Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03407209

Compared Efficacy of Patient-controlled Epidural Analgesia With or Without Automatic Boluses

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
462 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Caen · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Epidural analgesia is a significant feature of the everyday experience of the delivery room. Its benefits on the maternal experience and in terms of security has been widely demonstrated. However, some women under epidural analgesia have experienced motor block, which has been found to contribute in the lengthening of the duration of labor, dystocia and instrumental delivery. Therefore, in recent years, reducing these side effects by modifying local anesthetics, concentration of local anesthetic and injected volume has been a priority, with one aim: optimize analgesia without motor blockage. Although epidural analgesia was first provided by continuous epidural infusion, the efficacy of intermittent epidural bolus has been demonstrated. Small regularly spaced intermittent boluses lead to a more extensive and symmetrical spread of local anesthetic in the epidural space. These findings have led to a new kind of administration combining epidural intermittent boluses with patient-controlled boluses called PEIB (Patient Epidural Intermittent Bolus). On clinical grounds, PEIB is associated with reduced local anesthetic consumption and higher maternal satisfaction. While PEIB is experimentally and clinically approved, incidence of maternal motor block and instrumental vaginal delivery don't decrease significantly with this programming. We hypothesized that automatic intermittent boluses can lead to an accumulation of local anesthetic overlapping with patient bolus. This accumulation can be the source of motor block, dystocia and instrumental delivery. Therefore, we propose to lead a monocentric prospective randomized study upon 308 patients in order to compare PEIB to epidural analgesia totally controlled by the patient. We expect a lower consumption of local anesthetic and a lower incidence of motor block, dystocia and instrumental delivery with the free automatic bolus programming.

Detailed description

Local anesthetic used: levobupivacaine 0,625mg/ml Solution prepared with 200 ml of levobupivacaine 0,625mg/ml associated with analgesic adjuvants: sufentanyl 50 micrograms and clonidine 75 micrograms. Randomization between: \- PEIB: * automatic hourly bolus: 8ml (5mg) on 3 min * patient controlled bolus: 8ml (5mg) on 3 min * refractory period: 8min * continuous infusion: 0 * maximum dose: 65mg/4h or \- FREE programming: epidural analgesia totally controlled by the patient * automatic hourly bolus: 0 * patient controlled bolus: 8ml (5mg) on 3 min * refractory period: 8min * continuous infusion: 0 * maximum dose: 65mg/4h Supervision and care consistent with french expert conference of the SFAR (Société Française d'Anesthésie-Réanimation) on management of women under epidural analgesia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERconsumption of local anesthetic measurementconsumption of local anesthetic measurement in both groups

Timeline

Start date
2016-11-06
Primary completion
2017-08-16
Completion
2018-01-01
First posted
2018-01-23
Last updated
2018-01-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03407209. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.