Loizides Sofronis, Gurusamy Kurinchi Selvan, Nagendran Myura, Rossi Michele, Guerrini Gian Piero, Davidson Brian R
Department of General Surgery, St Richard's Hospital Chichester, Spitalfield Lane, Chichester, UK, PO19 6SE.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 12;2014(3):CD007049. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007049.pub2.
While laparoscopic cholecystectomy is generally considered to be less painful than open surgery, pain is one of the important reasons for delayed discharge after day surgery resulting in overnight stay following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The safety and effectiveness of local anaesthetic wound infiltration in people undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy is not known.
To assess the benefits and harms of local anaesthetic wound infiltration in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy and to identify the best method of local anaesthetic wound infiltration with regards to the type of local anaesthetic, dosage, and time of administration of the local anaesthetic.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Science Citation Index Expanded until February 2013 to identify studies of relevance to this review. We included randomised clinical trials for benefit and quasi-randomised and comparative non-randomised studies for treatment-related harms.
Only randomised clinical trials (irrespective of language, blinding, or publication status) comparing local anaesthetic wound infiltration versus placebo, no intervention, or inactive control during laparoscopic cholecystectomy, trials comparing different local anaesthetic agents for local anaesthetic wound infiltration, and trials comparing the different times of local anaesthetic wound infiltration were considered for the review.
Two review authors collected the data independently. We analysed the data with both fixed-effect and random-effects meta-analysis models using RevMan. For each outcome, we calculated the risk ratio (RR) or mean difference (MD) with 95% confidence interval (CI).
Twenty-six trials fulfilled the inclusion criteria of the review. All the 26 trials except one trial of 30 participants were at high risk of bias. Nineteen of the trials with 1263 randomised participants provided data for this review. Ten of the 19 trials compared local anaesthetic wound infiltration versus inactive control. One of the 19 trials compared local anaesthetic wound infiltration with two inactive controls, normal saline and no intervention. Two of the 19 trials had four arms comparing local anaesthetic wound infiltration with inactive controls in the presence and absence of co-interventions to decrease pain after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Four of the 19 trials had three or more arms that could be included for the comparison of local anaesthetic wound infiltration versus inactive control and different methods of local anaesthetic wound infiltration. The remaining two trials compared different methods of local anaesthetic wound infiltration.Most trials included only low anaesthetic risk people undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy. Seventeen trials randomised a total of 1095 participants to local anaesthetic wound infiltration (587 participants) versus no local anaesthetic wound infiltration (508 participants). Various anaesthetic agents were used but bupivacaine was the commonest local anaesthetic used. There was no mortality in either group in the seven trials that reported mortality (0/280 (0%) in local anaesthetic infiltration group versus 0/259 (0%) in control group). The effect of local anaesthetic on the proportion of people who developed serious adverse events was imprecise and compatible with increase or no difference in serious adverse events (seven trials; 539 participants; 2/280 (0.8%) in local anaesthetic group versus 1/259 (0.4%) in control; RR 2.00; 95% CI 0.19 to 21.59; very low quality evidence). None of the serious adverse events were related to local anaesthetic wound infiltration. None of the trials reported patient quality of life. The proportion of participants who were discharged as day surgery patients was higher in the local anaesthetic infiltration group than in the no local anaesthetic infiltration group (one trial; 97 participants; 33/50 (66.0%) in the local anaesthetic group versus 20/47 (42.6%) in the control group; RR 1.55; 95% CI 1.05 to 2.28; very low quality evidence). The effect of local anaesthetic on the length of hospital stay was compatible with a decrease, increase, or no difference in the length of hospital stay between the two groups (four trials; 327 participants; MD -0.26 days; 95% CI -0.67 to 0.16; very low quality evidence). The pain scores as measured by the visual analogue scale (0 to 10 cm) were lower in the local anaesthetic infiltration group than the control group at 4 to 8 hours (13 trials; 806 participants; MD -1.33 cm on the VAS; 95% CI -1.54 to -1.12; very low quality evidence) and 9 to 24 hours (12 trials; 756 participants; MD -0.36 cm on the VAS; 95% CI -0.53 to -0.20; very low quality evidence). The effect of local anaesthetic on the time taken to return to normal activity between the two groups was imprecise and compatible with a decrease, increase, or no difference in the time taken to return to normal activity (two trials; 195 participants; MD 0.14 days; 95% CI -0.59 to 0.87; very low quality evidence). None of the trials reported on return to work.Four trials randomised a total of 149 participants to local anaesthetic wound infiltration prior to skin incision (74 participants) versus local anaesthetic wound infiltration at the end of surgery (75 participants). Two trials randomised a total of 176 participants to four different local anaesthetics (bupivacaine, levobupivacaine, ropivacaine, neosaxitoxin). Although there were differences between the groups in some outcomes the changes were not consistent. There was no evidence to support the preference of one local anaesthetic over another or to prefer administration of local anaesthetic at a specific time compared with another.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Serious adverse events were rare in studies evaluating local anaesthetic wound infiltration (very low quality evidence). There is very low quality evidence that infiltration reduces pain in low anaesthetic risk people undergoing elective laparoscopic cholecystectomy. However, the clinical importance of this reduction in pain is likely to be small. Further randomised clinical trials at low risk of systematic and random errors are necessary. Such trials should include important clinical outcomes such as quality of life and time to return to work in their assessment.
虽然腹腔镜胆囊切除术通常被认为比开放手术疼痛轻,但疼痛是日间手术延迟出院的重要原因之一,这导致腹腔镜胆囊切除术后需要过夜住院。局部麻醉伤口浸润在接受腹腔镜胆囊切除术患者中的安全性和有效性尚不清楚。
评估局部麻醉伤口浸润在接受腹腔镜胆囊切除术患者中的益处和危害,并确定在局部麻醉剂类型、剂量和给药时间方面局部麻醉伤口浸润的最佳方法。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、EMBASE和科学引文索引扩展版,直至2013年2月,以识别与本综述相关的研究。我们纳入了关于益处的随机临床试验以及关于治疗相关危害的半随机和比较性非随机研究。
本综述仅考虑比较局部麻醉伤口浸润与安慰剂、无干预或腹腔镜胆囊切除术中无效对照的随机临床试验(无论语言、盲法或发表状态如何),比较局部麻醉伤口浸润不同局部麻醉剂的试验,以及比较局部麻醉伤口浸润不同时间的试验。
两位综述作者独立收集数据。我们使用RevMan通过固定效应和随机效应荟萃分析模型分析数据。对于每个结局,我们计算风险比(RR)或均值差(MD)及95%置信区间(CI)。
26项试验符合本综述的纳入标准。除一项30名参与者的试验外,所有26项试验均存在高偏倚风险。19项试验(1263名随机参与者)为本综述提供了数据。19项试验中的10项比较了局部麻醉伤口浸润与无效对照。19项试验中的1项比较了局部麻醉伤口浸润与两种无效对照,即生理盐水和无干预。19项试验中的2项有四个组,比较了在有和无辅助干预以减轻腹腔镜胆囊切除术后疼痛的情况下局部麻醉伤口浸润与无效对照。19项试验中的4项有三个或更多组,可纳入局部麻醉伤口浸润与无效对照及不同局部麻醉伤口浸润方法的比较。其余两项试验比较了局部麻醉伤口浸润的不同方法。大多数试验仅纳入了接受择期腹腔镜胆囊切除术的低麻醉风险人群。17项试验共将1095名参与者随机分为局部麻醉伤口浸润组(587名参与者)和无局部麻醉伤口浸润组(508名参与者)。使用了各种麻醉剂,但布比卡因是最常用的局部麻醉剂。在报告死亡率的7项试验中,两组均无死亡(局部麻醉浸润组0/280(0%),对照组0/259(0%))。局部麻醉对发生严重不良事件人群比例的影响不确切,严重不良事件可能增加或无差异(7项试验;539名参与者;局部麻醉组2/280(0.8%),对照组1/259(0.4%);RR 2.00;95%CI 0.19至21.59;极低质量证据)。严重不良事件均与局部麻醉伤口浸润无关。没有试验报告患者的生活质量。局部麻醉浸润组作为日间手术患者出院的参与者比例高于无局部麻醉浸润组(一项试验;97名参与者;局部麻醉组33/50(66.0%),对照组20/47(42.6%);RR 1.55;95%CI 1.05至2.28;极低质量证据)。局部麻醉对住院时间的影响与两组住院时间减少、增加或无差异相符(4项试验;327名参与者;MD -0.26天;95%CI -0.67至0.16;极低质量证据)。在4至8小时(13项试验;806名参与者;VAS上MD -1.33 cm;95%CI -1.54至-1.12;极低质量证据)和9至24小时(12项试验;756名参与者;VAS上MD -0.36 cm;95%CI -0.53至-0.20;极低质量证据),局部麻醉浸润组通过视觉模拟量表(0至10 cm)测量的疼痛评分低于对照组。局部麻醉对两组恢复正常活动所需时间的影响不确切,恢复正常活动所需时间可能减少、增加或无差异(2项试验;195名参与者;MD 0.14天;95%CI -0.59至0.87;极低质量证据)。没有试验报告恢复工作情况。4项试验共将149名参与者随机分为皮肤切口前局部麻醉伤口浸润组(74名参与者)和手术结束时局部麻醉伤口浸润组(75名参与者)。2项试验共将176名参与者随机分为四种不同的局部麻醉剂(布比卡因、左旋布比卡因、罗哌卡因、新石房蛤毒素)组。尽管在某些结局上组间存在差异,但变化并不一致。没有证据支持一种局部麻醉剂优于另一种局部麻醉剂,也没有证据支持与另一种局部麻醉剂相比在特定时间给予局部麻醉剂更优。
在评估局部麻醉伤口浸润的研究中,严重不良事件罕见(极低质量证据)。极低质量证据表明,浸润可减轻接受择期腹腔镜胆囊切除术的低麻醉风险人群的疼痛。然而,这种疼痛减轻的临床重要性可能较小。有必要进行系统误差和随机误差风险较低的进一步随机临床试验。此类试验应在评估中纳入重要的临床结局,如生活质量和恢复工作时间。