Title

Patient Controlled Epidural Analgesia Versus Local Infiltration Analgesia Following Knee Arthroplasty
Patient Controlled Epidural Analgesia Versus Local Infiltration Analgesia Following Knee Arthroplasty Within an Enhanced Recovery Programme - a Randomised Controlled Trial
  • Phase

    N/A
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Study Participants

    242
The purpose of this study was to determine if the method of peri-operative analgesia used following total Knee Replacement surgery affected the progress towards rehabilitation goals and to determine whether the analgesia had any impact on long term outcomes.
Enhanced Recovery Programmes (ERP) as defined by Henrik Kehlet have been established within orthopaedics within the United Kingdom in a number of centres (Malviya et al., 2011, McDonald et al., 2012, Scott et al., 2013) demonstrating improvements in patient outcomes. However as the ERP involved in all of these papers are a redesign of a number of key elements of the clinical pathway it remains unclear as to the level of significance each component may have on the patient's reported outcomes.

The use of Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA) as the primary post-operative analgesic technique has grown in popularity in Scotland over the past 5 years (Scott et al., 2013). A number of large cohort series have concurrently reported significant improvements in early ambulation and shortened lengths of stay (Malviya et al., 2011, McDonald et al., 2012) yet it remains unclear as to whether this is due to the introduction and use of the LIA technique or the overall development of the ERP programmes.

The aim of this parallel group randomised controlled trial was to test two different methods of regional analgesia (LIA and Epidural) and their impact on attainment of predetermined rehabilitation criteria for direct discharge home and to consider the impact of each technique on long term functional status up to one year post surgery.

Epidural analgesia when utilised as post-operative analgesia is predominantly used in the format of a continuous infusion of a set volume of analgesia (+/- adjuncts such as fentanyl) resulting in both a motor and sensory blockade, which as would be expected increases with the volume infused. Ambulatory patient epidurals have been used for a number of years within maternity services which provide adequate pain relief whilst enabling the patient to be mobile (Stewart & Fernando, 2011). Therefore to provide a fairer comparison with the LIA technique the standard epidural analgesia technique within the Golden Jubilee National Hospital was adapted to a Patient Controlled Epidural Analgesia (PCEA) system with no background infusion.

The planned long term follow up period ( One year) was developed to enable greater evidence of the impact of each method on functional capacity, Patient Reported Outcome Scores (PROMS) and to monitor the incidence of adverse incidents over a longer period of time than previously published literature.
Study Started
Apr 30
2010
Primary Completion
Aug 31
2011
Study Completion
Nov 30
2012
Results Posted
Nov 10
2015
Estimate
Last Update
Nov 10
2015
Estimate

Drug Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Following the operation, 4ml of 0.25% levobupivacaine was administered and the catheter was connected to a PCEA. Self-medication with a bolus 2ml of 0.125% bupivacaine via the PCEA system with a lockout time of 15 minutes until the following morning (post-operative day one) when it was stopped.

  • Other names: Levobupivacaine and Bupivacaine

Drug Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Subcutaneous infiltration during surgery using 200ml of 0.2% plain ropivacaine.

  • Other names: Ropivacaine

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA) Active Comparator

A lumbar epidural was sited using a side-directed technique towards the side of surgery following establishment of the spinal blockade. Following the completion of the operation, patients received 4ml of 0.25% levobupivacaine prior to leaving the operating room. Thereafter they were connected to a PCEA pump (McKinley 545) with no background infusion. Patients could self-medicate with a bolus 2ml of 0.125% bupivacaine via the PCEA system with a lockout time of 15 minutes to control their pain until the following morning (post-operative day one) when it was stopped. Nurse-administered rescue top-ups of 4ml of 0.25% levobupivacaine were available for insufficient analgesia. The epidural catheter was removed on the morning of post-operative day two (POD2).

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA) Experimental

Subcutaneous infiltration during surgery using 200ml of 0.2% plain ropivacaine. 50ml injected following bone preparation prior to implant cementation perpendicular to the posterior femur through the posterior joint capsule in 10ml aliquots. 30ml proximal to the suprapatellar pouch down to the femur.100ml spread into subcutaneous tissues including; collateral and cruciate ligaments, fatty and connective tissue on the anterior aspect of the incision. A 16 gauge epidural catheter inserted via a medial portal, 20ml was injected via the catheter following closure of wound. Post-operatively, patients received boluses of 40ml ropivacaine 0.2% via the catheter using a mechanical McKinley 595 pump 4 hours after leaving theatre, at 22:00 and 08:00 on post-operative day one.

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

All patients (age> 18years old) undergoing primary unilateral total knee arthroplasty (TKA) with a clinical diagnosis of osteoarthritis

Exclusion Criteria:

Patients planned for uni-compartmental/bilateral or revision knee surgery patients
Patients with a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA)
Patients with coagulation or anatomical defects e.g. preventing the use of spinal anaesthesia
Known allergies to any medications within the trial
Patients who were unable to give written informed consent
Patients requiring pre-operative catheterisation for urinary outflow dysfunction
Known neurological incident that would limit or make impossible early ambulation following surgery

Summary

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

All Events

Event Type Organ System Event Term Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA) Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Proportion of Patients Discharged From Rehabilitation by Day Four

% of patients meeting predetermined discharge criteria at 96 Hours post-surgery. The discharge criteria were: self dependent (dress, personal care); in and out of bedd independently; up and down stairs; walk with crutches/stick; 80 degrees knee flexion; able to straight leg raise operated limb.

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

77.0
percentage of patients

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

82.0
percentage of patients

Average Post-operative Length of Stay

Participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 5 days

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

4.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 2.0 to 20.0

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

4.0
days (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 2.0 to 12.0

Verbal Rating Score (VRS) Pain Scores

Summary 24 hour Verbal rated numerical pain scores were gathered each day. Scale range 0-10 where 0 is no pain and 10 is worst imaginable pain

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Post-operative day one( asked at 48hrs)

3.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3

Post-operative day two(asked 72 hrs)

3.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 2

Theatre Day( asked at 24 hrs)

3.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 4

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Post-operative day one( asked at 48hrs)

4.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3

Post-operative day two(asked 72 hrs)

4.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 3

Theatre Day( asked at 24 hrs)

3.0
units on a scale (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 4

Post-operative Urinary Catheterisation Rates

% of patients requiring catheterisation for urinary retention post-surgery

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

9.2
percentage of patients catheterised

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

4.4
percentage of patients catheterised

Post-operative Nausea and Vomiting Scores

percentage of patients reporting either symptoms of nausea or vomiting over the first 72 hours following surgery. Scale 0-2 wherein 0=no nausea and vomiting, 1=nausea and 2= nausea and vomiting

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

16.0
percentage of patients reporting PONV

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

14.0
percentage of patients reporting PONV

Day of Ambulation

Proportion of patients per day to ambulate for the first time with the physiotherapist > 3 Metres

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Post-operative day one

65.0
percentage of patients

Post-operative day two

4.0
percentage of patients

Theatre Day

35.0
percentage of patients

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Post-operative day one

49.0
percentage of patients

Post-operative day two

Theatre Day

51.0
percentage of patients

Maximal Flexion Angle of the Operative Knee at Discharge From Rehabilitation

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

80.0
angle of flexion (degree) (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 60.0 to 100.0

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

80.0
angle of flexion (degree) (Median)
Inter-Quartile Range: 65.0 to 105.0

Total Number of Reported Participants With Complications and/or Adverse Events

The composite number of adverse events reported per group at 30 days and then one year post surgery

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Reported complications at 30 days

Reported complications at one year

2.0
participants

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Reported complications at 30 days

2.0
participants

Reported complications at one year

4.0
participants

Patient Reported Outcome Measure - Oxford Knee Score

Units measured on old Oxford Score (12-60) from a 12 point questionnaire. Where in 60 is poor and lower scores are better patient reported outcome scores

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

One year Follow up score

19.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 12.0 to 46.0

Pre-operative Oxford Score

43.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 23.0 to 55.0

Six week follow up score

28.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 13.0 to 53.0

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

One year Follow up score

19.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 12.0 to 54.0

Pre-operative Oxford Score

43.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 20.0 to 57.0

Six week follow up score

26.0
units on a scale (Median)
Full Range: 13.0 to 48.0

Total

242
Participants

Age, Continuous

67
years (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 7.6

Body Mass Index

31
kilogrammes per meter squared (Mean)
Standard Deviation: 8

Region of Enrollment

Sex: Female, Male

Overall Study

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)

Drop/Withdrawal Reasons

Patient Controlled Epidural (PCEA)

Local Infiltration Analgesia (LIA)