Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Terminated

TerminatedNCT02056301

A Comparison Trial Between PCA and Epidural Analgesia for Pectus Excavatum Repair

A Comparison Trial Between Patient Controlled Intravenous Analgesia (PCA) and Epidural Analgesia for Pectus Excavatum Repair

Status
Terminated
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
62 (actual)
Sponsor
Baylor College of Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The aim of this study is to compare the efficacy of epidural and IV analgesia in controlling pain in patients undergoing Nuss repair of pectus excavatum. The primary end point will be the mean pain score during postoperative days 0-4.

Detailed description

Pectus excavatum is a cartilaginous deformity that is the most common congenital anterior chest wall defect in children \[1\]. Children with this disease process often complain of dyspnea, decreased exercise tolerance, and shortness of breath implying a restrictive pulmonary deficit \[2\]. Besides the reported physical limitations, patients can also exhibit manifestations of psychological disturbances (poor body image and depression). Surgical repair has been correlated with enhanced quality of life and improvement in body image\[3\] with recent studies showing improved pulmonary function and cardiac output \[4, 5\]. Surgery initially introduced by Sauerbruch involved rib cartilage resection and sternal osteotomy. This open procedure was further modified and became \[6\] known as the Ravitch procedure. This was the mainstay for repair for over 40 years until the introduction of minimally invasive surgery without rib resection by Nuss and colleagues in 1987 \[7\]. The Nuss repair involves placing an intrathoracic brace through small lateral chest wall incisions aided by thoracoscopy. Similar to bracing the teeth, the Nuss procedure avoids osteotomy or rib cartilage resection \[8\]. The Nuss procedure is the most common minimally invasive procedure in use today to correct this condition and is the current standard of surgical practice. Complications from Nuss repair can range anywhere from 7% to 25% \[9\] and can occur for as long as the bar is in place. Pain control remains a major issue in the perioperative period as patients may require weeks to months of oral narcotics before becoming pain-free after correction of the pectus. A prospective multicenter study reported peak pain scores of 8 on a 0-10 scale in the postoperative period and a mean score of 3 at discharge \[4\]. Postoperative pain after pectus repair has been managed with IV opioids administered by patient controlled analgesia (PCA) devices and by thoracic epidural infusions of combinations of local anesthetics and opioids. It is unclear from published data which method is superior and different tertiary care centers in the USA have a preference for different methods.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGHydromorphoneIn keeping with standard practice at the TCH, the position of the thoracic epidural catheter tip will be confirmed by real time fluoroscopy and a single injection of 1 ml of omnipaque 180 mg/mL contrast. In keeping with current practice, a bolus of 0.2% ropivacaine 0.3 ml per kg (maximum dose 20 ml) will be administered in the epidural space to the patients in the TEA group at least 10 minutes prior to surgical incision.
DRUGMorphineThis device runs a basal infusion of pain medicine (morphine) intravenously with additional allowable patient controlled doses every 10 minutes

Timeline

Start date
2012-08-01
Primary completion
2019-04-10
Completion
2019-10-01
First posted
2014-02-05
Last updated
2020-06-11
Results posted
2020-06-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02056301. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.