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Opioid Free Anaesthesia-Analgesia Strategy on Surgical Stress and Immunomodulation in Elective VATS-Lobectomy for NSCLC

U

University of Crete

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Postoperative Pain, Acute
Postoperative Pain, Chronic
Non-small Cell Lung Cancer
Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
Opioid Use
Infections Postoperative
Anesthesia

Treatments

Drug: Opioid-Based Anesthesia-Analgesia Strategy
Drug: Opioid-free Anesthesia-Analgesia Strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05172739
OFA-Thoracic

Details and patient eligibility

About

Lobectomy is a major, high-risk surgical procedure that in addition to one-lung ventilation (OLV) exerts a potent surgical stress response. An overwhelming immune cell recruitment may lead to excessive tissue damage, peripheral organ injury and immunoparesis. The effect of anesthesia on the immune system is modest, compared to the effects induced by major surgery. However, to an immunocompromised patient, due to cancer and/or other comorbidities, the immunosuppressive effects of anesthesia may increase the incidence of post-operative infections, morbidity, and mortality. Exogenous opioids have been correlated with immunosuppression, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, and respiratory depression, with deleterious outcomes. An Opioid-Free Anaesthesia-Analgesia (OFA-A) strategy is based on the administration of a variety of anaesthetic/analgesic and other pharmacological agents with different mechanisms of action, including immunomodulating and anti-inflammatory effects. Our basic hypothesis is that the implementation of a perioperative multimodal OFA-A strategy, will lead to an attenuated surgical stress response and attenuated immunosuppression, compared to a conventional Opioid-Based Anaesthesia-Analgesia (OBA-A) strategy. The aforementioned effects, are presumed to be associated with equal or improved analgesia and decreased incidence of postoperative infections compared to a perioperative OBA-A technique.

Full description

Surgical manipulation and one lung ventilation (OLV) exert different and synergic effects to generate an inflammatory response during lung resection surgery. Surgery, such as lobectomies, often leads to severe immunosuppression that in turn can lead to infectious complications and sepsis. Both anesthesia-related and surgery-related perioperative measures may modulate the patient's immune response and lead to the activation of different components of the immune system. Anesthesia-induced activation, in particular of the adaptive immune system, may also induce persistent, postoperative immunosuppression. An overwhelming immune cell recruitment may lead to excessive tissue damage, peripheral organ injury and immunoparesis.

Opioid analgesia remains the corner stone of acute pain management in perioperative analgesic regimes. Opioid receptors are not only expressed in the central nervous system to regulate pain perception but also occur on immune and tumour cells. Exogenous opioid administration has been correlated with immunosuppression, opioid-induced hyperalgesia, and respiratory depression, with deleterious outcomes.

An Opioid-Free Anaesthesia-Analgesia (OFA-A) strategy is based on the administration of a variety of anaesthetic/analgesic and other pharmacological agents with different mechanisms of action, including immunomodulating and anti-inflammatory effects where at least one factor causes inhibition of central sensitization and at least another factor inhibits the peripheral sensitization of the nervous system, as a response to painful surgical stimuli. This combination of factors has to have a synergistic or additive effect so that best analgesic effects can be achieved with the lowest possible dosage.

Our basic hypothesis is that a perioperative OFA-A strategy on cancer patients undergoing VATS lung surgery for tumour resection will be accompanied by abolished or attenuated immunosuppression. The additional potential clinical implication of a perioperative OFA-A strategy is the avoidance of the onco-proliferative side effects of both exogenous and endogenous opioids, released by cytokine-mediated immune cell activation. Inflammatory response inhibition is expected to reduce the possibility of acute and chronic post-operative pain developement, compared to a perioperative Opioid-Based Anaesthesia- Analgesia (OBA-A) technique. Additionally, the aforementioned inflammatory response inhibition is expected to lead to an overall reduction of overall postoperative pulmonary complications.

Enrollment

70 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • patients undergoing elective VATS lobectomy
  • early stage NSCLC (up to T3N1M0)

Exclusion criteria

  • Immunocompromised patients
  • previous lung surgery
  • preoperative corticosteroid or immunosuppressive drug use
  • uncontrolled Diabetes Mellitus
  • cardiac failure (NYHA 3 and 4)
  • preoperative infection (CRP >5mg/ml, WBC >10x10^9/L)
  • preoperative anemia (Hb<12g/dl)
  • chronic inflammatory diseases
  • inflammatory bowel disease

Group-specific exclusion criteria:

  • OFA-Α: perioperative opioid administration, within the study period
  • OBA-Α: perioperative dexmedetomidine or lidocaine infusion, ketamine, gabapentinoid or corticosteroid administration within the study period

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

70 participants in 2 patient groups

Opioid-Based Anaesthesia Analgesia
Active Comparator group
Description:
Premedication: IM Midazolam 0.05-0.07mg/kg. Anesthesia induction: Midazolam 0.03mg/kg, Propofol 2-3mg/kg, Fentanyl 1-2mcg/kg and Cisatracurium 0.2mg/kg or alternatively Rocuronium 0.6-1.2mg/ kg. Anesthesia maintenance: Desflurane set at approximately 1 MAC, Morphine 0.1-0.12mg/kg, Fentanyl 1-2mcg/kg during induction and 50-100mcg prn, Paracetamol 1g +/- Dexketoprofen trometamol 50mg, along with Ondansetron 4mg or Droperidol 0.625mg. Wound infiltration: Ropivacaine 75-150mg. Surgical ward: PCA pump with Morphine for the first 3 postoperative days. Additional postoperative analgesia: Paracetamol 1g 1x3 +/- Dexketoprofen trometamol 50mg 1x2. Rescue therapy only: Tramadol 50-100mg.
Treatment:
Drug: Opioid-Based Anesthesia-Analgesia Strategy
Opioid-Free Anesthesia Analgesia
Active Comparator group
Description:
Premedication: Pregabalin 150mg 1x2, IM Midazolam 0.05-0.07mg/kg. Anesthesia induction: Midazolam 0.03mg/kg, Dexmedetomidine 0.5-1mcg/kg, Lidocaine 1mg/kg, Propofol 2-3mg/kg, Ketamine 1-1.5mg/kg, Hyoscine 10mg, Cisatracurium 0.2mg/ kg or alternatively Rocuronium 0.6-1.2mg/kg, Magnesium sulphate 2.5-5g and Dexamethasone 8-16mg. Anesthesia maintenance: Desflurane set at \~1 MAC, Dexmedetomidine 0.5-1.2mcg/kg/h, Lidocaine 0.5-1mg/kg/h, Ketamine 0.3-0.5mg/kg prn, Paracetamol 1g +/- Dexketoprofen trometamol 50mg, and Ondansetron 4mg or Droperidol 0.625mg. Wound infiltration: Ropivacaine 75-150mg. Surgical ward: PCA pump with Ketamine, Lidocaine, Clonidine, Droperidol and Midazolam for the first 3 postoperative days. Additionally, Pregabalin 50mg per os 1x1 and 25mg 1x1, Paracetamol 1g 1x3 +/- Dexketoprofen trometamol 50mg 1x2. Rescue therapy only: Tramadol 50-100mg.
Treatment:
Drug: Opioid-free Anesthesia-Analgesia Strategy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Periklis Vasilos, MD; Georgios Stefanakis, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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