GR-CWI
Enrollment
120
Registered
2013-12-06
Start date
2013-08-31
Completion date
2016-09-30
Last updated
2017-03-03

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Abdominal Pain

Brief summary

The aim of the study is the identification, comparing continuous infusion of local anesthetics and steroids intralesionally with the current gold standard therapy (PCA), of the effective dose of local anesthetics and steroids within 7 days following abdominal surgery in order to halve the consumption of opioids and give the best pain control with a lower incidence of side effects and persistent chronic pain (at 1 and 3 months) We also plan to measure the peripheral inflammation and oxidative stress by analyzing the pro-inflammatory cytokines and anti-inflammatory properties. Another objective is to investigate the combined effect of polymorphisms of genes related to pain sensitivity, and the correlation with the development of the inflammatory response and the incidence of chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP), which will be considered to validate the genotype-phenotype correlations. The intralesional catheter will be placed within the operating field by the surgeon at the end of the procedure. * first postoperative 24 hours: ropivacaine 0.2%-methylprednisolone 1 mg/kg/die infusion (10ml/h) in the wound. Rescue dose with morphine via intravenous PCA (0.5 mg/ml, bolus 1 mg, lock-out 5 min, max 20 mg in 4 hours) * from 24 hs to 48 hs: ropivacaine 0.2%-methylprednisolone 1 mg/kg/die infusion (10ml/h) or saline 0.9% 10 ml/h in the wound. Rescue dose with morphine via intravenous PCA (0.5 mg/ml, bolus 1 mg, lock-out 5 min, max 20 mg in 4 hours) . from 48 hs to 7th day: ropivacaine 0.2% or saline 0.9% via patient controlled intralesional analgesia (PCIA) (2 mg/ml, bolus 20 mg, lock-out 60 min, max 80 mg in 4 hours). Rescue dose Tramadol 100 mg. The first assessment will be by the anesthetist pre-operatively, to verify the patient eligibility. All patients will be evaluated at the end of surgery (T0) and after 3-6-12-24-36-48 hours after surgery. Further evaluations are scheduled every 24 hours until the seventh postoperative day. At each assessment will be recorded: Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) at rest, NRS at movement (NRSm) - defined as pain at deep inspiration and cough - ; blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, nausea (PONV scale), need of rescue analgesics and presence of any complications. On the 7th postoperative day, the patient will be reassessed by both pain clinicians and surgeon; the surgeon will remove the catheter. At 1 month and 3 months after surgery, the patient will be evaluated through phone interview to investigate pain persistence. Inflammatory response analysis will be performed on the first 15 patients in each group (for a total of 30 patients). Before awakening of the patient the surgeon will insert a microdialysis catheter in the fat adjacent to the surgical wound with sterile technique. The microdialysed liquid will be collected in dedicated tubes directly in the infusion pump. The sample of the first hour will be discarded to avoid that microtrauma of catheter positioning influences the study. Sampling will be performed every 6 hours the first day, and every 12 hours in the second and third day. Serum samples will be collected to compare systemic with regional samples. All samples will be stored at -80 ° C until sampling. Concentrations quantification of different cytokines will be analyzed by ELISA Parma Unit will analyze VNTR (variable number of tandem repeats) polymorphism of the ADRB2 gene, directly related to the risk of chronic persistent postoperative pain development; Pavia Unit will take care of genotyping of polymorphic sites in the following genes: OPRM1 (mu-opioid receptor 1), COMT (catecholamine O-methyl transferase), UGT2B7 (UDP-glucuronyl transferase), IL1Ra (interleukin 1receptor alpha). From the blood samples will be extracted DNA and RNA using standard procedures. RNA will be retained for possible future studies on the expression of genes of interest. The DNA will be used instead for the study of genetic polymorphisms. In this study the formation of free radicals, particularly superoxide will be assessed together with lipid peroxidation in both serum and urine, The 8- deoxyguanosine and Poly-ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP), the presence of nitrotyrosine. Blood samples and urine tests will be carried out before the start of surgery , before the bolus of morphine and local anesthetic , at 24 h after the end of the intervention and 48 h after end of the intervention

Interventions

PCA morphine 0.5 mg/ml bolus 1 mg LO 5 min max 20 mg in 4 hs

DRUGMethylprednisolone 1mg/kg
DRUGsaline 0.9%

Sponsors

Fondazione IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo di Pavia
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Male and females 18-85 years old scheduled to use PCA with morphine for postoperative pain control * HIV-negative * Classification American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) I: without systemic disease * Classification ASA II or III (moderate systemic disease or severe systemic disease that limits activity without disability) * Scheduled for major abdominal and urologic surgery (no emergency surgery)

Exclusion criteria

* regular use of opioid analgesics; * History of abuse of drugs and / or alcohol; * Postoperative hospitalization in intensive care with sedation and / or mechanical ventilation; * severe renal impairment (creatinine\> 2 g / dl, creatinine clearance \<30 ml / h) and / or hepatic impairment (cholinesterase \<2000 IU); * Cardiac disorders (arrhythmias, heart failure); * Neurological disorders (epilepsy); * Cognitive disorders, mental retardation, psychiatric disorders; * Changes in the normal coagulation or coagulopathy (INR\> 2, PTT\> 44 sec); * Platelet count less than 100.000/mm3; * BMI\> 30; * Allergy to study drugs. * diabetes type I/II

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
total morphine consumption7 days after surgery

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
pain values7 daysnumber of patients presenting NRS values lower than 4 both at rest and at movement
number of patients presenting methylprednisolone side effectsup to 7 dayswound healing retardation or other side effects which could be related to steroid wound infusion
number of patients presenting morphine or ropivacaine side effectsup to 7 daysincidence of PONV, pruritus and sedation; side effects related to local anesthetic's systemic absorption
persistent pain at 1 and 3 months3 monthsnumber of participants developing pain at 1 and 3 months after surgery

Countries

Italy

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 4, 2026