Analgesic efficacy of an opioid-free postoperative pain management strategy versus a conventional opioid-based strategy following laparoscopic radical gastrectomy: an open-label, randomized, controlled, non-inferiority trial
Zhimin Lin, Zhongbiao Chen, Yongliang Li

TL;DR
This study compares an opioid-free pain management method with traditional opioid use after stomach surgery and finds both are equally effective for pain control.
Contribution
The study provides clinical evidence that a continuous opioid-free STAPB is non-inferior to conventional opioid-based pain management after laparoscopic radical gastrectomy.
Findings
There were no significant differences in pain scores between the opioid-free and conventional groups at rest and during movement.
The opioid-free group showed faster postoperative recovery, including quicker bowel movement and food intake.
The opioid-free method had lower rates of postoperative nausea and vomiting compared to the conventional group.
Abstract
In patients undergoing laparoscopic radical gastrectomy, the use of subcostal transversus abdominis plane block (STAPB) for completely opioid-free postoperative pain management lacks convincing clinical evidence. This study included 112 patients who underwent laparoscopic radical gastrectomy at the 900TH Hospital of the Joint Logistics Support Force from October 2020 to March 2022. Patients were randomly divided into (1:1) continuous opioid-free STAPB (C-STAPB) group and conventional group. In the C-STAPB group, 0.2% ropivacaine (bilateral, 20 ml per side) was injected intermittently every 12 h through a catheter placed on the transverse abdominis plane for postoperative pain management. The conventional group was treated with a conventional intravenous opioid pump (2.5 μg/kg sufentanil and 10 mg tropisetron, diluted to 100 ml with 0.9% NS). The primary outcomes were the accumulative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Pain Management · Nausea and vomiting management · Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
