Analgesic efficacy of PECS vs paravertebral blocks after radical mastectomy: A systematic review, meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_75D07BF4D4EA
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Analgesic efficacy of PECS vs paravertebral blocks after radical mastectomy: A systematic review, meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis.
Journal
Journal of clinical anesthesia
ISSN
1873-4529 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0952-8180
Publication state
Published
Issued date
08/2020
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
63
Pages
109745
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Review
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Due to conflicting results published in the literature regarding the analgesic superiority between the paravertebral block and the PECS block, the study objective is to determine which one should be the first line analgesic treatment after radical mastectomy.
Systematic review, meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis.
Operating room, postoperative recovery area and ward, up to 24 postoperative hours.
Patients scheduled for radical mastectomy under general anaesthesia.
We searched five electronic databases for randomized controlled trials comparing any PECS block with a paravertebral block.
The primary outcome was rest pain score (0-10) at 2 postoperative hours, analyzed according to the combination with axillary dissection or not, to account for heterogeneity. Secondary outcomes included rest pain scores, cumulative intravenous morphine equivalents consumption and rate of postoperative nausea and vomiting at 24 postoperative hours.
Eight trials including 388 patients were identified. Rest pain scores at 2 postoperative hours were decreased in the PECS block group, with a mean difference (95%CI) of -0.4 (-0.7 to -0.1), I <sup>2</sup> = 68%, p = 0.01, and a significant subgroup difference observed between radical mastectomy with (mean difference [95%CI]: 0.0 [-0.2 to 0.2], I <sup>2</sup> = 0%, p = 1.00), or without axillary dissection (mean difference [95%CI]: -0.7 [-1.1 to -0.4], I <sup>2</sup> = 40%, p < 0.001; p for subgroup difference < 0.001). All secondary pain-related outcomes were similar between groups. The overall quality of evidence was low.
There is low quality evidence that a PECS block provides marginal postoperative analgesic benefit after radical mastectomy at 2 postoperative hours only, when compared with a paravertebral block, and not beyond. Clinical trial number: PROSPERO - registration number: CRD42019131555.
Systematic review, meta-analysis and trial sequential analysis.
Operating room, postoperative recovery area and ward, up to 24 postoperative hours.
Patients scheduled for radical mastectomy under general anaesthesia.
We searched five electronic databases for randomized controlled trials comparing any PECS block with a paravertebral block.
The primary outcome was rest pain score (0-10) at 2 postoperative hours, analyzed according to the combination with axillary dissection or not, to account for heterogeneity. Secondary outcomes included rest pain scores, cumulative intravenous morphine equivalents consumption and rate of postoperative nausea and vomiting at 24 postoperative hours.
Eight trials including 388 patients were identified. Rest pain scores at 2 postoperative hours were decreased in the PECS block group, with a mean difference (95%CI) of -0.4 (-0.7 to -0.1), I <sup>2</sup> = 68%, p = 0.01, and a significant subgroup difference observed between radical mastectomy with (mean difference [95%CI]: 0.0 [-0.2 to 0.2], I <sup>2</sup> = 0%, p = 1.00), or without axillary dissection (mean difference [95%CI]: -0.7 [-1.1 to -0.4], I <sup>2</sup> = 40%, p < 0.001; p for subgroup difference < 0.001). All secondary pain-related outcomes were similar between groups. The overall quality of evidence was low.
There is low quality evidence that a PECS block provides marginal postoperative analgesic benefit after radical mastectomy at 2 postoperative hours only, when compared with a paravertebral block, and not beyond. Clinical trial number: PROSPERO - registration number: CRD42019131555.
Keywords
Analgesia, Peripheral nerve block, Postoperative pain, Radical mastectomy
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
03/03/2020 14:52
Last modification date
10/07/2020 5:21