Gordon Debra B, de Leon-Casasola Oscar A, Wu Christopher L, Sluka Kathleen A, Brennan Timothy J, Chou Roger
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Roswell Park Cancer Institute and University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Buffalo, New York.
J Pain. 2016 Feb;17(2):158-66. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2015.10.023. Epub 2015 Dec 21.
Acute postoperative pain is a common clinical condition that, when poorly controlled, can result in a number of significant negative consequences. The American Pain Society commissioned an evidence-based guideline on the management of postoperative pain to promote evidence-based, safe, and effective perioperative pain management. An interdisciplinary panel developed 31 key questions and inclusion criteria to guide the evidence review. Investigators reviewed 6556 abstracts from multiple electronic databases up to November 2012, an updated evidence review to October 2014, and key references suggested by expert reviewers. More than 800 primary studies not included in a systematic review and 107 systematic reviews were included. Despite a large body of evidence, a number of critical research gaps were identified where only low-quality or insufficient evidence was found to help guide clinical practice recommendations. This report identifies evidence gaps including optimal methods and timing of perioperative patient education, nonpharmacological modalities, combinations of analgesic techniques, monitoring of patient response to treatment, techniques for neuraxial and regional analgesia, and organizational care delivery models. Recommendations to help guide the design of future perioperative studies are offered.
Acute postoperative pain is a common clinical condition requiring an evidence-based, planned, and multimodal approach. Despite the plethora of published evidence, much of it is weak and key questions remain unanswered. Researchers are encouraged to work together to produce strong evidence to help guide clinical decisions in perioperative pain management.
急性术后疼痛是一种常见的临床状况,若控制不佳,可能会导致许多严重的负面后果。美国疼痛协会委托制定了一项关于术后疼痛管理的循证指南,以促进循证、安全且有效的围手术期疼痛管理。一个跨学科小组制定了31个关键问题和纳入标准,以指导证据审查。研究人员检索了截至2012年11月多个电子数据库中的6556篇摘要、截至2014年10月的更新证据审查以及专家评审员建议的关键参考文献。纳入了800多项未纳入系统评价的原始研究和107项系统评价。尽管有大量证据,但仍发现了一些关键的研究空白,在这些领域仅找到低质量或不充分的证据来指导临床实践建议。本报告确定了证据空白,包括围手术期患者教育的最佳方法和时机、非药物治疗方式、镇痛技术的联合应用、对患者治疗反应的监测、神经轴和区域镇痛技术以及组织护理提供模式。提供了有助于指导未来围手术期研究设计的建议。
急性术后疼痛是一种常见的临床状况,需要循证、有计划的多模式方法。尽管已发表了大量证据,但其中许多证据力度较弱,关键问题仍未得到解答。鼓励研究人员共同努力,以产生有力的证据,帮助指导围手术期疼痛管理中的临床决策。