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Effect of Cervical Epidural Analgesia on the Occurrence of Pharyngocutaneous Fistula

A

Assiut University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Laryngectomy
Cutaneous Fistula

Treatments

Device: cervical epidural analgesia

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02870556
Not yet assigned

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pharyngocutaneous fistula (PCF) is the most commonly reported postoperative complication in total laryngectomy patients. PCF significantly increases morbidity, length of hospitalization, and cost of care, in addition to delaying the beginning of adjuvant therapy. The reported incidence of PCF ranges from 3% to 65%.The increased use of radiation in the primary management of laryngeal carcinoma has resulted in an increase in the PCF formation after salvage laryngectomy (STL).

Previously reported risk factors for PCF development include preoperative radiotherapy, tumor stage, concomitant neck dissection, prior need for tracheotomy, hypoalbuminemia and anemia.

Among surgical options, the pectoralis major myofascial flap has been proposed to cover the pharyngeal closure, to interpose non-irradiated tissue between the neopharynx and the skin during STL. Nonetheless, the efficacy of this approach is not fully established.Epidural anesthesia improves the blood supply due to its vasodilating effect. The aim of the study is to evaluate the effect of perioperative cervical epidural analgesia on the occurrence of pharyngocutaneous fistula following salvage laryngectomy and reconstruction with pectoralis major myocutaneous flap.

Full description

Patients will be divided into two equal groups, group (EP), will receive perioperative cervical epidural analgesia in addition to general anesthesia and group (GA) will receive general anesthesia and postoperative analgesia through patient controlled intravenous morphine analgesia (PCA), that involve 1 mg continuous infusion and 2 mg boluses with lockout interval 10 min.

Cervical epidural technique: epidural needle will be inserted at C 6-C7 or C7-T1 under fluoroscopy in prone position, 6 ml of 0.125% bupivacaine and fentanyl 2 mic/ ml will be administered before skin incision followed by 4 ml of the same injectate, will be infused continously for 2 days

Enrollment

46 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients who failed treatment with radiotherapy for laryngeal cancer

Exclusion criteria

  1. Infection at the site of flap
  2. Primary laryngectomy without radiotheraapy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

46 participants in 2 patient groups

EP, Cervical epidural group
Experimental group
Description:
patients undergoing salvage laryngectomy (failed radiotherapy to treat laryngeal cancer) will receive cervical epidural analgesia in addition to the standard general anesthesia (induction with propofol 2 mg / kg, endotracheal intubation facilitated by cis-atracurium 0.3 mg / kg and 0.15 mg /kg on demand and maintained with inhalational anesthetic sevoflurane) Cervical epidural technique: epidural needle will be inserted at C 6-C7 or C7-T1 under fluoroscopy in prone position, 6 ml of 0.125% bupivacaine and fentanyl 2 mic/ ml will be administered before skin incision followed by 4 ml of the same injectate, will be infused continously for 2 days
Treatment:
Device: cervical epidural analgesia
GA, General anesthesia
Active Comparator group
Description:
patients undergoing salvage laryngectomy (failed radiotherapy to treat laryngeal cancer) will receive standard general anesthesia only (induction with propofol 2 mg / kg, endotracheal intubation facilitated by cis-atracurium 0.3 mg / kg and 0.15 mg /kg on demand and maintained with inhalational anesthetic sevoflurane) in addition to postoperative analgesia through patient controlled intravenous morphine analgesia (PCA), that involve 1 mg continuous infusion and 2 mg boluses with lockout interval 10 min
Treatment:
Device: cervical epidural analgesia

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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