Division of General Surgery, Department of Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 Sep 28;15(9):e0239896. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239896. eCollection 2020.
Pain management is the pillar of caring for patients with traumatic rib fractures. Intravenous lidocaine (IVL) is a well-established non-opioid analgesic for post-operative pain, yet its efficacy has yet to be investigated in trauma patients. We hypothesized that IVL is associated with decreased inpatient opioid requirements among patients with rib fractures.
We retrospectively evaluated adult patients presenting to our Level 1 trauma center with isolated chest wall injuries. After 1:1 propensity score matching patients who received vs did not receive IVL, we compared the two groups' average daily opioid use, opioid use in the last 24 hours of admission, and pain scores during admissions hours 24-48. We performed multivariable linear regression for these outcomes (with sensitivity analysis for the opioid use outcomes), adjusting for age as a moderating factor and controlling for hospital length of stay and injury severity.
We identified 534 patients, among whom 226 received IVL. Those who received IVL were older and had more serious injury. Compared to propensity-score matched patients who did not receive IVL, patients who received IVL had similar average daily opioid use and pain scores, but 40% lower opioid use during the last 24 hours of admission (p = 0.002). Multivariable regression-with and without sensitivity analysis-did not show an effect of IVL on any outcomes.
IVL was crudely associated with decreased opioid requirements in the last 24 hours of admission, the time period associated with opioid use at 90 days post-discharge. However, we did not observe beneficial effects of IVL on multivariable adjusted analyses; we are conducting a randomized control trial to further evaluate IVL's opioid-sparing effects for patients with rib fractures.
疼痛管理是创伤性肋骨骨折患者护理的基础。静脉注射利多卡因(IVL)是一种经过充分验证的非阿片类镇痛药,可用于术后疼痛,但尚未在创伤患者中进行研究。我们假设 IVL 可降低肋骨骨折患者的住院内阿片类药物需求。
我们回顾性评估了因单纯胸壁损伤而到我们的一级创伤中心就诊的成年患者。在 1:1 倾向评分匹配接受 IVL 治疗与未接受 IVL 治疗的患者后,我们比较了两组患者的平均每日阿片类药物使用量、入院后 24 小时内的阿片类药物使用量以及入院后 24-48 小时的疼痛评分。我们对这些结果进行了多变量线性回归分析(对阿片类药物使用结果进行了敏感性分析),并调整了年龄作为调节因素,同时控制了住院时间和损伤严重程度。
我们确定了 534 例患者,其中 226 例接受了 IVL。接受 IVL 的患者年龄更大,损伤更严重。与未接受 IVL 的倾向评分匹配患者相比,接受 IVL 的患者的平均每日阿片类药物使用量和疼痛评分相似,但入院后最后 24 小时的阿片类药物使用量低 40%(p = 0.002)。多变量回归分析(包括和不包括敏感性分析)均未显示 IVL 对任何结果有影响。
IVL 与入院后最后 24 小时内阿片类药物需求减少有关,这一时间与出院后 90 天内阿片类药物使用有关。然而,我们在多变量调整分析中未观察到 IVL 的有益效果;我们正在进行一项随机对照试验,以进一步评估 IVL 对肋骨骨折患者的阿片类药物节省作用。