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DEXmedetomidine for Postoperative Analgesia and Delirium Prevention After NEUROsurgery (DEX-NEURO Trial)
Sponsor: University of Malaya
Summary
Post-craniotomy pain is common and often undertreated. Inadequate analgesia can lead to patient discomfort and higher opioid consumption, which may result in respiratory depression, sedation risks and impaired neurological assessment in the early postoperative period. The incidence of post-operative delirium after intracranial surgery was 19%, ranging from 12 to 26% caused by variation in clinical features and delirium assessment methods1. It is associated with increased morbidity, longer length of hospital stay, and harm to self or staffs. Dexmedetomidine (Precedex) is a highly selective α2-adrenergic agonist with the properties of analgesia, sedative, anxiolytic and neuroprotection without significant respiratory depression. Most of the trials administered a loading dose of 0.5-1.0 μg/kg intravenous dexmedetomidine over 10 minutes followed by infusion dose 0.2-0.7 μg/kg/hour. The use of intraoperative dexmedetomidine is believed to reduce the usage of postoperative opioids where frequent neurological assessment is often required in neurosurgical patients. Beyond the benefit of analgesia, perioperative dexmedetomidine has been studied for prevention of postoperative delirium. Randomized trials in mixed noncardiac surgical populations reported that low-dose perioperative dexmedetomidine may reduce the incidence of delirium. Dexmedetomidine produces dose-dependent bradycardia and hypotension, which should be carefully monitored to maintain the cerebral perfusion pressure in brain surgery. However, most trials and meta-analyses have focused on general surgical or cardiac cohorts; the evidence remains limited in neurosurgical (craniotomy) patients. Although it showed promising benefits of analgesia and neuroprotection in non-neurosurgical patients, recent meta-analyses of intraoperative dexmedetomidine reported high degree of heterogeneity due to the inclusion of varied procedures (elective vs emergent craniotomy), dosing regimes (loading dose only versus loading dose + infusion versus infusion only) and varied primary endpoints (postoperative pain scores, cumulative opioid consumption or incidence of delirium). Therefore, this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial is designed to examine the use of intravenous dexmedetomidine in the reduction of postoperative pain score and delirium in neurosurgical patients. We hypothesised that intravenous dexmedetomidine reduces postoperative pain score and delirium with lower need of rescue analgesia and amount of morphine consumption in patients undergoing craniotomy.
Official title: DEXmedetomidine for Postoperative Analgesia and Delirium Prevention After NEUROsurgery: A Double-blinded Randomised Placebo-controlled Trial (DEX-NEURO Trial)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 65 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
60
Start Date
2026-07-22
Completion Date
2027-08-22
Last Updated
2026-02-09
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Dexmedetomidine
intravenous dexmedetomidine loading dose 0.5mcg/kg followed by 0.5mcg/kg/hour
Normal Saline (0.9% NaCl)
Intravenous normal saline loading and infusion dose of normal saline