Effects of Catheter Location Relative to Femoral Artery on Postoperative Analgesia for Continuous Adductor Canal Blocks
NCT ID: NCT03650504
Last Updated: 2018-08-28
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-08-24
2019-07-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Following written, informed consent, we will record baseline anthropomorphic information. All subjects will have a peripheral intravenous (IV) catheter inserted, standard noninvasive monitors applied, supplemental oxygen administered via a nasal cannula or face mask, and positioned supine. Midazolam and fentanyl will be titrated for patient comfort, while ensuring that patients remain responsive to verbal cues. The ultrasound will be placed to visualize the short axis (cross-section) of the adductor canal. If both sites (above femoral artery versus between femoral artery and vein) are acceptable for catheter insertion, the subject will be randomized using a computer-generated list (blocks of 8) to one of two treatment groups in a 1:1 ratio using sealed, opaque, consecutively numbered envelopes: (1) above femoral artery vs (2) between femoral artery and vein.
Catheter insertion will adhere to current UCSD standard-of-care. The only difference for subjects participating in the study will be that the specific catheter insertion location will be determined randomly, instead of the physician simply choosing him/herself. All catheters will be placed by a regional anesthesia fellow under the direct supervision and guidance of a regional anesthesia attending. All catheters will be placed using standard UCSD perineural catheter techniques.
The area of insertion will be cleaned with chlorhexidine gluconate and isopropyl alcohol, and a clear, sterile, fenestrated drape applied. The ultrasound probe will be placed to visualize the short-axis (cross-section) of the target nerve(s). A 17-gauge needle (FlexTip, Teleflex Medical, Triangle Research Park, NC, USA) will be used to place all perineural catheters. The catheter-placement needle will be inserted through the skin wheal, advanced in-plane beneath the US transducer and directed to the target nerve as described below:
"Above-the-artery": The needle will be directed below the nerve to about five o'clock of the artery. The needle will then be advanced to twelve o'clock of the artery while opening the adductor canal space with saline until adequate opening of the canal is realized. At that point, the catheter is placed above the artery.
"Between-the-artery-and-vein": The needle will be directed above the nerve and placed at one o'clock of the artery. Then the needle will be positioned at about six o'clock of the artery and advanced between the femoral artery and vein with simultaneous pressure until the adductor canal opens appropriately. The perineural catheter will be placed between the artery and vein.
Saline (10 mL) will be administered via the needle to dilate the space where the catheter is to be inserted. A flexible non-stimulating perineural catheter will be inserted 3-5 cm past the needle tip; and the needle withdrawn over the catheter. A 30 mL bolus of lidocaine 2% with 1:400,000 of epinephrine will then be administered through the catheter.
Intraoperatively, patients may receive a general and/or neuraxial anesthetic that would be determined by the intraoperative anesthesia provider. Additional boluses of 10 mL 2% lidocaine with epinephrine may be given, if needed, via the perineural catheter.
Perineural infusion: An infusion pump will be attached to each subject's perineural catheter. The pump will provide ropivacaine 0.2% at 6 mL/h and a 4 mL patient-controlled bolus with a 30-minute lockout.
Data collection: All data collection will be through standard UCSD nursing/therapy electronic medical record notes for the day following surgery.
Primary endpoint: The primary endpoint will be the average pain on post operative day 1 following surgery as measured on a numeric rating scale (0-10, 0=no pain, 10=worst imaginable pain) during the time periods of 08:00-24:00.
Secondary endpoints: Other data collected will include: (1) total procedure duration (from needle-in to needle-out), (2) total opioid consumption on postoperative day 1, (3) worst pain score measured on a numeric rating scale, (4) number of intra-procedural vascular punctures, (5) total local anesthetic infused in 24 hours following surgery, and (6) distance ambulated on postoperative day 1 with first session of physical therapy.
Sample size estimates:
The primary analysis will utilize the Wilcoxon Rank Sum test. The mean postoperative day 1 pain scores following adductor canal catheter placement for total knee arthroplasty is 4.12 with standard deviation = 1.74.2 The null hypothesis is that the "above-the-artery" group is inferior to the "between-the-artery-and-vein" group. The alternative hypothesis is that the "above-the-artery" group in non-inferior to the "between-the-artery-and-vein" group. Assuming a non-inferiority limit of 1.5, power = 0.80, two-side alpha = 0.05, we will require 17 patients in each group (total = 34). To account for dropouts, we plan to recruit 20 patients in each group, totaling 40 patients all together.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Above Artery Group
Above Artery Catheter Placement
Nerve catheter placed between superficial femoral artery and sartorial muscle
Between Artery and Vein Group
Between Artery and Vein Placement
Nerve catheter placed between superficial femoral artery and femoral vein
Interventions
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Above Artery Catheter Placement
Nerve catheter placed between superficial femoral artery and sartorial muscle
Between Artery and Vein Placement
Nerve catheter placed between superficial femoral artery and femoral vein
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* history of peripheral neuropathy, neuropathic pain, or chronic pain requiring opioid medications.
* Pregnant females and prisoners
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Rodney Gabriel MD
UNKNOWN
Matthew Swisher MD
UNKNOWN
University of California, San Diego
OTHER
Responsible Party
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John J. Finneran IV, MD
Assistant Clinical Professor
Central Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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180718
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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