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Clinical Trials/NCT02572804
NCT02572804
Unknown
Not Applicable

A Randomised Controlled Trial of Thoracic Epidural Analgesia Versus Surgically Placed Rectus Sheath Catheters for Open Radical Cystectomy: Is There a Difference in Patient Outcomes?

Vancouver Coastal Health1 site in 1 country160 target enrollmentSeptember 2015

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Bladder Cancer
Sponsor
Vancouver Coastal Health
Enrollment
160
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Cumulative post-operative opioid consumption
Last Updated
9 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

This is a prospective randomised controlled trial that will compare the outcomes of rectus sheath catheters to epidurals in patients who have undergone a cystectomy, via a lower midline abdominal incision for bladder cancer.

Detailed Description

This study will compare the outcomes of two different pain control techniques, used as standard of care, following major abdominal surgery for bladder removal. Rectus sheath catheters are small tubes that are positioned into a specific area of the cut abdominal wall at the end of surgery; whereas an epidural is a tube that is positioned into the back. Both allow administration of local anaesthetic for pain control. The current gold standard is an epidural. This study will aim to evaluate this and show the comparative efficacy of the rectus sheath catheter, which anecdotally the investigators have found superior in practice.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
September 2015
End Date
June 2017
Last Updated
9 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Dr. Alan I. So

Urologic Surgeon

Vancouver Coastal Health

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Patients over or equal to the age of 19 years old who can understand the study protocol and are able to give consent
  • Patients with an American Society of Anaesthesiology (ASA) classification 1 to 3
  • Patients must have a preoperative oral 24 hour opioid consumption of less than or equal to 30mg morphine equivalents
  • Patients must be able to understand and be able to use patient controlled analgesia
  • Patients must be undergoing a cystectomy with an infra-umbilical midline incision

Exclusion Criteria

  • Patients with BMI greater than 40
  • Patients with an allergy to local anaesthetics
  • Patients who are contraindicated to having an epidural (e.g. coagulopathic, distorted anatomy, patient refusal, infection at the site of proposed insertion)
  • Patients with previous spinal surgery at the proposed site of epidural
  • Patients with neurodegenerative disorders or spinal cord injury
  • Patients with known anatomy that would not permit placement of the rectus sheath catheters e.g. Prune Belly Syndrome
  • Patients undergoing another complex abdominal procedure in addition to cystectomy and reconstruction requiring extension of the abdominal incision above the umbilicus.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Cumulative post-operative opioid consumption

Time Frame: To Day 3 post-op

Secondary Outcomes

  • Patient Satisfaction with pain control(Day 3 post operatively)
  • Duration of post-operative ileus(This will be measured during the patients' inpatient hospital stay - usually up to a maximum of 10 days.)
  • Time to mobilisation(The day at which patient achieves mobilisation - usually at a maximum of 5 days post-operatively)
  • Length of Hospital Stay(The day at which patient is discharged from hospital- usually on average 10 days post-operatively)
  • Total patient fluid requirements throughout hospital admission(From the start of the operation to day 3 post-operatively.)
  • Visual Analogue Score pain score(within 4 hours post-operatively and on days 1, 2 and 3 post-operatively)
  • Complications and side effects.(30 day morbidity and mortality)
  • Patient total intraoperative Opioid requirement(Intraoperatively)
  • Recorded evidence of hypotension(Until Day 3 postoperatively)

Study Sites (1)

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