Skip to content

Surgical Versus Anaesthetic Placement of Rectus Sheath Catheters

Surgical Placement Versus Anaesthetic Placement of Rectus Sheath Catheter for Pain Relief Following Major Abdominal Surgery (SPARC). A Single Centre Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03137732
Acronym
SPARC
Enrollment
50
Registered
2017-05-03
Start date
2017-06-30
Completion date
2018-06-30
Last updated
2017-05-03

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

Conditions

Pain, Postoperative, Wound; Abdomen, Incision

Brief summary

This is a single centred randomized controlled trial comparing surgeon versus anaesthetist inserted rectus sheath catheters for management of analgesia post major abdominal surgery.

Detailed description

Background and study aims Pain management post laparotomy (abdominal surgery) can be difficult and in our trust we are increasingly using rectus sheath catheters (RSCs).This is achieved by placing catheters, done by either by the surgeon or anaesthetist into the potential space between the rectus muscle and the posterior rectus sheath. Two catheters are placed, one on either side of the mid-line wound. Local anaesthetic is then infused through the catheters for up to 3 days post-operatively. This provides analgesia to the central abdominal wall in the region of the T7-T11 dermatomes. It only provides analgesia for somatic pain, not visceral pain and hence needs to be used in addition to a multi-modal analgesic regime usually including a patient controlled analgesia device (PCA) containing either morphine or oxycodone. Advantages of a RSC infusion over an epidural include that it can be used in patients with coagulopathy or systemic infection and can be safely performed asleep. It is also less labour intensive to manage on the ward and does not carry the same risks of hypotension and excessive fluid administration that are associated with an epidural. There is randomised controlled trial evidence that RSC infusions in addition to PCA provide superior analgesia when compared to PCA alone in surgery performed through a midline incision. There is also a randomised controlled trial in progress that is comparing analgesic quality of epidural infusions to RSC with PCA. In most published literature to date, RSC are inserted by the anaesthetist using ultrasound to aid placement. In our hospital, some RSC are inserted by anaesthetists although the majority are performed by surgeons at the end of an operation. This is because we believe that this technique is less time consuming and both insertion techniques result in equivalent analgesia. The primary aim endpoint of this study is to determine any difference in insertion time for rectus sheath catheters between those inserted by surgeons and those inserted by anaesthetists. Observationally in our hospital, there is no difference in quality of analgesia provided by the two insertion techniques. However, surgical insertion of RSC causes less disruption of an operation as the patient already has their abdomen draped with sterilised skin as part of their surgical procedure. Also, surgical insertion of RSC with an open abdomen is potentially easier than ultrasound guided insertion by an anaesthetist before an operation. Who can participate? Any adults undergoing emergency or elective laparotomy (major abdominal surgery.) What does the study involve? All participants will receive rectus sheath catheters but will be randomly allocated to each group. Following the surgery, participants will have to answer questions about their pain on 3 consecutive days. What are the possible benefits and risks of participating? There are no specific benefits to patients and the risks are the same if they were in the trial or not as it is routine in our hospital to use rectus sheath catheters as a means of analgesia post laparotomy. These risks include bleeding, dislodgement of catheter and failure of catheter and are low risk. Where is the study run from? This a single centre study at the Countess of Chester Hospital in the United Kingdom. When is study starting and how long is it expected to run for? We anticipate recruiting patient from June 2017 for 6 months. How long will the trial be recruiting participants for? No funding is required as all data collection will be carried out by doctors working in the departments but the study is being supported and supervised by the Hospital's Research and Development department.

Interventions

Insertion of rectus sheath catheter via either method

Sponsors

Countess of Chester NHS Foundation Trust
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

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

Masking description

Patients will be blinded to the intervention that they are randomized to intraoperatively.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Patients aged over 18 years * Able to provide informed consent * Undergoing elective, open colorectal surgery or emergency laparotomy via a midline incision extending above the umbilicus * Weight of 50kg or over to standardise the analgesia given.

Exclusion criteria

* Weight of less than 50kg * Patients unable to consent * Age under 18 years * Inability to insert RSC - local infection or severe coagulopathy * Allergy to local anaesthetic * Chronic pre-operative use of strong opioids or gabapentins and or chronic pain syndromes

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time taken to insert rectus sheath cathetersunder 15 minutesThis will be recorded in theatre on a stopwatch and recorded.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Peri-operative analgesic use4 daysAnalgesic use intra-operatively and post-operatively for 3 days. This will include strong opioids, paracetamol, NSAIDs, codeine, ketamine, IV lignocaine, tramadol, clonidine and PCA usage post-operatively.
Catheter issues4 daysThis includes haemorrhage, dislodgement, blockage
Pain scores4 daysPatients will be asked to score their pain in recovery and on days 0,1,2,3 post operatively. This will be graded using a Numeric Pain Rating Scale.
TIme to diet and mobilisationlikely 1-3 days
Time to dischargeapproximately 7 days
Duration of catheter use4 days

Contacts

Primary ContactDale Vimalachandran, MBChB MD FRCS
dale.vimalachandran@nhs.net01244 365000
Backup ContactElizabeth G Kane, MBChB BSc MRCS
ekane1@nhs.net

Outcome results

None listed

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