4.6 Article

Intrathecal diamorphine for perioperative analgesia during colorectal surgery: a cross-sectional survey of current UK practice

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-057407

Keywords

Adult anaesthesia; Pain management; Colorectal surgery

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The study aimed to investigate the use of intrathecal diamorphine as analgesia for major elective laparoscopic colorectal surgery in the UK. The results showed that a high percentage of consultant anaesthetists used intrathecal opioids routinely, with diamorphine being the most commonly used drug. However, there was a lack of consensus regarding the optimal dosing of intrathecal diamorphine. Further randomized dose-response trials are needed to understand the relationship between the dose of intrathecal diamorphine and patient outcomes.
Objectives To describe current UK clinical practice around the use of intrathecal diamorphine as analgesia for major elective laparoscopic colorectal surgery. Design Online self-administered survey. Setting Acute public hospitals in the UK (National Health Service - NHS) . Participants Consultant anaesthetists involved in colorectal surgery lists. Main outcome measures Rate of intrathecal opioids used by anaesthetists for elective laparoscopic colorectal procedures; minimum, most common and maximum doses of intrathecal diamorphine used, timing of administration of intrathecal injection, and relationship between the number of patients anaesthetised for laparoscopic colorectal resections per month by each anaesthetist, and the doses of intrathecal diamorphine they administer. Results In total, 479 responses were received. Of these, 399 (83%) use intrathecal opioid routinely: 351/399 (88%) use diamorphine, 35 (8.8%) use morphine, 8 (2%) use fentanyl, and 7 (1.3%) use other drugs. The median intrathecal diamorphine dose most commonly administered by anaesthetists was 500 mu g (IQR 400-750 [(range 200-1500])). The median of the maximum dose administered by anaesthetists was 600 mu g (IQR 500-1000 [(range 200-2000])). Greater intrathecal diamorphine dosing was positively associated with higher number of cases per month (rho=0.113, pp=0.033). Conclusions Intrathecal diamorphine is widely used by UK anaesthetists for patients undergoing major elective laparoscopic colorectal surgery. However, there is little consensus regarding optimal dosing. Therefore, high-quality randomised dose-response trials are needed to investigate the relationship between doses of intrathecal diamorphine and patient outcomes.

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