Hamilton Thomas W, Athanassoglou Vassilis, Mellon Stephen, Strickland Louise H, Trivella Marialena, Murray David, Pandit Hemant G
Nuffield Department of Orthopaedics, Rheumatology and Musculoskeletal Sciences (NDORMS), University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Oxford, UK.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Feb 1;2(2):CD011419. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011419.pub2.
Despite multi-modal analgesic techniques, acute postoperative pain remains an unmet health need, with up to three quarters of people undergoing surgery reporting significant pain. Liposomal bupivacaine is an analgesic consisting of bupivacaine hydrochloride encapsulated within multiple, non-concentric lipid bi-layers offering a novel method of sustained-release analgesia.
To assess the analgesic efficacy and adverse effects of liposomal bupivacaine infiltration at the surgical site for the management of postoperative pain.
On 13 January 2016 we searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, MEDLINE In-Process, Embase, ISI Web of Science and reference lists of retrieved articles. We obtained clinical trial reports and synopses of published and unpublished studies from Internet sources, and searched clinical trials databases for ongoing trials.
Randomised, double-blind, placebo- or active-controlled clinical trials in people aged 18 years or over undergoing elective surgery, at any surgical site, were included if they compared liposomal bupivacaine infiltration at the surgical site with placebo or other type of analgesia.
Two review authors independently considered trials for inclusion, assessed risk of bias, and extracted data. We performed data analysis using standard statistical techniques as described in the Cochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews of Interventions, using Review Manager 5.3. We planned to perform a meta-analysis and produce a 'Summary of findings' table for each comparison however there were insufficient data to ensure a clinically meaningful answer. As such we have produced two 'Summary of findings' tables in a narrative format. Where possible we assessed the quality of evidence using GRADE.
We identified nine studies (10 reports, 1377 participants) that met inclusion criteria. Four Phase II dose-escalating/de-escalating trials, designed to evaluate and demonstrate efficacy and safety, presented pooled data that we could not use. Of the remaining five parallel-arm studies (965 participants), two were placebo controlled and three used bupivacaine hydrochloride local anaesthetic infiltration as a control. Using the Cochrane tool, we judged most studies to be at unclear risk of bias overall; however, two studies were at high risk of selective reporting bias and four studies were at high risk of bias due to size (fewer than 50 participants per treatment arm).Three studies (551 participants) reported the primary outcome cumulative pain intensity over 72 hours following surgery. Compared to placebo, liposomal bupivacaine was associated with a lower cumulative pain score between the end of the operation (0 hours) and 72 hours (one study, very low quality). Compared to bupivacaine hydrochloride, two studies showed no difference for this outcome (very low quality evidence), however due to differences in the surgical population and surgical procedure (breast augmentation versus knee arthroplasty) we did not perform a meta-analysis.No serious adverse events were reported to be associated with the use of liposomal bupivacaine and none of the five studies reported withdrawals due to drug-related adverse events (moderate quality evidence).One study reported a lower mean pain score at 12 hours associated with liposomal bupivacaine compared to bupivacaine hydrochloride, but not at 24, 48 or 72 hours postoperatively (very low quality evidence).Two studies (382 participants) reported a longer time to first postoperative opioid dose compared to placebo (low quality evidence).Two studies (325 participants) reported the total postoperative opioid consumption over the first 72 hours: one study reported a lower cumulative opioid consumption for liposomal bupivacaine compared to placebo (very low quality evidence); one study reported no difference compared to bupivacaine hydrochloride (very low quality evidence).Three studies (492 participants) reported the percentage of participants not requiring postoperative opioids over initial 72 hours following surgery. One of the two studies comparing liposomal bupivacaine to placebo demonstrated a higher number of participants receiving liposomal bupivacaine did not require postoperative opioids (very low quality evidence). The other two studies, one versus placebo and one versus bupivacaine hydrochloride, found no difference in opioid requirement (very low quality evidence). Due to significant heterogeneity between the studies (I = 92%) we did not pool the results.All the included studies reported adverse events within 30 days of surgery, with nausea, constipation and vomiting being the most common. Of the five parallel-arm studies, none performed or reported health economic assessments or patient-reported outcomes other than pain.Using GRADE, the quality of evidence ranged from moderate to very low. The major limitation was the sparseness of data for outcomes of interest. In addition, a number of studies had a high risk of bias resulting in further downgrading.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Liposomal bupivacaine at the surgical site does appear to reduce postoperative pain compared to placebo, however, at present the limited evidence does not demonstrate superiority to bupivacaine hydrochloride. There were no reported drug-related serious adverse events and no study withdrawals due to drug-related adverse events. Overall due to the low quality and volume of evidence our confidence in the effect estimate is limited and the true effect may be substantially different from our estimate.
尽管采用了多模式镇痛技术,但术后急性疼痛仍是一项未得到满足的健康需求,多达四分之三的手术患者报告有明显疼痛。脂质体布比卡因是一种镇痛药,由包裹在多个非同心脂质双分子层内的盐酸布比卡因组成,提供了一种新型的缓释镇痛方法。
评估手术部位注射脂质体布比卡因用于术后疼痛管理的镇痛效果和不良反应。
2016年1月13日,我们检索了Cochrane系统评价中心注册库(CENTRAL)、医学期刊数据库(MEDLINE)、MEDLINE在研数据库、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)、科学引文索引(ISI Web of Science)以及检索到文章的参考文献列表。我们从互联网资源中获取已发表和未发表研究的临床试验报告和综述,并检索临床试验数据库以查找正在进行的试验。
纳入18岁及以上接受择期手术的患者,在任何手术部位进行的随机、双盲、安慰剂对照或活性对照临床试验,若其将手术部位注射脂质体布比卡因与安慰剂或其他类型的镇痛方法进行比较。
两名综述作者独立考虑纳入试验、评估偏倚风险并提取数据。我们使用《Cochrane干预措施系统评价手册》中描述的标准统计技术进行数据分析,使用Review Manager 5.3软件。我们计划进行荟萃分析并为每个比较生成“结果总结”表,然而数据不足,无法确保得出具有临床意义的答案。因此,我们以叙述形式生成了两个“结果总结”表。我们尽可能使用GRADE评估证据质量。
我们确定了9项符合纳入标准的研究(10篇报告,1377名参与者)。四项旨在评估和证明疗效与安全性的II期剂量递增/递减试验提供了我们无法使用的汇总数据。在其余五项平行组研究(965名参与者)中,两项为安慰剂对照,三项使用盐酸布比卡因局部麻醉浸润作为对照。使用Cochrane工具,我们判断大多数研究总体偏倚风险不明确;然而,两项研究存在选择性报告偏倚的高风险,四项研究因样本量(每个治疗组少于50名参与者)存在偏倚的高风险。三项研究(551名参与者)报告了术后72小时内的主要结局——累积疼痛强度。与安慰剂相比,脂质体布比卡因在手术结束时(0小时)至72小时之间的累积疼痛评分较低(一项研究,极低质量)。与盐酸布比卡因相比,两项研究显示该结局无差异(极低质量证据),然而由于手术人群和手术方式(隆胸术与膝关节置换术)不同,我们未进行荟萃分析。未报告与使用脂质体布比卡因相关的严重不良事件,五项研究中均未报告因药物相关不良事件而退出研究(中等质量证据)。一项研究报告,与盐酸布比卡因相比,脂质体布比卡因在术后12小时的平均疼痛评分较低,但在术后24、48或72小时无差异(极低质量证据)。两项研究(382名参与者)报告,与安慰剂相比,首次术后使用阿片类药物的时间更长(低质量证据)。两项研究(325名参与者)报告了术后72小时内的阿片类药物总消耗量:一项研究报告,与安慰剂相比,脂质体布比卡因的累积阿片类药物消耗量较低(极低质量证据);一项研究报告,与盐酸布比卡因相比无差异(极低质量证据)。三项研究(492名参与者)报告了术后最初72小时内不需要术后使用阿片类药物的参与者百分比。在两项比较脂质体布比卡因与安慰剂的研究中,有一项显示接受脂质体布比卡因的参与者中不需要术后使用阿片类药物的人数较多(极低质量证据)。另外两项研究,一项与安慰剂比较,一项与盐酸布比卡因比较,发现阿片类药物需求无差异(极低质量证据)。由于研究之间存在显著异质性(I² = 92%),我们未汇总结果。所有纳入研究均报告了术后30天内的不良事件,恶心、便秘和呕吐最为常见。在五项平行组研究中,除疼痛外,均未进行或报告卫生经济学评估或患者报告的结局。使用GRADE评估,证据质量从中等至极低不等。主要限制是感兴趣结局的数据稀少。此外,一些研究存在高偏倚风险,导致进一步降级。
与安慰剂相比,手术部位使用脂质体布比卡因似乎确实能减轻术后疼痛,然而,目前有限的证据并未表明其优于盐酸布比卡因。未报告与药物相关的严重不良事件,也没有研究因药物相关不良事件而退出。总体而言,由于证据质量低且数量有限,我们对效应估计的信心有限,真实效应可能与我们的估计有很大差异。