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RECRUITING
NCT03756961
NA

Effects of an Opioid Free/Sparing Care Pathway for Patients Undergoing Obesity Surgery

Sponsor: Göteborg University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The opioid consumption has exploded in the western world, and for some patient populations such as obese patients, patients with sleep apnoea or patients undergoing cancer treatment, opioid-sparing/ opioid-free strategies could have positive effects on outcomes. Studies suggest that opioids could have opioid-induced immunosuppression, induce chronic post-operative pain syndrome and hyperalgesia in addition to the more well-known side effects such as respiratory depression, nausea, bladder, and bowel dysfunction. Hence, new studies are needed on the impact of person-centered care programs that combine pharmaceutical and non-pharmaceutical strategies to reduce the adverse short and long-term effects of opioid therapy. The overall aim is to evaluate the short-, medium- and long-term effects of opioid-free care pathways with or without person-centred care compared to conventional opioid-based treatment in patients undergoing obesity surgery. Specific aims 1. Determine the effects of opioid-free care with or without person-centred care compared with conventional opioid-based general anaesthesia on the cognitive and physical quality of recovery after surgery up to 24 months after surgery (short-term: postoperative to discharge, medium-term: 14 days, 3 months, long-term: 6 months, 12 months and 24 months). 2. Describe the clinical monitoring trend regarding nociceptive response intraoperatively between opioid-free and conventional care. 3. Map the impact of opioid-free anaesthesia (with and without person-centred care) on the usage of opioids up to 24 months after hospital discharge. 4. Explore the patients' experience of quality of life, economic evaluations, self-efficacy and recovery after surgery in opioid-free care with or without person-centred care during the first year post-surgery. The aims will be evaluated by a prospective, randomized, non-blinded, non-commercial multi-centre study (Nov 2018-Dec 2022) approved by the Swedish Medicines Agency (EU-CT 2023-505934-86-00) and the ethical review board (DNR 1006-17).

Official title: Effects of an Opioid Sparing Care Pathway for Patients Undergoing Obesity Surgery

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

220

Start Date

2019-05-01

Completion Date

2029-12-31

Last Updated

2026-01-07

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Dexmedetomidine

The intervention group will obtain the pharmacological treatment during both perioperative. Pharmacological treatment in the intervention group differs solely from the patients in the control group by replacing opioids with the following non-opioid treatment:

BEHAVIORAL

Person-centred care (PCC)

The intervention tests non-pharmacological interventions compared to conventional treatment, supplemented by an evidenced-based Person-centred care PCC approach throughout the continuum of the perioperative and until 4 weeks after discharge. This will be part of patients in Phase 2

DRUG

Esketamine

The intervention group will obtain the pharmacological treatment perioperatively. Pharmacological treatment in the intervention group differs solely from the patients in the control group by replacing opioids with the following non-opioid treatment:

DRUG

Lidocaine

The intervention group will obtain the pharmacological treatment perioperatively. Pharmacological treatment in the intervention group differs solely from the patients in the control group by replacing opioids with the following non-opioid treatment.

DEVICE

Transcutaneous Nerve Stimulation (TENS)

The intervention group will obtain non-pharmacological treatment by TENS during the entire hospital stay (both perioperative and post-operative) until discharge.

DRUG

Remifentanil

The control group receives general anesthesia with Remifentanil as the routine opioid drug during general anesthesia.

DRUG

Desflurane

The patient receives general anesthesia with Desflurane/ or Sevoflurane as the routine volatile anesthetic during general anesthesia

DRUG

Propofol

The patient receives general anesthesia with Propofol as the routine induction anaesthetic during general anesthesia

DRUG

Oxycodone

The control group receives Oxycodone as the routine pain management drug post-operative.

Locations (2)

Lindesberg Hospital

Lindesberg, Region Örebro, Sweden

Sahlgrenska University hospital/ Östra hopsital

Gothenburg, VG, Sweden