Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative Care, and Pain Medicine, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Neuroscience and Physiology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
Trials. 2024 Jan 19;25(1):67. doi: 10.1186/s13063-023-07884-y.
Mastectomies are commonly performed and strongly associated with chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP), more specifically termed postmastectomy pain syndrome (PMPS), with 25-60% of patients reporting pain 3 months after surgery. PMPS interferes with function, recovery, and compliance with adjuvant therapy. Importantly, it is associated with chronic opioid use, as a recent study showed that 1 in 10 patients continue to use opioids at least 3 months after curative surgery. The majority of PMPS patients are women, and, over the past 10 years, women have outpaced men in the rate of growth in opioid dependence. Standard perioperative multimodal analgesia is only modestly effective in prevention of CPSP. Thus, interventions to reduce CPSP and PMPS are urgently needed. Ketamine is well known to improve pain and reduce opioid use in the acute postoperative period. Additionally, ketamine has been shown to control mood in studies of anxiety and depression. By targeting acute pain and improving mood in the perioperative period, ketamine may be able to prevent the development of CPSP.
Ketamine analgesia for long-lasting pain relief after surgery (KALPAS) is a phase 3, multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial to study the effectiveness of ketamine in reducing PMPS. The study compares continuous perioperative ketamine infusion vs single-dose ketamine in the postanesthesia care unit vs placebo for reducing PMPS. Participants are followed for 1 year after surgery. The primary outcome is pain at the surgical site at 3 months after the index surgery as assessed with the Brief Pain Inventory-short form pain severity subscale.
This project is part of the NIH Helping to End Addiction Long-term (HEAL) Initiative, a nationwide effort to address the opioid public health crisis. This study can substantially impact perioperative pain management and can contribute significantly to combatting the opioid epidemic.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05037123. Registered on September 8, 2021.
乳房切除术是一种常见的手术,与慢性术后疼痛(CPSP)密切相关,更具体地称为乳腺癌根治术后疼痛综合征(PMPS),有 25-60%的患者在手术后 3 个月报告疼痛。PMPS 会干扰功能、恢复和辅助治疗的依从性。重要的是,它与慢性阿片类药物的使用有关,因为最近的一项研究表明,10 名患者中就有 1 名至少在根治性手术后 3 个月仍继续使用阿片类药物。大多数 PMPS 患者为女性,在过去 10 年中,女性在阿片类药物依赖增长率方面超过了男性。标准围手术期多模式镇痛对预防 CPSP 的效果仅为中等。因此,迫切需要采取干预措施来减少 CPSP 和 PMPS。氯胺酮在急性术后期间已被证实可改善疼痛并减少阿片类药物的使用。此外,氯胺酮已被证明可在焦虑和抑郁的研究中控制情绪。通过针对围手术期的急性疼痛和改善情绪,氯胺酮可能能够预防 CPSP 的发生。
术后长效止痛的氯胺酮镇痛(KALPAS)是一项 3 期、多中心、随机、安慰剂对照、双盲试验,旨在研究氯胺酮在减少 PMPS 方面的有效性。该研究比较了连续围手术期氯胺酮输注与术后护理单元单次剂量氯胺酮与安慰剂在减少 PMPS 方面的效果。参与者在手术后 1 年进行随访。主要结局是在索引手术后 3 个月时用简明疼痛量表-短式疼痛严重程度子量表评估手术部位的疼痛。
该项目是 NIH 帮助终结阿片类药物滥用长期(HEAL)倡议的一部分,这是一项全国性努力,旨在解决阿片类药物公共卫生危机。这项研究可以极大地影响围手术期疼痛管理,并为对抗阿片类药物流行做出重大贡献。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05037123。注册于 2021 年 9 月 8 日。