Department of Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, Medical Research Institute, Pusan National University Hospital, Busan.
Department of Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, School of Medicine, Pusan National University, Yangsan, Republic of Korea.
Pain Physician. 2020 Jan;23(1):37-47.
Compared to acute postsurgical pain, studies regarding the role of ketamine in persistent postsurgical pain (PPSP) are limited.
The aim of this clinical trial was to test if intraoperative low-dose ketamine without postoperative infusion would reduce PPSP development after breast cancer surgery.
We used a randomized, double-blinded, placebo study design.
This study was conducted at Pusan National University Hospital, Republic of Korea, between December 2013 and August 2016.
A total of 184 patients scheduled for breast cancer surgery were randomly assigned to either the control or ketamine group. Before skin incision, a bolus (0.5 mg/kg of ketamine or placebo), followed by a continuous infusion (0.12 mg/kg/h of ketamine or placebo), was administered until the end of the surgery. The patients were interviewed via telephone 1, 3, and 6 months after surgery. The first question was whether the patient had surgery-related pain. If answered affirmatively, questions from the Numeric Rating Scale for pain at rest (NRSr) and for coughing (NRSd) were also asked. Our primary outcome was the incidence of PPSP at 3 months after surgery.
For PPSP analysis, 168 patients were included. The number of patients who experienced pain was significantly lower in the ketamine group at 3 months (86.9% in the control group vs 69.0% in the ketamine group, P = .005) postoperatively. However, the NRSr and NRSd did not differ between the groups throughout the follow-up.
There were no postoperative low-dose ketamine infusion groups to compare due to hospital regulations. Dosage of ketamine was too low to reduce the severity of PPSP. And by using propofol and remifentanil for anesthesia, different results can be deduced with volatile anesthetics. Data from written questionnaires would have been more specific than telephone interviews for long-term assessment.
Though intraoperative low-dose ketamine without postoperative infusion significantly reduced the incidence of PPSP up to 3 months after breast cancer surgery, it failed to reduce clinically significant PPSP and improve patients' quality of life.
Analgesia, breast cancer, chronic pain, ketamine, mastectomy, morphine, pain, postoperative, propofol.
与急性术后疼痛相比,关于氯胺酮在持续性术后疼痛(PPSP)中的作用的研究有限。
本临床试验旨在检验术中给予小剂量氯胺酮而不进行术后输注是否会减少乳腺癌手术后 PPSP 的发生。
我们采用随机、双盲、安慰剂对照研究设计。
本研究在韩国釜山大学医院进行,时间为 2013 年 12 月至 2016 年 8 月。
共有 184 例拟行乳腺癌手术的患者被随机分配至对照组或氯胺酮组。在切开皮肤前,给予负荷量(氯胺酮 0.5mg/kg 或安慰剂),随后给予持续输注(氯胺酮 0.12mg/kg/h 或安慰剂),直至手术结束。术后通过电话对患者进行 1、3 和 6 个月的访谈。第一个问题是患者是否有与手术相关的疼痛。如果回答为是,还会询问静息时数字评分量表(NRSr)和咳嗽时数字评分量表(NRSd)的疼痛评分。我们的主要结局是术后 3 个月时 PPSP 的发生率。
在 PPSP 分析中,共有 168 例患者入组。术后 3 个月时,氯胺酮组发生疼痛的患者比例显著低于对照组(86.9%比 69.0%,P=0.005)。然而,在整个随访期间,两组的 NRSr 和 NRSd 均无差异。
由于医院规定,没有术后给予小剂量氯胺酮输注的组进行比较。氯胺酮的剂量太低,无法减轻 PPSP 的严重程度。并且由于使用丙泊酚和瑞芬太尼进行麻醉,使用挥发性麻醉剂可能会得出不同的结果。对于长期评估,书面问卷的数据会比电话访谈更具体。
尽管术中给予小剂量氯胺酮而不进行术后输注可显著降低乳腺癌手术后 3 个月内 PPSP 的发生率,但未能减轻临床上显著的 PPSP 和改善患者的生活质量。
镇痛,乳腺癌,慢性疼痛,氯胺酮,乳房切除术,吗啡,疼痛,手术后,丙泊酚。