The analgesic effectiveness of perioperative lidocaine infusions for acute and chronic persistent postsurgical pain in patients undergoing breast cancer surgery: a systematic review and meta-analysis
医学
利多卡因
围手术期
麻醉
止痛药
乳腺癌
荟萃分析
急性疼痛
外科
癌症
内科学
作者
Nasir Hussain,Richard Brull,Lauren V. Weber,Alexandrea Garrett,Marissa Werner,Ryan S. D’Souza,Tamara Sawyer,Tristan Weaver,Manoj H. Iyer,Michael Essandoh,Faraj W. Abdallah
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women and tumour resection carries a high prevalence of chronic persistent postsurgical pain (CPSP). Perioperative i.v. lidocaine infusion has been proposed as protective against CPSP; however, evidence of its benefits is conflicting. This review evaluates the effectiveness of perioperative lidocaine infusions for breast cancer surgery.
Methods
Randomised trials comparing perioperative lidocaine infusions with parenteral analgesia in breast cancer surgery patients were sought. The two co-primary outcomes were the odds of CPSP at 3 and 6 months after operation. Secondary outcomes included rest pain at 1, 6, 12, and 24 h; analgesic consumption at 0–24 and 25–48 h; quality of recovery; opioid-related side-effects; and lidocaine infusion side-effects. Hartung–Knapp–Sidik–Jonkman (HKSJ) random effects modelling was used.
Results
Thirteen trials (1039 patients; lidocaine: 518, control: 521) were included. Compared with control, perioperative lidocaine infusion did not decrease the odds of developing CPSP at 3 and 6 months. Lidocaine infusion improved postoperative pain at 1 h by a mean difference (95% confidence interval) of −0.65 cm (−0.73 to −0.57 cm) (P<0.0001); however, this difference was not clinically important (1.1 cm threshold). Similarly, lidocaine infusion reduced oral morphine consumption by 7.06 mg (−13.19 to −0.93) (P=0.029) over the first 24 h only; however, this difference was not clinically important (30 mg threshold). The groups were not different for any of the remaining outcomes.
Conclusions
Our results provide moderate-quality evidence that perioperative lidocaine infusion does not reduce CPSP in patients undergoing breast cancer surgery. Routine use of lidocaine infusions for perioperative analgesia and CPSP prevention is not supported in this population.