ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Evaluating the Effectiveness of Bilateral ESPB in Addition to Standard Analgesia at Reducing Opioid Consumption

Montefiore Medicine Academic Health System logo

Montefiore Medicine Academic Health System

Status

Completed

Conditions

Block
Anesthesia

Treatments

Procedure: Erecto Spinae nerve block
Procedure: Multimodal Analgesia

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03954249
2019-10183

Details and patient eligibility

About

Study the benefits of a Erector Spinae nerve block for pain control and decrease narcotics usage after mammoplasty in an ambulatory setting

Full description

Breast surgery is among the most common procedures performed at ambulatory surgery centers. Whether for cosmetic or cancer indications, mastectomy and reduction mammoplasty are being performed under general anesthesia with standard multimodal pharmacologic analgesia. Regional anesthetic techniques have become increasingly prevalent in the management of postoperative analgesia. In oncologic surgery, regional anesthetic techniques have demonstrated a lower incidence of recurrence or metastasis of breast cancer compared to opioid analgesia. The breast has complex innervation, receiving innervation from C5-T7, thus posing a challenge to the regional anesthesiologist.

Current regional techniques for breast and other thoracic surgeries, such as open heart surgery, include the PEC I, PEC II, serratus anterior block as well as the paravertebral block. Of these options, the paravertebral block is heralded as the gold standard for multimodal analgesia in breast surgery. Unfortunately, the paravertebral block carries with it the risk of pneumothorax due to its proximity to the pleura. This risk is also increased when an inexperienced provider is performing the block, which is common on an academic institution. As a result, the PEC I, PEC II and serratus anterior blocks have gained traction, is that they carry less risk of adverse events. One drawback of the PEC blocks and serratus anterior block is that they may not achieve adequate anterior spread and complete coverage of the surgical field, making them less effective at providing adequate post-operative analgesia. Due to these drawbacks, the erector spinae plane block (ESPB) has begun to gain traction as the regional technique of choice for breast surgery. The ESPB is a myofascial block alternative to the paravertebral block. [1] It is performed by injecting local anesthetic in the plane between the erector spinae muscle and the spinal transverse process. The ESPB is thought to be safer than the paravertebral block because the transverse process acts as a barrier to the pleura. It has been postulated that local anesthetic spread reaches the paravertebral space and in fact, cadaveric studies have shown dye spreading to involve the ventral and dorsal rami of spinal nerves. It is because of this mechanism of action that this block has been call the "paravertebral by proxy." The spread of the local anesthetic is volume-dependent, and has been seen to anesthetize between 3-8 vertebral levels when using local anesthetic volumes of 15-20mL. The ESPB has been used successfully for analgesia in open-heart surgery as well as in chronic thoracic neuropathy secondary to herpetic neuralgia. Proponents of the erector spinae block prefer it to the paravertebral block for its ease to perform and seemingly safer profile.

The investigators seek to explore the proposed benefits of the erector spinae plane block in our patients undergoing bilateral breast reduction mammoplasty. Reducing overall opioid use and enhancing recovery after surgery are areas of great importance in the ambulatory, outpatient setting. The investigators hope to show the positive impact of ESPB on both of important perioperative factors.

UPDATE (1/27/2026): The 'actual' Enrollment total has been updated from 76 to 78 on account of an error identified from the time the record was completed in May 2022.

Enrollment

78 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 99 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients undergoing reduction mammoplasty
  • Age >18 years
  • ASA class I-III

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient refusal
  • Renal insufficiency (defined as CKD stage 3 or greater)
  • Infection at the skin at the site of needle puncture
  • Known allergies to any study drugs
  • Coagulopathy
  • Severe asthmatics
  • BMI >40
  • ASA 4 and 5
  • Pre-existing pain disorder
  • Regular consumption of chronic pain medication
  • Failed block
  • Diagnosis of OSA

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

78 participants in 2 patient groups

Erector Spinae nerve block group
Experimental group
Description:
Receive multimodal analgesia and in addition erector spinae plane block
Treatment:
Procedure: Erecto Spinae nerve block
Multimodal Analgesia group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Receive standard multimodal analgesia
Treatment:
Procedure: Multimodal Analgesia

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems