Intravenous Ibuprofen for Laparoscopic Bariatric Surgery



Status:Completed
Conditions:Obesity Weight Loss
Therapuetic Areas:Endocrinology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:4/21/2016
Start Date:October 2012
End Date:March 2015

Use our guide to learn which trials are right for you!

Primary objective of this study is to test hypothesis that IV ibuprofen decreases 24 hours
morphine requirement using IV PCA in patients after laparoscopic bariatric surgery.
Secondary objective is to determine if it decreases respiratory depression measured using
RD, improves area under curve (AUC) for pain scores at rest (AUCr) and with cough (AUCa) and
pressure pain threshold (PPT) (important for mobilization). Tertiary objective is to compare
incidence of nausea/vomiting, sedation, itching, blood transfusion, over sedation, urinary
retention, GI or surgical bleeding, renal dysfunction, time to clears and baseline activity
in ibuprofen and control groups.

Investigators will recruit patients scheduled for laparoscopic bariatric surgery at Jacobi
Medical Center (100 patients with allowance for 20% drop-offs). Patients will be randomized
to IV Ibuprofen versus placebo to test if morphine usage can be decreased, pain control
improved, pressure pain thresholds increased and respiratory depression decreased.

Exclusion/withdrawal criteria:

Patients with history of ibuprofen or aspirin allergy, morphine allergy, opioid or
psychotropic medication use pre-operatively, patients who would show positive preoperative
U-tox screening, patients unable to sign consent and patients unable to understand or use
patient controlled analgesia (PCA) or report pain intensity will be excluded. Patients with
GFR<60 or history of GI bleed within 6 weeks will be excluded. Patients will be withdrawn
from the study if PCA would have to be discontinued, or the patient would develop acute
renal failure, GI bleed or post-surgical bleed. Intention to treat analysis will be
performed including the dropouts.

Patients' instructions and protocol:

Patients consented for the study will be educated about morphine PCA for pain control and
about pain reporting using NRS-11 and VAS scale at rest and with cough or during incentive
spirometry. They will receive instructions about Remmers Sleep Recorder (SagaTech Calgary,
Alberta, Canada), which includes continuous oximetry, and device will be provided for
overnight home screening preoperatively {Whitelaw,W.A. 2005;}. The sleep recorder data will
be reviewed pre-operatively and patients with respiratory disturbance index (RDI, measured
as oxygen desaturation event) >15/hour who do not have OSA diagnosis and do not use CPAP
will be referred for sleep study and/or CPAP titration before the surgery, Patients will be
educated on QST testing using pressure algometry with 1cm2 padded tip {Coronado 2010} and
will be given survey questionnaire (postoperative diary) for self-reporting of pain (VAS at
rest and with cough), nausea/vomiting, activity and side effects from medications as well as
satisfaction with recovery and pain control. Baseline pressure pain thresholds (N/cm2) will
be tested at abdomen (area of postoperative hyperalgesia) and the pulp of third finger
finger on the right (reference site) using average of three measurements per site.

On the day of surgery patients will be allocated to group A or B according to
randomization.com generated table for two groups with variable blocking factor. Group A and
B assignment to the ibuprofen versus control will be available to the pharmacy only until
the completion of the study and statistical analysis.

The pharmacy will store Ibuprofen and on the day of surgery will provide the covered bag of
ibuprofen 800mg versus saline solution labeled with the patient's name .Group assignment (A
or B) will be known to the pharmacy only. IV will be started and first dose of medication
will be given over 5-30 minutes preoperatively. In the subgroup of patients, where surgery
start time is delayed by one hour or more, PPT will be repeated before the start of the
surgery.

Patients will have standardized general anesthetic for the surgery. Intraoperative opioid
usage will be recorded. Laparoscopic ports will be infiltrated with local anesthetic.

800mg Ibuprofen or placebo infusion will be repeated every 6 hours for 24 hours
postoperatively.

In recovery room patients will be started on morphine patient controlled analgesia (morphine
PCA 0.5mg every 5 minutes while NPO, with ability to escalate the dose up to 1 mg every
5minutes per hospital PCA protocol if patient requires additional morphine rescue to control
the pain, uses PCA appropriately and demonstrates no side effects). Patients will have
antiemetics and morphine loading/rescue dose (4mg Q15minute max 16mg per PACU nurse
discretion) per standard hospital protocol. Patients will be continuously monitored
overnight per nursing protocol and in addition to that with Remmer's unit (pulse oximetry,
respiratory effort, respiratory flow, airway pressure). Pain score at rest and with cough
and nausea/vomiting will be assessed periodically and will be reported by patient in the
postoperative diary. Pain scores will be integrated separately over 24 hours to obtain area
under curve at rest (AUCr) and with cough or activity (AUCa) Overnight oximetry recordings
will be analyzed post hoc to determine RDI. Patients with PCA will be monitored per hospital
policy (Q1h x 12h, then Q2hx 12h). All bariatric patients are continuously monitored
overnight in the PACU or surgical step-down unit. Nurses taking care of the patient
routinely notify anesthesia and/or surgical team about significant apnea/hypopnea.

PCA usage log will be obtained from the pump and morphine given by the nurses will be added
to calculate postoperative morphine cumulative dose for 24 hours. If PCA is discontinued,
patient data will be analyzed as drop-off. Per hospital PCA policy in the event of excessive
sedation and/or respiratory depression (level of sedation 4) following actions are to be
taken:

- STOP PCA PUMP, stimulate patient, support respirations with bag valve mask as needed

- Have a coworker notify the Rapid Response Team. Arrange for BMV, O2, and suction.

- Hang Naloxone 0.8mg in 100ml 0.9% NS IVSS -continue until respirations are more than 9
b/m or a total of 0.8mg is infused.

Time 0 for the purposes of study will be time of admission to PACU. PPT will be tested in
the PACU in the subset of patients who are awake and wiling to perform QST testing, when
their pain is controlled with NRS<=4. QST will be repeated in qualifying patients (awake,
pain controlled) following day.

In addition investigators will record:

1. Transfusion requirement (number of units)

2. Difference between pre-operative and discharge hemoglobin

3. Requirement for surgical revision due to anastomotic leak

4. Incidence of wound infection

5. Readmission rate within 30 days

6. Preoperative and discharge GFR

7. Timed NRS-11 (nurse recorded) and VAS (self reported) for pain at rest and during cough
or incentive spirometry.

8. Area under the curve AUCr using NRS at rest and during incentive spirometry/cough
(AUCa). AUCr and AUCa will be separately integrated to area under curve for 24 hours.

9. Total dose of morphine given by nurses for 24 hours.

10. Morphine PCA usage (hourly and cumulative/24h)

11. Presence of nausea/vomiting for 24 hours

12. Antiemetic requirement (number of doses).

13. Time to oral tolerance (clears, solids) (hours)

14. Time to bowel movement (hours)

15. Time patient meets discharge criteria from the PACU (hours)

16. Time to discharge from PACU (hours)

17. Time to discharge from hospital (hours)

18. Respiratory disturbance index) baseline and postoperatively (from Remmers unit)

19. Incidence of desaturation to SpO2<95, <90 and <80% baseline and postoperatively (from
Remmers unit). Maximum FiO2 required postoperatively (excluding first 2 hours
immediately after surgery).

20. Incidence of over sedation (sedation score 3 and 4)

21. Naloxone requirement if any

22. Patient satisfaction scores

23. Time to out of bed to chair (hours)

24. Time to stand-up (hours)

25. Time to ambulation (hours)

26. Time to baseline physical activity (days)

27. Max temperature

28. Incidence of DVT

29. Reason for delayed discharge (>72 hours)

30. Incidence of readmission within 4 weeks

31. Incidence of reoperation within 4 weeks

Data will be analyzed using commercially available statistical software.

If dropouts to the study will be present, intent to treat analysis will be performed.

Metric scale data will be tested for normality of distribution (Kolmogorov-Smirnov test).
Categorical data will be presented as absolute frequency and relative distribution. For
normally distributed data, a t test for independent samples will be used to compare pre/post
differences between the treatment groups. Otherwise, a nonparametric Mann-Whitney test will
be used. Categorical data will be compared using chi square test or Fisher exact test for
groups <5. Bonferonni correction will be done for multiple comparisons.

After comparing groups for age, sex, BMI, co morbidities, surgical time, baseline pressure
pain thresholds investigators will investigate whether assignment into ibuprofen or saline
groups makes a difference In the primary, secondary and tertiary outcomes.

Our null hypothesis (H0) is that there will be no differences in cumulative 24h morphine
consumption, AUCa and AUCr for pain scores, and that there will be no change in pre/post
difference in RDI and pressure pain thresholds. In addition investigators hypothesize that
there will be no difference in the incidence of nausea/vomiting, discharge readiness,
patient satisfaction among the test and control groups

Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients scheduled for laparoscopic bariatric surgery at Jacobi Medical Center

Exclusion Criteria:

- Patients with history of ibuprofen or aspirin allergy

- morphine allergy

- opioid or psychotropic medication use pre-operatively

- positive preoperative U-tox screening

- unable to sign consent and patients unable to understand or use patient controlled
analgesia (PCA) or report pain intensity

- GFR <60 or history of GI bleed within 6 weeks
We found this trial at
1
site
1400 Pelham Parkway South
Bronx, New York 10461
(718) 918-5000
Jacobi Medical Center In 1955, the NYC Department of Hospitals opened a new, specialized care...
?
mi
from
Bronx, NY
Click here to add this to my saved trials