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Recovery after major abdominal surgery can be longer than other types of surgery. This is because often after abdominal surgery, the bowel does not work normally. When this happens, patients are unable to pass gas. This can lead to bloating, pain, nausea and vomiting. These symptoms are called postoperative ileus.
We, the researchers at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC), are doing this study to compare two methods of treating pain during and after major gynecological surgery. The two methods are called patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) and patient-controlled intravenous analgesia (PCA). PCA is the standard of care for women having major gynecological surgery. We are going to compare PCEA to PCA to see if PCEA will improve recovery after major gynecologic surgery.
PCEA is a well established method used to ease pain in many settings such as during childbirth and bowel surgery. There have been several studies showing that PCEA is as good as and sometimes better for pain relief than PCA. PCEA may help the bowel work better by preventing ileus after surgery. However, this has never been looked at in women having major gynecologic surgery. This study will also look at whether preventing this ileus will lead to patients going home or returning to regular activities sooner.
Full description
The objective of this study is pain at rest and coughing in addition to determine the effect of intraoperative and postoperative thoracic patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA) compared to postoperative intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) on postoperative recovery parameters, such as time to potential discharge and resumption of intestinal function after major open gynecologic surgery. The population included in this study will be women undergoing a laparotomy for major abdominal or pelvic surgery by the gynecology service. There will be a total of 240 women recruited for this study, with an accrual rate of 5 to 10 patients per month. This study will be a randomized controlled clinical trial. Subjects will be randomized to either general anesthesia with postoperative intravenous patient controlled analgesia (control group) or general anesthesia with intraoperative thoracic epidural anesthesia and postoperative thoracic patient-controlled epidural analgesia (treatment group). This study will not be blinded because of the ethical issues with placing a "sham" epidural catheter in half of the study participants. These patients will be followed prospectively and relevant postoperative parameters will be measured in both groups and compared. This study will address the potential benefits of epidural analgesia on multiple measurements of postoperative recovery. This study will address the potential benefits of epidural analgesia on multiple measurements of postoperative recovery. The primary outcome of interest in this study is pain at rest and when coughing. The secondary outcome is the time to potential discharge.
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Exclusion criteria
Patients undergoing total pelvic exenteration
Patients undergoing laparoscopy only
Patients undergoing palliative surgery for bowel obstruction
Patients undergoing emergent operations
Inability to take oral intake
Current history of chronic (three months) opioid use or known active alcohol abuse
Patients with significant cognitive impairment or documented psychologic impairment
Patients with a history of documented anaphylaxis or contraindication to any of the study medications or standardized intraoperative medications will be excluded from study. These include:
Contraindication to epidural catheter placement. This includes:
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240 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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