Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
RECRUITING
NCT07070050
PHASE4

Continuous vs. Bolus Administration of NSAIDs After Laparoscopic Surgery for Multimodal Analgesia

Sponsor: Federal Research and Clinical Centre of Intensive Care Medicine and Rehabilitology

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Currently the prevalent approach to perioperative management of patients is ERAS (Enhanced Recovery After Surgery) concept. This approach includes numerous aspects, among which the perioperative use of multimodal analgesia takes one of the leading places. Within the ERAS guidelines all sorts of minimization of opioid analgesics use in schemes of postoperative analgesia are appreciated. Thus, new pharmacological approaches are being actively developed currently in order to achieve adequate analgesia and to minimize the use of this group of drugs. One of the most perspective trends within the multimodal analgesia concept is continuous infusion of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID). Up to date there are papers that both confirm the effectiveness of this method for maintaining adequate postoperative analgesia and show its limitations and deny the advantages of the continuous use of NSAID. Up to this time the main attention of the medical community was paid for such drugs as paracetamol and ketoprofen. Nevertheless, one of the most common and safe NSAID is ibuprofen. In spite of this, there are no studies that explore the effectiveness of the continuous infusion of this drug. Thus, the lack of even low-quality evidence led to setting up a study of effectiveness and safety of continuous infusion of ibuprofen in comparison to its bolus injection.

Official title: Continuous vs. Bolus Administration of NSAIDs After Laparoscopic Surgery for Multimodal Analgesia: Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

100

Start Date

2025-05-05

Completion Date

2026-11-20

Last Updated

2025-07-17

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DRUG

Ibuprofen continuous infusion

1. The first bolus: ibuprofen 400 mg diluted in 0,9% NaCl 200 ml is intravenous injected during the first hour right after the admission to the department. The drug is injected during the first hour at the rate of 4 mg/kg/h for the ideal body weight. 2. Continuous infusion: * Ibuprofen 1200 mg diluted in 0,9% NaCl 300 ml is intravenous injected on the first day with the speed of 1 mg/kg/h (for the ideal body weight) during the remaining 23 hours. * On the second day the intravenous infusion of ibuprofen 1600 mg diluted in 0,9% NaCl 400 ml with the speed of 1 mg/kg/h is continued during the 24 hours. 3. Imitation of bolus: Every 8 hours placebo (0, 9% NaCl 200 ml) is intravenous injected to create an imitation of bolus injection. Placebo is injected during the first hour.

DRUG

Ibuprofen bolus injection

1. The first bolus: ibuprofen 400 mg diluted in 0, 9% NaCl 200 ml is intravenous injected during the first hour right after the admission to the department. The drug is injected during the first hour at the rate of 4 mg/kg/h for the ideal body weight. 2. Bolus injection: * Every 8 hours a intravenous bolus of ibuprofen 800 mg diluted in 0,9% NaCl 200 ml is injected during 1 hour (3 boluses per day in total). * On the second day the every 8 hours intravenous bolus of ibuprofen 800 mg diluted in 0, 9% NaCl 200 ml is injected during 1 hour (3 boluses per day in total). 3. Placebo continuous infusion: Between the boluses a placebo (0,9% NaCl) continuous intravenous infusion is performed with the speed imitating the speed of ibuprofen infusion in the experimental group.

Locations (1)

City Clinical Hospital named after S.S. Yudin

Moscow, Moscow Oblast, Russia