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Multimodal Analgesia in Major Abdominal Pediatric Cancer Surgeries

N

National Cancer Institute, Egypt

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pain, Postoperative
Pediatric Cancer

Treatments

Drug: Paracetamol and ketamine
Procedure: Caudal levobupivacaine
Drug: Morphine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03580980
Ehab-Hossam.multi

Details and patient eligibility

About

Surgical trauma initiates multiple physiological mechanisms that cause postoperative pain. Postoperative pain has nociceptive, inflammatory, and neuropathic components.Inadequate relief of postoperative pain leads to significant morbidity, delayed recovery, and mortality.Adverse reactions of medications used for postoperative pain management, particularly opioids, are common including pruritus and nausea and vomiting.Preemptive analgesia is defined as analgesic treatment that starts before surgical incision to prevent central sensitization caused by incisional and inflammatory injuries.Therefore, in this pilot study, the investigators are trying to evaluate safety and efficacy of preemptive multimodal analgesia compared with preemptive caudal analgesia and PCA morphine in pediatric cancer patient undergoing major abdominal surgery.

Full description

Surgical trauma initiates multiple physiological mechanisms that cause postoperative pain. Postoperative pain has nociceptive, inflammatory, and neuropathic components.Inadequate relief of postoperative pain leads to significant morbidity, delayed recovery, and mortality.Despite the development of new drugs and analgesic techniques, up to 40% of hospitalized children - especially surgical patients - experiences moderate to severe pain. Adverse reactions of medications used for postoperative pain management, particularly opioids, are common including pruritus and nausea and vomiting.The incidence of opioid-related respiratory depression was reported to range from 0.11 to 0.41%.Regional anesthesia was suggested as an alternative to opioid-based analgesia in pediatric patients. Caudal epidural analgesia is a relatively safe and simple technique for postoperative pain management in children.However, there is a potential for adverse effects related to the technique of catheter placement or systemic toxicity of the local anesthetic.

Preemptive analgesia is defined as analgesic treatment that starts before surgical incision to prevent central sensitization caused by incisional and inflammatory injuries.However, studies in animal models of incisional pain demonstrated that single analgesic treatment before the incision does not reduce postoperative pain. Once nociceptive afferent block subsides, the wound reinitiates central sensitization. Also, clinical trials reported similar results.Multimodal analgesia uses a combination of delivery routes administered at variable time points to optimize outcomes in the treatment of acute pain.

Therefore, in this pilot study, the investigators are trying to evaluate safety and efficacy of preemptive multimodal analgesia compared with preemptive caudal analgesia and PCA morphine in pediatric cancer patient undergoing major abdominal surgery.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • were ASA I or II patients.
  • Aged between 5 and 12 years.
  • Both sexes.
  • Scheduled for major abdominal surgery with a midline incision.

Exclusion criteria

  • included history of mental retardation or delayed development that may interfere with pain intensity assessment,
  • Known or suspected allergy to any administered drugs.
  • Active renal (creatinine clearance <50).
  • Hepatic (liver enzymes more than 10 folds).
  • Respiratory (SPO2 <92% on room air).
  • Cardiac disease (ejection fraction < 50%).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

90 participants in 3 patient groups

Drug: Morphine
Active Comparator group
Description:
Morphine Group C (n=30) was the control group who received IV morphine in a dose of 0.1 mg/kg after induction of anesthesia
Treatment:
Drug: Morphine
Procedure/surgery:Caudal levobupivacaine
Active Comparator group
Description:
In Caudal Group (n=30), patients were placed in the lateral position and received caudal epidural block after induction of anesthesia with levobupivacaine 0.125% , 1.1 ml/kg and morphine 0.02 mg/kg with maximum 20ml.
Treatment:
Procedure: Caudal levobupivacaine
Drug: Paracetamol and ketamine
Active Comparator group
Description:
The patients of Multimodal Group (n=30) received paracetamol infusion 10 mg/kg over 10 minutes and ketamine 0.5 mg/kg IV bolus followed by ketorolac 1 mg/kg infusion over 10 minutes.
Treatment:
Drug: Paracetamol and ketamine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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