Intraoperative Methadone Versus Epidural Analgesia for Perioperative Pain Management in Major Abdominal and Thoracic Surgery: A Retrospective Single-Center Study
Arend Rahrisch, Sandra E. Guzzella, Samira Akbas, Julia Braun, Rolf Schüpbach, Donat R. Spahn, Alexander Kaserer

TL;DR
This study compares methadone and epidural analgesia for pain management after major surgery, finding similar outcomes with minor differences in pain scores and opioid use.
Contribution
The study provides real-world evidence comparing methadone and epidural analgesia for postoperative pain in abdominal and thoracic surgery.
Findings
Methadone was associated with higher pain scores but lower opioid consumption compared to epidural analgesia.
Patients receiving methadone mobilized earlier than those with epidural analgesia.
No significant differences were found in major adverse events or hospital stay duration between the two groups.
Abstract
Background: Adequate analgesia is essential for enhanced recovery following major abdominal and thoracic surgery. Intravenous methadone has emerged as an alternative analgesic modality to traditional epidural analgesia. This study compares intravenous methadone with epidural analgesia in postoperative pain. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed adult patients who underwent laparotomy or non-cardiac thoracotomy between January 2019 and December 2022 and who had either general anesthesia with epidural analgesia or intravenous methadone. Co-primary outcomes were mean numeric rating scale (NRS) pain scores and cumulative opioid consumption from extubation until the end of postoperative day 2. Pain scores were obtained regularly from routine postoperative assessments documented in the electronic health record and were not recorded at predefined postoperative hours. Secondary outcomes related…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnesthesia and Pain Management · Pain Management and Opioid Use · Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
