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Prospective Randomized Trial of Moderate vs Deep Neuromuscular Blockade During Laparoscopic Ventral Hernia Repair

Stony Brook University logo

Stony Brook University

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Pneumoperitoneum
Hernia, Ventral
Neuromuscular Blockade

Treatments

Procedure: Patients will be randomized to moderate (TOF 1-2) or deep (post tetanic count 1-2) relaxation. Low pressure insufflation (start pressure set at 8 mm Hg)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03201744
1034023-3

Details and patient eligibility

About

The proposed study aims to assess the effect of different levels of muscle relaxation on the success of low-pressure insufflation, surgical conditions and patient recovery following laparoscopic repair of a ventral hernia (VHR) between 2 and 10cm in diameter. Patients will be randomized to moderate (TOF 1-2) or deep (post tetanic count 1-2) relaxation.

Specific Aim 1. Compare two different modes of neuromuscular blockade (moderate and deep) on the ability to maintain low insufflation pressure during laparoscopic VHR. All procedures will start with low-pressure insufflation (8 mm Hg). Surgeon assessment of the conditions will be serially performed during surgery on an established visual scale. If conditions are deemed less than adequate (score 1-2), insufflation pressure will incrementally increase up to 15 mm Hg. Outcome for this specific aim will be the mean insufflation pressure during each procedure, and the ability to perform low-pressure laparoscopic VHR.

Specific Aim 2. Evaluate the success of moderate neuromuscular blockade on the ability to maintain good conditions (visual scale grade 4 or 5) for each. Surgical conditions will be considered successful when scores are maintained at 4 or 5 throughout the duration of the procedure. Outcome for this aim will be the mean score for surgical condition assessment for each procedure, using a previously published surgeon-driven scoring system (score 4-5 will be used as a surrogate of good visualization).

Specific Aim 3. Assess patient recovery with low and high insufflation pressures during laparoscopic VHR. Patient overall satisfaction with recovery, pain level, pain medication requirement, PONV incidence and severity will be assessed in multiple time points following surgery. Outcomes for this aim will be mean pain (visual scale), PONV severity (analogue score) and incidence (binary outcome), and patient satisfaction using the QoR-15 survey. Assessments will be performed at 30 minutes, 1, 12 and 24 hours following surgery.

Enrollment

34 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients age 18-75 years old
  • Umbilical, ventral, epigastric, spigelian or incisional hernia
  • Plan for laparoscopic ventral hernia repair with mesh
  • Estimated fascial defect between 2-10 cm in maximum diameter

Exclusion criteria

  • Allergy to medications delineated in the protocol (muscle blockade, anesthetics, reversal agents)
  • Inability to provide informed consent
  • Body mass index of 35 or over
  • Multiple recurrent hernias (>1)
  • Creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min (using the Cockcroft-Gault calculation)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

34 participants in 2 patient groups

Moderate Neuromuscular Block
Experimental group
Description:
Train of four count of 1-2. All procedures will start with low-pressure insufflation (8 mm Hg). Surgeon assessment of the conditions will be serially performed during surgery on an established visual scale. If conditions are deemed less than adequate (score 1-2), insufflation pressure will incrementally increase up to 15 mm Hg. Reversal of muscle relaxation will be performed at the end of the procedure using established medications used in clinical practice. In theory, deep relaxation may require a more prolonged reversal process, but using contemporary medical agents (sugammadex), reversal from deep relaxation is prompt (2-3 minutes) without any additional delays.
Treatment:
Procedure: Patients will be randomized to moderate (TOF 1-2) or deep (post tetanic count 1-2) relaxation. Low pressure insufflation (start pressure set at 8 mm Hg)
Deep Neuromuscular Block
Experimental group
Description:
Post tetanic count of 1-2. All procedures will start with low-pressure insufflation (8 mm Hg). Surgeon assessment of the conditions will be serially performed during surgery on an established visual scale. If conditions are deemed less than adequate (score 1-2), insufflation pressure will incrementally increase up to 15 mm Hg. Reversal of muscle relaxation will be performed at the end of the procedure using established medications used in clinical practice. In theory, deep relaxation may require a more prolonged reversal process, but using contemporary medical agents (sugammadex), reversal from deep relaxation is prompt (2-3 minutes) without any additional delays.
Treatment:
Procedure: Patients will be randomized to moderate (TOF 1-2) or deep (post tetanic count 1-2) relaxation. Low pressure insufflation (start pressure set at 8 mm Hg)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Dawn Alomar, MBA; Shabana Humayon, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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