# Effect of opioid-free anesthesia combined with pectoral nerve block on the quality of recovery in patients after mastectomy: A randomized, controlled trial

**Authors:** Jiawei Chen, Lewei He, Yuying Shi, Jing Jiao, Shaoqiang Huang, Jianhua Zhou, Qingyan Luo, Alessandro De Cassai, Alessandro De Cassai, Alessandro De Cassai

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0320592 · PLOS One · 2025-04-03

## TL;DR

This study finds that opioid-free anesthesia with a nerve block doesn't improve recovery quality after mastectomy but reduces adverse events.

## Contribution

The study evaluates the combined effect of opioid-free anesthesia and pectoral nerve block on post-mastectomy recovery quality.

## Key findings

- OFA combined with PECS block did not improve the QoR-15 global score at 24 hours post-surgery.
- OFA was associated with fewer adverse events and prolonged extubation time compared to opioid-based anesthesia.
- OFA showed higher MAP at T1 and T2 but lower MAP and HR at T3 compared to opioid-based anesthesia.

## Abstract

To evaluate the impact of opioid-free anesthesia (OFA) combined with regional blocks on the quality of recovery (QoR) in patients who underwent mastectomy.

This randomized controlled trial involved 132 mastectomy patients who were randomized to receive either OFA combined with PECS block or opioid-based anesthesia (OBA) combined with PECS block. The QoR was assessed using the QoR-15 global score at 24 h post-surgery. Secondary outcomes included postoperative sufentanil consumption, incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV), Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) scores at 1, 4, and 24 h, incidence of postoperative adverse events, extubation, incidence of severe bradycardia and intraoperative mean artrial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) at after entering the operating room (T0, baseline value), after intubation (T1), after skin incision (T2), and after extubation (T3).

The QoR-15 global score at 24 h was not significantly different between groups (MD = -0.4, 95% CI [-3.8 to 4.7], P = 0.67). Postoperative sufentanil consumptions (P = 0.075), the incidence of PONV (P = 0.12), NRS scores at 1 h (P = 0.36), 4 h (P = 0.53), and 24 h (P = 0.02) were not significantly different. Incidence of adverse events (OR = 0, 95% CI [0 to 0.44], P = 0.0063) were lower in Group OFA than that in Group OBA. Extubation time was significantly longer in Group OFA than in Group OBA (MD = 15, 95%CI [10–18], P <  0.001). MAPs at T1 and T2 were significantly higher in Group OFA than in Group OBA (P <  0.0125), while MAP and HR at T3 were significantly lower in Group OFA than in Group OBA(P <  0.0125). Incidence of severe bradycardia were not significantly different (P = 0.67).

In conclusion, while OFA contributes to a reduction in adverse events, its integration with PECS blocks does not improve QoR or postoperative analgesia at 24 h post-mastectomy. Moreover, OFA was associated with a prolonged extubation time.

chictr.org; registration number: ChiCTR2100043575.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** sufentanil (PubChem CID 41693)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bradycardia (MESH:D001919), mastectomy (MESH:D000072656), PONV (MESH:D020250)
- **Chemicals:** PECS (MESH:C058575), sufentanil (MESH:D017409)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

23 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11967923/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11967923