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Evaluation of the Performance of Epidural Analgesia After Major Abdominal Surgery (PAPCAM)

T

Toulouse University Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Epidural Analgesia After Major Open Abdominal Surgery

Treatments

Other: postoperative pain assess

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04912557
RC31/21/0160
2021-A00926-35 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Epidural analgesia is widely used for the treatment of acute postoperative pain, and currently represents the gold standard after open major abdominal surgery. However, several studies have reported a failure rate of APT of up to 30%. Its efficacy regarding pain control during coughing and mobilization is also inconsistent, with correct analgesia found in only 60% of cases in a Scandinavian multicenter cohort. Inadequate Epidural analgesia may be associated with more postoperative complications. This finding prompts a study in our institution to evaluate the performance of epidural analgesia after major open abdominal surgery.

Full description

Epidural analgesia is widely used for the treatment of acute postoperative pain, and currently represents the gold standard after open major abdominal surgery. However, several studies have reported a failure rate of APT of up to 30%. Its efficacy regarding pain control during coughing and mobilization is also inconsistent, with correct analgesia found in only 60% of cases in a Scandinavian multicenter cohort. Inadequate Epidural analgesia may be associated with more postoperative complications. This finding prompts a study in our institution to evaluate the performance of epidural analgesia after major open abdominal surgery.

Epidural analgesia does not guarantee total control of acute postoperative pain after major open abdominal surgery. The performance of epidural analgesia could vary according to predisposing factors and postoperative days. Inadequate epidural analgesia could be associated with greater morbidity after open major abdominal surgery.

In order to evaluate the performance of epidural analgesia after major open abdominal surgery, a prospective observational monocentric scheme seems relevant. The evaluation will be clinical based on questioning and a brief medical examination during the early postoperative phase of the operated patients.

Enrollment

69 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Major abdominal surgery patient operated by laparotomy (predicted operative time ≥ 2 hours)
  • epidural analgesia accepted

Exclusion criteria

  • Minor or protected patient
  • Patients under guardianship, curatorship or safeguard of justice
  • Pregnant or breastfeeding woman
  • Contraindication or refusal of epidural analgesia
  • Failure of the initial placement of the epidural catheter
  • Major intraoperative complication requiring continued postoperative sedation

Trial design

69 participants in 1 patient group

Patients
Description:
Open major abdominal surgery patient (predicted operative time ≥ 2 hours) with Peridural Analgesia accepted
Treatment:
Other: postoperative pain assess

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Guillaume PORTA-BONETE, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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