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This is a randomized controlled trial to determine if intraoperative local analgesia administered at the level of the sacrospinous ligament can lessen the gluteal pain felt by patients postoperatively after SSL colpopexy.
Hypothesis: Local analgesia administered at the level of the sacrospinous ligament can lessen the gluteal pain felt by patients postoperatively after SSL colpopexy.
Full description
This is a randomized double-blind clinical trial. Potential subjects will be identified by members of the Center for Urogynecology and Pelvic Reconstructive Surgery at the Cleveland Clinic main campus. Eligible patients that agree to participate will be provided written informed consent administered by the collaborators listed on the IRB at the Cleveland Clinic main campus.
All subjects will be predetermined by their surgeon to undergo sacrospinous ligament colpopexy for management of vaginal apex prolapse after hysterectomy. The participants will then be randomized to one of two groups: "local analgesia injection" or "normal saline injection" according to a computer-generated randomization schedule with random block sizes with the use of the SAS statistical software package (SAS Institute, Cary, NC). Randomization will be done by a nurse coordinator who will not be involved in participant recruitment or injection at the time of surgery. All patients and providers will be blinded to their assignment. The assignment will be kept in an envelope which will be given to the pharmacy the day of the patient's scheduled procedure. The pharmacy will then dispense the correct intervention based on the randomization.
In addition to a standardized evaluation including the history and physical examination, patients will be asked to complete a functional assessment questionnaire as well as a surgical pain scale at the preoperative visit. Prior to discharge from the hospital, patients will be provided with an envelope with pre-labeled questionnaires to bring home with them. Prior to discharge, they will be asked to complete the surgical pain scale only. Subjects will then be called the day after discharge, at week 1, week 2, week 4 and week 6 after the procedure and will be reminded to complete the appropriate questionnaires/forms that were provided to them. They will bring in these forms to their 6-week postoperative visit. All questionnaires will be self-administered. Completion of these questionnaires is the only additional assessment that is specific to participation in this study and is not usually included as part of the standard care of sacrospinous ligament colpopexy.
Sacrospinous ligament colpopexy will be performed in a standard fashion. The approach is done by either entering the vagina along the anterior or posterior wall or at the apex. Approach and side of the suspension will be based on surgeon's preference. Prior to entry, the apex of the vaginal vault is first identified by visualizing the old hysterectomy scar. Allis clamps are used to demarcate the new vaginal apex and to ensure that this apex will suspend adequately to the sacrospinous ligament, which is identified transvaginally by palpation of the ischial spine. Once vaginal entry is made, sharp and blunt dissection are performed down to the pararectal space on one or both sides. Identification of the ischial spine confirms the position of the coccygeus-sacrospinous ligament complex. Once the complex is freed of any overlying areolar tissue, a Briesky Navratil retractor is placed to retract the rectum away from the site of suture placement and to help with visualization of the ligament complex.
The CapioTM device is then used to place the suspension sutures. 3 sutures are placed: 2 delayed-absorbable (0 PDS) and 1 permanent (0 prolene). All sutures are placed one and a half to two fingerbreadths (2-3cm) medial to the ischial spine in a sequential fashion. After placement, a rectal exam is done to ensure that no sutures have been placed through the rectum and the coccygeus-sacrospinous ligament complex is visualized carefully to ensure that the surgical site is hemostatic. The absorbable-delayed suspension sutures are placed through the vaginal epithelium at the level of the neoapex and all permanent sutures are placed through the subepithelial tissue.
Injection of the sacrospinous ligament will be performed prior to tying down the suspension sutures according to the group the patient is randomized to. A pudendal nerve block kit needle and syringe will be used to administer the injection. The spacer will be removed, allowing the needle point to enter the ligament 10mm in depth with each injection. The injection will be placed in 3 locations (~3mL in each injection for a total of 10mL) along the center of the sacropinous ligament under each previously placed suture. Proper injection technique will be performed with each injection (e.g. there will be confirmation of extravascular placement of the needle tip prior to each injection). One of two injections (bupivacaine vs. normal saline) delivered by the pharmacy will be administered depending upon the group to which the patient has been randomized.
Preoperative data will include the following:
Intraoperative data will include the following:
Postoperative data will include the following:
All paper forms used for data collection will be kept in a research cabinet dedicated to this project which will be locked at all times, in a locked office at the Cleveland Clinic. All forms will contain de-identified information - identification numbers will correspond to the subjects listed in the master excel file.
All study data will be transferred and managed electronically using REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture). Each subject will be entered into REDCap using the assigned identification number from the master excel file. REDCap is a secure, web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies, providing user-friendly web-based case report forms, real-time data entry validation, audit trials, and a de-identified data export mechanism to common statistical packages. They system was developed by a multi-institutional consortium which was initiated at Vanderbilt University and includes the Cleveland Clinic. The database is hosted at the Cleveland Clinic Research Datacenter in the JJN basement and is managed by the Quantitative Health Sciences Department. The system is protected by a login and Secure Sockets Layers (SSL) encryption. Data collection is customized for each study as based on a study-specific data dictionary defined by the research team with guidance from the REDCap administrator in Quantitative Health Sciences at the Cleveland Clinic
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46 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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