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Analgesic Effects of Low-dose S-ketamine in Major Spine Fusion Surgery

P

Peking University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Postoperative Analgesia
Spine Fusion
S-ketamine

Treatments

Drug: S-ketamine
Drug: Placebo

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04964219
2021-272

Details and patient eligibility

About

Despite opioid-based multimodal analgesia, moderate-to-severe pain remains a big problem in patients following multi-segment spinal fusion. As a N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, S-ketamine has prominent analgesic effects through activating receptors both in the brain and in the spinal cord, inhibiting the excitatory postsynaptic potential, and thus blunting nociception transmission.

This randomized controlled trial is designed to investigate whether perioperative S-ketamine infusion can decrease pain intensity after major spine fusion surgery.

Full description

Multi-segment spinal fusion usually lasts long and produces significant trauma. Patients following this surgery are at high risk of developing moderate-to-severe pain. In a large sample size cohort study investigating pain severity following 179 kinds of surgical procedures, multi-segment spinal fusion ranked the third with a median pain score of 6.6 (assessed with an 11-point scale, where 0=no pain and 10= the worst pain) and a median morphine consumption of 27 mg during the first postoperative day.

High-dose opioids are associated with adverse effects including respiratory depression, sedation, nausea and vomiting, pruritus, and constipation, which are harmful for early postoperative recovery. A previous study showed that about 50% of patients are taking opioids for chronic pain at 3 months after spinal fusion surgery. Chronic pain is considered to be a result of poorly controlled acute postoperative pain. Thus, multimodal analgesia aiming at improving analgesia while decreasing opioid consumption is advocated to control acute postsurgical pain, in order to promote perioperative recovery and prevent chronic pain.

Racemic ketamine, a commonly used N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, is a mixture of equal parts of two optical isomers including R-(-)-ketamine and S-(+)-ketamine. It has prominent analgesic effects through activating receptors both in the brain and in the spinal cord, inhibiting the excitatory postsynaptic potential, and thus blunting nociception transmission. Additionally, studies also showed that, when used within the appropriate time, ketamine reduces pain-related sensitization that aggravates postoperative pain. Thus, ketamine is recommended as a part of a multimodal analgesia regimen in clinical practice, especially for patients undergoing major orthopedic surgery. However, the reported psychotropic side effects limit the clinical use of racemic ketamine.

S-ketamine, an S-isomer of ketamine, is twice as potent as the racemic mixture in analgesia, and produces fewer side effects than the racemic ketamine. How, there are only a few studies exploring analgesic effect of S-ketamine in spine fusion surgery. In opioid-dependent patients, Nielsen et al. reported that intraoperative S-ketamine infusion reduced opioid consumption within 24 hours and relieved back pain intensity at 6 months, it also decreased the daily opioid use at 1 year after spinal surgery. On the other hand, the study of Brinck et al. did not found any superiority of intraoperative S-ketamine in reducing oxycodone consumption within 48 hours after lumbar fusion surgery in opioid-naive patients.

Considering these inconsistent results, the effects of S-ketamine in spinal surgery require further clarification. This trial is designed to investigate the analgesic effect of S-ketamine infused both intraoperatively and postoperatively in patients undergoing multi-segment spine infusion surgery.

Enrollment

164 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients aged between 18 and 80 years.
  • Scheduled to undergo multi-segment (≥2) spine fusion surgery.
  • Agreed to receive postoperative patient-controlled analgesia.

Exclusion criteria

  • Refused to participant in this trial.
  • Poor blood pressure control in those with hypertension (BP >160/100 mmHg in the ward).
  • Previous history of hyperthyroidism or pheochromocytoma.
  • Previous history of schizophrenia, epilepsy or Parkinson disease.
  • History of sick sinus syndrome, bradycardia (HR <50 beat per min), or atrioventricular block of grade II or higher without pacemaker.
  • Severe heart dysfunction (New York Heart Association functional classification 4), hepatic insufficiency (Child-Pugh grade C), renal insufficiency (serum creatinine of 442 μmol/L or above, or requirement of renal replacement therapy), or ASA classification IV or above.
  • Unable to complete preoperative assessment due to severe dementia or language barrier.
  • Any other conditions that were considered unsuitable for the study participation.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

164 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

S-ketamine group
Experimental group
Description:
After anesthesia induction, a bolus of 0.15 mg/kg S-ketamine is injected intravenously about 30 min before incision; this is followed by a continuous infusion at a rate of 0.15 mg/kg/h until 1 hour before the end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled analgesia is provided. The pump is established with S-ketamine 25 mg, dexmedetomidine 100 microgram, and sufentanil 100 microgram, diluted with normal saline to 100 ml. The pump is programmed to deliver 2-ml boluses with a background infusion rate at 1 ml /h and a 10-min lockout interval.
Treatment:
Drug: S-ketamine
Control group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
After anesthesia induction, a bolus of placebo (normal saline) in the same volume is injected intravenously about 30 min before incision; this is followed by a continuous infusion of placebo at the same rate until 1 hour before the end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled analgesia is provided. The pump is established with placebo, dexmedetomidine 100 microgram and sufentanil 100 microgram, diluted with normal saline to 100 ml. The pump is programmed to deliver 2-ml boluses with a background infusion rate at 1 ml /h and a 10-min lockout interval.
Treatment:
Drug: Placebo

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Xue Li, MD; Dong-Xin Wang, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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