Taenzer Andreas H, Sites Brian D, Kluger Roman, Barrington Michael
Anesthesiology, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
Anesthesiology, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Reg Anesth Pain Med. 2019 Sep 6. doi: 10.1136/rapm-2019-100650.
Variation in clinical practice is often considered unwarranted when it does not reflect patient preference or evidence-based medicine. Complications from regional anesthesia such as nerve injury and systemic toxicity are dose dependent. It is currently unclear if there is significant variation with the dosing of local anesthetics (LA) in the context of the modern practice of peripheral regional anesthesia.
We analyzed data from the International Registry of Regional Anesthesia that include prospective data on peripheral regional anesthesia procedures from 21 centers located around the world. Using data from years 2011 to 2017, our primary aim was to characterize the degree of variation in dosing of LA for the top 10 most commonly performed single injection peripheral nerve blocks. Our secondary aim was to identify potential drivers of this variation.
Among the 26 457 peripheral blocks performed, mean (±SD) LA dose per block in ropivacaine equivalents was 125.1±51.2 mg and 1.6±0.7 for mg/kg. There was large variation across all block types, with the highest variation (measured by interdecile range) in axillary blocks (143.8 mg) and lowest in interscalene blocks (83.3 mg). In a regression analysis, dose was primarily associated with the hospital (Cohen's f=0.37) where the block was administered and block type (f=0.38), less so with age (f=0.02), weight (f=0.12), gender (f=0.05) or LA (f=0.17) used. Hospital site had strong impact on variation in LA dose (f=0.88). Variation was not significantly associated with number of blocks performed by hospital site.
Large variation in dosing for regional blocks exists within and among hospitals, which is unlikely to be warranted. For many blocks, the variation of dosing is larger than the mean dose. Hospital site had strong impact on variation in LA dose and moderate impact on mean LA dose.
当临床实践中的差异未反映患者偏好或循证医学时,通常被认为是不合理的。区域麻醉的并发症,如神经损伤和全身毒性,具有剂量依赖性。目前尚不清楚在现代外周区域麻醉实践中,局部麻醉药(LA)的剂量是否存在显著差异。
我们分析了国际区域麻醉注册中心的数据,这些数据包括来自全球21个中心的外周区域麻醉手术的前瞻性数据。利用2011年至2017年的数据,我们的主要目的是描述最常进行的10种单次注射外周神经阻滞中LA剂量的差异程度。我们的次要目的是确定这种差异的潜在驱动因素。
在进行的26457例外周阻滞中,每例罗哌卡因等效剂量的平均(±标准差)LA剂量为125.1±51.2mg,每千克体重为1.6±0.7mg。所有阻滞类型之间存在很大差异,腋窝阻滞的差异最大(以十分位数间距衡量为143.8mg),锁骨下阻滞的差异最小(83.3mg)。在回归分析中,剂量主要与实施阻滞的医院(科恩f值=0.37)和阻滞类型(f值=0.38)相关,与年龄(f值=0.02)、体重(f值=0.12)、性别(f值=0.05)或所用的LA(f值=0.17)的相关性较小。医院地点对LA剂量的差异有很大影响(f值=0.88)。差异与医院地点进行的阻滞数量没有显著关联。
医院内部和医院之间区域阻滞的剂量存在很大差异,这很可能是不合理的。对于许多阻滞,剂量差异大于平均剂量。医院地点对LA剂量差异有很大影响,对平均LA剂量有中等影响。