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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07523321

Dexmedetomidine-esketamine Combination and Moderate-to-severe Pain After Spinal Surgery

Effect of Perioperative Use of Dexmedetomidine-esketamine Combination on Incidence of Moderate-to-severe Pain After Spinal Surgery: a Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
274 (estimated)
Sponsor
Peking University First Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Spinal surgery is generally followed by severe postoperative pain, and poor pain control may cause adverse outcomes such as cardiovascular events, neurocognitive disorders, and chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). In previous studies, perioperative use of dexmedetomidine or esketamine is each associated with improved analgesia after surgery. Recent studies suggest that combined use of dexmedetomidine and esketamine may produce synergetic effects in improving analgesia. This trial is designed to test the hypothesis that perioperative combined use of dexmedetomidine and esketamine may improve analgesia and reduce moderate-to-severe pain in patients after spinal surgery.

Detailed description

Spinal surgery is genrally followed by severe pain due to extensive trauma. The reported rate of moderate-to-severe pain ranged from 30% to 63%. Uncontrolled postoperative pain is associated with worse outcomes including cardiovascular events, neurocognitive complications, and chronic postsurgical pain. Opioids are the main stay of analgesia after spinal surgery. However, high dose opioids provoke side effects such as nausea and vomiting, delirium, and even respiratory depression. Multimodel analgesia is suggested for these patients. Dexmedetomidine is a highly selective alpha 2 adrenergic receptor agonist with sedative, analgesic, and anxiolytic effects. A meta-analysis suggest that, for patients undergoing spinal surgery, intraoperative dexmedetomidine improved early postoperative analgesia, but the effect did not persist beyond 6 hours. Ketamine is a noncompetitive N-Methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptor antagonist and has been used as an anesthetic and analgesic for decades. Esketamine is the S-enantiomer of ketamine and has an analgesic potent of approximately 2 times of that of ketamine. Small sample size studies in patients undergoing spinal surgery showed that intra- or postoperative use of subanesthetic dose esketamine improved analgesia and reduced rescue analgesics. The analgesic effects of dexmedetomidine and esketamine are dose-dependent. However, routine dose dexmedetomidine may increase bradycardia and hypotension, and even subanethetic dose esketamine may produce neuropsychiatric symptoms. Combined use of dexmedetomdine and esketamine may augment analgesic and sedative effects while decreasing side effects. In a previous study, using low-dose dexmedetomidine (1 ug/ml) and esketamine (0.25 mg/ml) as supplements to self-controlled sufentanil analgesia improved pain relief and sleep quality after spinal surgery, but the rate of moderate-to-severe pain remained high. In a recent study, when used as a supplement to sufentanil analgesia, increasing esketamine dose to 0.5 mg/ml did not significantly improve analgesia, whereas increasing esketamine dose to 0.75 mg/ml increased nausea and vomiting. In available studies, use of dexmedetomidine and/or esketamine were mostly limited to either intra- or postoperative period. Introperative use of the combination only improve early postoperative analgesia. Whereas postoperative use of the combination did not have effects on peak intraoperative stress. It is reasonable to hypothesize that using dexmedetomidine-esketamine combination during both the intra- and postoperative periods may provide better analgesia in patients after spinal surgery.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGCombined dexmedetomidine-esketamine administrationDuring anesthesia, a loading dose (0.2 ml/kg) of dexmedetomidine-esketamine (DEX-ESK) combination (DEX 2 ug/ml; ESK 1 mg/ml) will be infused after anesthesia induction (DEX 0.4 ug/kg; ESK 0.2 mg/kg), followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h (DEX 0.2 ug/kg/h; ESK 0.1 mg/kg/h) until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with dexmedetomidine (DEX 1.5 ug/ml), esketamine (ESK 0.5 mg/ml), and sufentanil (1.25 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml boluses (DEX 3.0 ug, ESK 1 mg, and sufentanil 2.5 ug) with a 8-10-minute lockout interval and a 1-ml/h (DEX 1.5 ug/h, ESK 0.5 mg/h, and sufentanil 1.25 ug/h) background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.
DRUGPlacebo administrationDuring anesthesia, a loading dose (0.2 ml/kg) of normal saline will be infused after anesthesia induction, followed by a continuous infusion at 0.1 ml/kg/h until 1 hour before the expected end of surgery. After surgery, patient-controlled intravenous analgesia will be established with sufentanil (1.25 ug/ml), programmed to deliver 2-ml boluses (sufentanil 2.5 ug) with a 8-10-minute lockout interval and a 1-ml/h (sufentanil 1.25 ug/h) background infusion, and used for up to 48 hours.

Timeline

Start date
2026-04-01
Primary completion
2027-04-01
Completion
2027-05-01
First posted
2026-04-13
Last updated
2026-04-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07523321. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.