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Paravertebral Catheters for Pancreatic Surgery

University of Minnesota (UMN) logo

University of Minnesota (UMN)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Acute Pain

Treatments

Procedure: Paravertebral catheters
Procedure: Epidural

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02363777
1203M11482

Details and patient eligibility

About

Design: Level I randomized prospective outcomes study comparing two groups of patients. One group will receive bupivacaine and dilaudid thoracic epidural analgesia (PCA) post-operatively. The other will receive bilateral ultrasound guided paravertebral blocks with indwelling paravertebral catheters with an infusion of 0.2% ropivicaine post-operatively and a PCA.

Sample Size: 50 patients Study Duration: Approximately 12 months Population:. Patients presenting to the University of Minnesota Medical Center for elective open pancreatic surgery.

Primary Objective: To determine if bilateral paravertebral catheters in patients with open pancreatic procedures result in decreased pain compared to patients treated with thoracic epidural for post-operative pain.

Secondary Objectives:

  1. To determine whether the use of bilateral paravertebral catheters impacts the length of ICU and hospital stay for patients, compared to a thoracic epidurals in patients undergoing elective open pancreatic surgery.
  2. To determine whether the use of ultrasound guided bilateral paravertebral catheters leads to lower risk of complications, compared to use of a thoracic epidural in patients undergoing open pancreatic surgery.

Full description

Design: Level I randomized prospective outcomes study comparing two groups of patients. One group will receive buipvacanine and dilaudid thoracic epidural analgesia (PCA) post-operatively. The other will receive bilateral ultrasound guided paravertebral blocks with indwelling paravertebral catheters with an infusion of 0.2% ropivicaine post-operatively and a PCA.

Sample Size: 50 patients Study Duration: Approximately 12 months Population:. Patients presenting to the University of Minnesota Medical Center for elective open pancreatic surgery.

Primary Objective: To determine if bilateral paravertebral catheters in patients with open pancreatic procedures result in decreased total maximal pain scores compared to patients treated with thoracic epidural for post-operative pain.

Secondary Objectives:

  1. To determine whether the use of bilateral paravertebral catheters impacts the length of ICU and hospital stay for patients, compared to a thoracic epidurals in patients undergoing elective open pancreatic surgery.

  2. To determine whether the use of ultrasound guided bilateral paravertebral catheters leads to lower risk of complications, compared to use of a thoracic epidural in patients undergoing open pancreatic surgery.

  3. Synopsis and Medical Application:

Specific Aims:

Primary Hypothesis: Paravertebral catheters will result in improved pain control relative to thoracic epidural for post-operative pain from open pancreatic surgery.

Secondary Hypothesis: Paravertebral catheters will result in fewer hospital days and improved subjective respiratory function compared to patients in the thoracic epidural group.

Enrollment

50 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • • All patients undergoing open pancreatic surgery.

Exclusion criteria

  • • Previous difficult airway or multiple previous intubations

    • History of myasthenic syndrome

    • Systemic infection

    • Pre-existing sensory deficit

    • PT >14 or PTT >40 sec

    • Platelet count less than 50,000

    • Creatinine > 1.5

    • Allergy to local anesthetics

    • Patients who remain intubated for one week after surgery or who are unable to provide information as to their feelings of pain post-operatively for the first week post-operatively

    • Use of a spinal or epidural anesthetic for surgery

    • Daily use of opioid for more than a week or chronic pain syndrome

    • Lack of patient cooperation

    • Contraindication to regional anesthesia

      • Infection at injection site
      • Inability to guarantee sterile equipment or sterile conditions for the block
      • Patient refusal
      • Risk of local anesthetic toxicity
      • Coagulopathy or bleeding disorder
      • Severe respiratory disease (where the patient depends on intercostal muscle function for ventilation);
      • Ipsilateral diaphragmatic paresis;

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

50 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard of Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Epidural placed for postoperative pain control
Treatment:
Procedure: Epidural
Experimental Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Bilateral paravertebral catheters placed for postoperative pain control
Treatment:
Procedure: Paravertebral catheters

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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