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CompletedNCT03414359

Comparison of Chloroprocaine vs Lidocaine for Epidural Anesthesia in Cesarean Delivery

A Randomized, Double-blind Study Comparing 3% Chloroprocaine Versus 2 % Lidocaine/ Epinephrine/ Bicarbonate/ Fentanyl for Epidural Anesthesia in Elective Cesarean Delivery

Status
Completed
Phase
EARLY_Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
70 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Arkansas · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Regional anesthesia is commonly used for elective and emergency cesarean delivery. It provides numerous safety advantages when compared to general anesthesia for both the mother and fetus1. Epidurals also have the added benefit of being able to provide pain relief throughout labor and in the event of cesarean delivery, epidural analgesia can be "extended" to provide surgical anesthesia. Numerous studies have been performed to assess the onset times of various local anesthetics when administered through an epidural catheter. Attempts to reduce anesthetic onset time and improve the quality of intraoperative analgesia have been attempted by using different local anesthetic solutions and by the addition of other drugs to the epidural solution (such as epinephrine, fentanyl and sodium bicarbonate).

Detailed description

Regional anesthesia is commonly used for elective and emergency cesarean delivery. It provides numerous safety advantages when compared to general anesthesia for both the mother and fetus1. Epidurals also have the added benefit of being able to provide pain relief throughout labor and in the event of cesarean delivery, epidural analgesia can be "extended" to provide surgical anesthesia. Numerous studies have been performed to assess the onset times of various local anesthetics when administered through an epidural catheter. Attempts to reduce anesthetic onset time and improve the quality of intraoperative analgesia have been attempted by using different local anesthetic solutions and by the addition of other drugs to the epidural solution (such as epinephrine, fentanyl and sodium bicarbonate). A recent meta-analysis concluded that the optimum local anesthetic solution for extending a labor epidural from analgesia to surgical anesthesia has yet to be determined 2. In 1994, a retrospective study compared 1.5% lidocaine/bicarbonate/epinephrine mixture to 3% chloroprocaine in parturients with pre-existing epidural catheters for urgent cesarean delivery3. It was found that the chloroprocaine group had a significantly faster onset of anesthesia compared to the lidocaine group. Both drugs provided excellent anesthesia. However a high quality study comparing 3% chloroprocaine with 2% lidocaine/ epinephrine/ bicarbonate/ fentanyl (LEBF) in terms of anesthetic onset times has yet to be performed. Women in labor frequently request an epidural to provide pain relief. Epidural pain relief is commonly provided by the administration of a low concentration of local anesthetic and opioid solution through an epidural catheter. This solution is delivered by an automated epidural infusion pump. In the event that a cesarean delivery is required, the pre-existing epidural is frequently used to administer a higher concentration anesthetic solution to allow pain free cesarean delivery. This is commonly referred to as an "epidural top up" or as an "extension of the epidural block." Standard practice at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) for an epidural top up is Lidocaine, Epinephrine, Bicarbonate and Fentanyl (LEBF) or 3% chloroprocaine. These two mixtures are routinely and almost exclusively used for epidural cesarean delivery. The decision on which mixture to use is based solely on physician preference. It is likely that the LBEF mixture is used more frequently but the investigators consider both local anesthetic mixtures as equals and the standard of care at UAMS. The investigators do not use any other local anesthetics (unless there are very specific reasons).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUG2% Lidocaine2% Lidocaine using a combined spinal-epidural (CSE)
DRUG3% Chloroprocaine3% Chloroprocaine using a combined spinal-epidural (CSE)

Timeline

Start date
2018-02-15
Primary completion
2019-03-27
Completion
2019-03-27
First posted
2018-01-29
Last updated
2020-04-13
Results posted
2020-04-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03414359. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.