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Effects of Catheter Location on Postoperative Analgesia for Continuous Adductor Canal and Popliteal-Sciatic Nerve Blocks

Effects of Catheter Location on Postoperative Analgesia for Continuous Adductor Canal and Popliteal-Sciatic Nerve Blocks

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02523235
Enrollment
117
Registered
2015-08-14
Start date
2015-08-31
Completion date
2018-03-31
Last updated
2019-09-03

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

Conditions

Post-surgical Pain, Total Knee Arthroplasty, Foot/Ankle Surgery, Catheterization for Postop Analgesia

Keywords

moderate pain, severe pain, surgery, postop analgesia, TKA, adductor catheter, poplital catheter, foot/ankle surgery

Brief summary

Currently, continuous adductor canal and popliteal-sciatic nerve blocks are used commonly for lower extremity post-operative pain control, specifically for total knee arthroplasty and foot/ankle surgery, respectively. A perineural catheter used to infuse local anesthetic for postoperative analgesia may be placed at various locations along the target nerves. Investigations of single-injection peripheral nerve blocks suggest that the onset of the block might be faster with one location over the other; but, the success rates are equivalent. However, remaining unknown is whether there is an optimal location to place a perineural catheter as part of a continuous peripheral nerve block.

Detailed description

This will be a single-center (UCSD), randomized, controlled investigation. Enrollment. Consenting adults undergoing knee arthroplasty or foot/ankle surgery with a planned adductor canal or popliteal perineural catheter, respectively, will be offered enrollment. Study inclusion will be proposed to eligible patients prior to surgery. If a patient desires study participation, written, informed consent will be obtained using a current UCSD IRB-approved ICF. Selection for inclusion will not be based on gender, race, or socioeconomic status. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are listed in section #10 below. Following written, informed consent, The Investigators will record baseline anthropomorphic information (age, sex, height, and weight) that is already provided by all patients having surgery. All subjects will have a peripheral intravenous (IV) catheter inserted, standard noninvasive monitors applied, supplemental oxygen administered via a nasal cannula or face mask, and positioned supine (adductor canal) or prone (popliteal-sciatic). Midazolam and fentanyl (IV) will be titrated for patient comfort, while ensuring that patients remain responsive to verbal cues. The area that will be subsequently covered by the catheter dressing will be clipped of hair, if necessary. The ultrasound will be placed to visualize the short axis (cross-section) of the adductor canal or popliteal regional at both proximal and distal locations. If both sites are acceptable for catheter insertion, the subject will be randomized using a computer-generated list (blocks of 8) to one of two treatment groups in a 1:1 ratio using sealed, opaque, consecutively numbered envelopes stratified by catheter type (adductor canal vs. popliteal-sciatic): (1) proximal vs (2) distal insertion. Catheter insertion. Catheter insertion will adhere to current UCSD standard-of-care. The only difference for subjects participating in the study (vs those not participating) will be that the specific catheter insertion location-both currently standard-of-care and used daily at UCSD because of clinical equipoise-will be determined randomly, instead of the physician simply choosing him/herself. All catheters will be placed by a regional anesthesia fellow or resident under the direct supervision and guidance of a regional anesthesia attending (or by the attending him/herself). All catheters will be placed using standard UCSD perineural catheter techniques, nerve in short-axis, ultrasound-guidance. The area of insertion will be cleaned with chlorhexidine gluconate and isopropyl alcohol (ChloraPrep One-Step, Medi-Flex Hospital Products, Inc., Overland Park, KS, USA), and a clear, sterile, fenestrated drape applied. The ultrasound probe will be placed to visualize the short-axis (cross-section) of the target nerve(s). A skin wheal will be raised at the catheter-placement needle's anticipated point of entry (proximal or distal location). A 17 gauge needle (FlexTip, Teleflex Medical, Triangle Research Park, NC, USA) will be used to place all perineural catheters. The catheter-placement needle will be inserted through the skin wheal, advanced in-plane beneath the US transducer and directed to the target nerve as described below: Adductor canal. Proximal: Inserted as described previously: …we performed an ultrasound survey at the medial part of the thigh, halfway between the superior anterior iliac spine and the \[superior border of the\] patella. In a short axis view, we identified the femoral artery underneath the sartorius muscle, with the vein just inferior and the saphenous nerve just lateral to the artery. Distal: Inserted as described previously: The transducer was initially placed on the medial aspect of the distal third of the thigh to identify the femoral artery immediately deep to the sartorius muscle. The transducer was then moved caudally along the long axis of the thigh until the femoral artery was seen diving deep and moving away from the anterior muscle plane (sartorius and vastus medialis muscles), toward the posterior aspect of the thigh where it becomes the popliteal artery. This area was identified as the adductor hiatus, and the block location was selected 2 to 3 cm proximally to this area, in the distal adductor canal. Saline (10 mL) will be administered via the needle to dilate the space where the catheter is to be inserted. A flexible non-stimulating perineural catheter (FlexTip, Arrow International, Reading, PA, USA) will be inserted 3-5 cm past the needle tip; and the needle withdrawn over the catheter. A 30 mL bolus of lidocaine 2% with 1:400,000 of epinephrine will then be administered though the catheter. A successful catheter insertion will be defined as decreased sensation to cold within the distribution of the saphenous nerve. Popliteal-sciatic. Using an ultrasound, the bifurcation of the sciatic nerve will be identified in short axis and marked at a point immediately distal at which point the two main branches of the sciatic nerve are separate and a hypoechoic area can be viewed between the two. This level will be marked on the skin. Proximal: The needle will be inserted to intersect the sciatic nerve 6-7 cm proximal to the mark on the skin (therefore, proximal to the sciatic bifurcation) and injection with saline used to ensure subepimyseal spread. Distal: The needle tip will be inserted into the hypoechoic area between the two branches of the sciatic nerve immediately distal to the sciatic nerve bifurcation between the paraneurium and epineurium (the subparaneural space/compartment). As described previously: An adequate position was defined as the presence of circular expansion of the paraneural sheath... Once circular expansion was obtained, we injected. During the injection process, the Tuohy needle was kept stationary and care was taken to ensure that neural swelling did not occur. The latter was defined as an increase in the cross-sectional surface of the nerve. If neural swelling was detected by US, the needle was carefully withdrawn before resuming the injection. A 40 mL bolus of normal saline or lidocaine 2% with 1:400,000 of epinephrine will then be given though the needle. A flexible non-stimulating perineural catheter (FlexTip, Arrow International, Reading, PA, USA) will be inserted 3-5 cm past the needle tip; and the needle withdrawn over the catheter. If saline was administered pre-operatively, then the 40 mL of lidocaine 2% with 1:400,000 of epinephrine will be administered through the catheter following surgery. A successful catheter insertion will be defined as decrease in cutaneous sensation to cold on the plantar aspect of the foot. Intraop: Patients may receive a general and/or neuraxial anesthetic that would be determined by the intraoperative anesthesia provider. Additional boluses of 10 mL 2% lidocaine with epinephrine may be given, if needed, via the perineural catheter. Perineural infusion: An infusion pump will be attached to each subject's perineural catheter. The pump will provide ropivacaine 0.2% at 8 mL/h (adductor) or 6 mL/h (popliteal) basal rate infusion and a 4 mL patient-controlled bolus with a 30 minute lockout (all standard at UCSD). Data collection: All data collection will be through standard UCSD nursing/therapy EPIC notes (adductor canal) or postoperative phone calls (popliteal) for the day following surgery. Primary endpoint: The primary endpoint will be the average pain on post operative day 1 following surgery as measured on a numeric rating scale (0-10, 0=no pain, 10=worst imaginable pain) during the time periods of 08:00-24:00 (adductor) or the two hours preceding the data-collection phone call (popliteal). Secondary endpoints: Popliteal subjects will be called the day following surgery to collect information regarding surgical pain (Numeric Rating Scale of 0 to 10, with 0 being no pain and 10 being the worst pain ever experienced), analgesic use (oral, IV, and infusion boluses), infusion side effects, and distance ambulated (adductor catheters only). Popliteal subjects will be called one week (+/- 1 day) following surgery to inquire about possible block-related complications. Sample size estimates: Adductor canal. The primary analysis will utilize the Wilcoxon Rank Sum test. The figure below shows the estimated density of post-op day 1 pain scores following Proximal insertion (mean = 4.12, SD = 1.74) based on published data.10 To simulate power, The Investigators used the truncated Gaussian distribution with range 0 to 10; SD=1.74; Proximal group mean = 4.12; and Distal group means = 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5, 7, 6.5, and 8. Under these assumptions and two-sided a = 5%, The Investigators simulated 10,000 trials with sample size of 25 per group with a primary end point measurement. The Investigators found the simulated power to be as plotted below \[clinicaltrials.gov does not support figures at this location\]. So The Investigators have 80% power to detect group differences in pain as small as about 1.52. Popliteal-sciatic. Using an expected NRS mean=2.6 and SD=2.1 of average pain on postoperative day 1 (based on unpublished data from IRB study #101282), approximately 31 subjects in each treatment arm with a primary end point measurement will be required to detect a difference between treatment group means of 1.5. This is with a 2-sided alpha=0.05, beta=0.2, and power=0.8 (ClinCalc.com accessed June 28, 2015). The Investigators will employ a t-test for parametric data and Wilcoxon Rank Sum test for non-parametric data. With the two locations combined, The Investigators will need 112 subjects with a primary end point measurement; and, The Investigators will enroll up to 150 subjects to account for drop-outs and subjects without a primary end point measurement. \*\* Of great importance: the popliteal-sciatic and adductor canal data will be analyzed and reported completely separately--they will NOT be combined at any time.

Interventions

Perineural ropivacaine 0.2% at 8 mL/h (adductor) or 6 mL/h (popliteal) basal rate infusion and a 4 mL patient-controlled bolus with a 30 minute lockout

Sponsors

University of California, San Diego
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

1. undergoing surgery with an adductor canal or popliteal-sciatic perineural catheter for postoperative analgesia following primary tri-compartment knee arthroplasty or foot/ankle surgery; 2. anticipated to have at least moderate pain following surgery \[NRS\>3\]; and, 3. age 18 years or older.

Exclusion criteria

1. pregnancy (a urine pregnancy test is standard at UCSD for female patients prior to menopause who are sexually active with the opposite sex within the previous year); 2. inability to communicate with the investigators and hospital staff; 3. clinical neuropathy in the surgical extremity; 4. chronic high-dose opioid use (defined as daily use for more than 4 weeks prior to surgery of at least the equivalent of 20 mg oxycodone); 5. BMI \> 40 kg/m2; 6. allergy to study medications (lidocaine, ropivicaine); 7. known renal insufficiency; or, 8. incarceration.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pain (Average): Numeric Rating Scale for PainAverage for the day after surgery 08:00-24:00 (adductor) and the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal)Numeric Rating Scale for Pain (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Number of Participants That Had Fluid Leakage Reported at Catheter Site.From surgery through the day after surgeryIf subjects detected leakage at the catheter site, the response was recorded as yes; and, if subjects did not detect leakage at the catheter site, the response was recorded as no.
Toe/Foot Numbness (Insensate) :0-10 ScaleAverage for the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal only)0-10 scale, 0=no numbness and 10=completely insensate
Total Local Anesthetic Infused (Adductor Only) : mLThe day following surgery recorded during mid-day roundsmL
Pain During Afternoon Physical Therapy SessionAverage during physical therapy in the afternoon following surgeryPain during afternoon physical therapy session as measured with the Numeric Rating Scale (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)
Analgesic Use: IV Morphine EquivalentsAverage for Intraoperative, in the recovery room, after the recovery room until 08:00 day after surgery, and 08:00-24:00 day after surgeryIV morphine equivalents
Ambulation: Distance in MetersAverage for morning and afternoon following surgerydistance in meters
Pain (Worst) :Numeric Rating Scale for PainAverage for the day after surgery 08:00-24:00 (adductor) and the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal)Numeric Rating Scale for Pain (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Pre-assignment details

3 subjects were enrolled (signed ICF), but were not included in the results: (1) two found to have inferior visualization of the distal location and therefore excluded before randomization per protocol and (2) one subject randomized to the proximal location experienced an intraoperative medical complication unrelated to the study and was withdrawn

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Proximal Catheter Insertion
Adductor canal catheters: we performed an ultrasound survey at the medial part of the thigh, halfway between the superior anterior iliac spine and the \[superior border of the\] patella. In a short axis view, we identified the femoral artery underneath the sartorius muscle, with the vein just inferior and the saphenous nerve just lateral to the artery Popliteal catheters: Using an ultrasound, the bifurcation of the sciatic nerve will be identified in short axis and marked at a point immediately distal at which point the two main branches of the sciatic nerve are separate and a hypoechoic area can be viewed between the two. The needle will be inserted to intersect the sciatic nerve 6-7 cm proximal to the mark on the skin (therefore, proximal to the sciatic bifurcation) and injection with saline used to ensure subepimyseal spread. ropivacaine 0.2%: Perineural ropivacaine 0.2% at 8 mL/h (adductor) or 6 mL/h (popliteal) basal rate infusion and a 4 mL patient-controlled bolus with a 30
56
Distal Catheter Insertion
Adductor canal catheters: Inserted as described by Manickam et al. 2009 Popliteal catheters: Using an ultrasound, the bifurcation of the sciatic nerve will be identified in short axis and marked at a point immediately distal at which point the two main branches of the sciatic nerve are separate and a hypoechoic area can be viewed between the two. This level will be marked on the skin. The needle tip will be inserted into the hypoechoic area between the two branches of the sciatic nerve immediately distal to the sciatic nerve bifurcation between the paraneurium and epineurium (the subparaneural space/compartment). As described by Tran et al, An adequate position was defined as the presence of circular expansion of the paraneural sheath... Once circular expansion was obtained, we injected. ropivacaine 0.2%: Perineural ropivacaine 0.2% at 8 mL/h (adductor) or 6 mL/h (popliteal) basal rate infusion and a 4 mL patient-controlled bolus with a 30 minute lockout
58
Total114

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicProximal Catheter InsertionDistal Catheter InsertionTotal
Age, Continuous
Age (years)
69 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 10
69 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 9
69 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 10
Race and Ethnicity Not Collected0 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
25 Participants35 Participants60 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
31 Participants23 Participants54 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
0 / 560 / 58
other
Total, other adverse events
0 / 560 / 58
serious
Total, serious adverse events
0 / 560 / 58

Outcome results

Primary

Pain (Average): Numeric Rating Scale for Pain

Numeric Rating Scale for Pain (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)

Time frame: Average for the day after surgery 08:00-24:00 (adductor) and the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal)

Population: Adductor canal subjects

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionPain (Average): Numeric Rating Scale for Pain0.5 score on a scale
Distal Catheter InsertionPain (Average): Numeric Rating Scale for Pain3.0 score on a scale
Secondary

Ambulation: Distance in Meters

distance in meters

Time frame: Average for morning and afternoon following surgery

Population: adductor canal afternoon after surgery

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionAmbulation: Distance in Meters150 meters
Distal Catheter InsertionAmbulation: Distance in Meters170 meters
Secondary

Analgesic Use: IV Morphine Equivalents

IV morphine equivalents

Time frame: Average for Intraoperative, in the recovery room, after the recovery room until 08:00 day after surgery, and 08:00-24:00 day after surgery

Population: adductor canal subjects, POD 1 8:00 am through 12 pm

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionAnalgesic Use: IV Morphine Equivalents6.7 mg
Distal Catheter InsertionAnalgesic Use: IV Morphine Equivalents6.7 mg
Secondary

Number of Participants That Had Fluid Leakage Reported at Catheter Site.

If subjects detected leakage at the catheter site, the response was recorded as yes; and, if subjects did not detect leakage at the catheter site, the response was recorded as no.

Time frame: From surgery through the day after surgery

Population: adductor canal subjects

ArmMeasureValue (COUNT_OF_PARTICIPANTS)
Proximal Catheter InsertionNumber of Participants That Had Fluid Leakage Reported at Catheter Site.3 Participants
Distal Catheter InsertionNumber of Participants That Had Fluid Leakage Reported at Catheter Site.1 Participants
Secondary

Pain During Afternoon Physical Therapy Session

Pain during afternoon physical therapy session as measured with the Numeric Rating Scale (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)

Time frame: Average during physical therapy in the afternoon following surgery

Population: adductor canal afternoon therapy

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionPain During Afternoon Physical Therapy Session3.0 score on a scale
Distal Catheter InsertionPain During Afternoon Physical Therapy Session3.0 score on a scale
Secondary

Pain (Worst) :Numeric Rating Scale for Pain

Numeric Rating Scale for Pain (0-10; 0=no pain and 10=worst imaginable pain)

Time frame: Average for the day after surgery 08:00-24:00 (adductor) and the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal)

Population: Adductor canal subjects

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionPain (Worst) :Numeric Rating Scale for Pain4.0 score on a scale
Distal Catheter InsertionPain (Worst) :Numeric Rating Scale for Pain5.0 score on a scale
Secondary

Toe/Foot Numbness (Insensate) :0-10 Scale

0-10 scale, 0=no numbness and 10=completely insensate

Time frame: Average for the morning after surgery for 2 hours before phone call made between 10:00-noon (popliteal only)

Population: popliteal-sciatic subjects

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionToe/Foot Numbness (Insensate) :0-10 Scale7.0 score on a scale
Distal Catheter InsertionToe/Foot Numbness (Insensate) :0-10 Scale7.0 score on a scale
Secondary

Total Local Anesthetic Infused (Adductor Only) : mL

mL

Time frame: The day following surgery recorded during mid-day rounds

Population: adductor volume bolus doses volume (excluding basal infusion)

ArmMeasureValue (MEDIAN)
Proximal Catheter InsertionTotal Local Anesthetic Infused (Adductor Only) : mL32 mL
Distal Catheter InsertionTotal Local Anesthetic Infused (Adductor Only) : mL40 mL

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