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Advances in
eISSN: 2378-3168

Obesity, Weight Management & Control

Review Article Volume 5 Issue 2

Pain management in weight loss surgery: aiming for multimodal approach

Juan S Barajas Gamboa,1 Daniel Gonzalez Nu ez2

1Department of Surgery, Autonomous University of Bucaramanga, Colombia
2Department of Surgery, Pontifical Xavierian University, Colombia

Correspondence: uan S Barajas Gamboa MD, Department of Surgery, Autonomous University of Bucaramanga, Floridablanca, Santander, Colombia

Received: September 26, 2016 | Published: November 4, 2016

Citation: Barajas Gamboa MD, Gonzalez Nuñez MD. Pain management in weight loss surgery: aiming for multimodal approach. Adv Obes Weight Manag Control. 2016;5(2):232-237. DOI: 10.15406/aowmc.2016.05.00125

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Abstract

Weight loss surgery (WLS) is an effective group of procedures with a low rate of complications, preventing or treating several cardiovascular co morbidities associated with morbid obesity. Pain management in the preoperative needs special consideration in this population because of different aspects, specially the theoretical need for opioid avoidance, generally used in the postoperative of major surgeries. This literature review assesses the available information on analgesic strategies for WLS, with a special approach on multimodal settings and possible alternatives. Well-controlled studies are needed to determine the level of recommendation for individual therapies and multimodal regimens.

Keywords: weight loss surgery, bariatric surgery, obesity, pain management, postoperative, pain

Introduction

The importance of WLS can be explained by the epidemic of obesity not only in the United States, where rates according to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) are between 26 and 32% (and rising). It is expected that almost half of the Americans will be overweight by 2018. Surgical approaches still remain the preferred alternative for this public health problem. Most of the bariatric surgery procedures are performed using minimally invasive techniques (MIS), these include laparoscopic gastric bypass, Laparoscopic Sleeve Gastrectomy, Laparoscopic Gastric Banding and Laparoscopic Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch (Figure 1) (Table 1).

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

Total (thousands)

158

173

179

193

196

RNY

36.70%

37.50%

34.20%

26.80%

23.10%

Band

35.40%

20.20%

14%

9.50%

5.70%

Sleeve

17.80%

33%

42.10%

51.70%

53.80%

BPD/DS

0.90%

1%

1%

0.40%

0.60%

Table 1 BOLD, ASC/MBSAQIP, National Inpatient Sample data and outpatient estimations

Figure 1 Minimally Invasive Bariatric Surgery Statistics

One of the clinical advantages of using MIS approaches is less probability of postoperative pain. The estimated annual medical cost of obesity in the U.S. in 2008 was $147billion U.S. dollars. The average mortality rate associated with bariatric surgery was just 0.13%.

Pain management strategies are extensive and diverse. From physical modalities to intravenous infusion of new sedoanalgesic agents, therapeutic alternatives are at hand. The key to reaching good clinical practices on preoperative pain control is to individualize procedures, populations and patients. It is widely accepted the different perception of pain that patients experience in similar conditions, therefore the need to guide its management with objective scales and effective agents.

Bariatric surgery presents a difficult population due to a high prevalence of associated OSA (Obstructive Sleep Apnea) and cardiovascular risk factors with a theoretical need for less opioid and NSAID consumption, among other elements. A study evaluating obese patients programmed for WLS found an average of 78% of OSA in a formal sleep study, clearly rising according to BMI.1 This high incidence is translated into preoperative hypoxia; an increased risk of postoperative complications, higher need of ICU and increased hospital stay.2 Opioids have been shown to impair ventilatory function by affecting both peripheral and central carbon dioxide chemo reflex loops,3 having special contraindication in patients at high-risk of preoperative hypoxia such as OSA.

Another aspect to be taken into account regarding opioid use is the associated bowel dysfunction. With varying prevalence in different studies it is an important cause of postoperative morbidity and increased hospital stay. Most commonly presenting as constipation it can also be accounted for decreased gastric emptying, abdominal pain, bloating and delayed gastrointestinal transit.4

As important as multimodal management of pain is, the effectiveness of each strategy must be evaluated in light of high quality evidence. We present the assessment of strategies used in bariatric surgery with a discussion regarding the clinical implications and possible protocols to be used in the preoperative, especially in post-anesthetic care units (PACU) and surgical wards. The aim is to reduce postoperative pain while achieving an adequate safety profile in obese patients.

Methods

A medical literature review was conducted in order to find the most recent medical manuscripts published in this clinical field. Using the Keywords: Weight Loss Surgery, Bariatric Surgery, Obesity, Pain Management, Postoperative and Pain the following databases were consulted: Pubmed, Lilacs, Proquest, Cochrane, Ovid and Google Scholar. With the aim to maximize the number of articles, no date limit in the search was set, and manuscripts in English, Spanish and Portuguese were considered. Meta-analysis papers, review articles, clinical trials, prospective and retrospective case series were included in the review.

Initially, 314 articles were obtained, of which 152 met the inclusion criteria. However, only the 34 were referenced in the current work with a focus on bariatric surgery and pain management. Considering the nature of this publication, no ethical approval and statistical consultation were needed in its preparation.

Review

Pain assessment

The World Health Organization defines pain as “an unpleasant sensory or emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage, or described in terms of such damage”. The difficulty to objectively assess pain in patients has demanded the use of scales and questionnaires to identify classify and ultimately manage pain. Validated scales are accurate because of tested intrapatient and inter-rater reliability. Amongst these, the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (Figure 2), Faces Rating Scale (Figure 3) and International Pain Outcomes Questionnaire are frequently used in post operatory pain rating studies. It is important to not only determine severity but to differentiate its characteristics, effect on life quality and early mobilization as well as response to pharmacological and other pain relieving modalities.5

Figure 2 Visual Analog Scale (VAS).
Figure 3 Faces Rating Scale

Therapeutic alternatives

Premedication

The only study found to date evaluating the effect on premedication in bariatric surgery is the administration of 300mg of Pregabalin in the preparatory period. Outcomes on pain intensity levels were consistently lower and nausea/vomiting decreased in the study group. No opioid use or effect on mobilization was assessed (Table 2).6

Median Pain Score at 24h

Need for Morphine Rescue****

IV analgesia*

5

16%

IV analgesia + Epidural**

2.5

2%

IV analgesia + Local anesthetic***

2

2%

Table 2 Local Anesthesia Vs. Regional Anesthesia Approaches and Clinical Outcomes

*Metamizole 2 g/8 h and acetaminophen 1 g/8 h, alternating every 4 h
**Continuous perfusion of levobupivacaine 0.125 %
***10 ml of bupivacaine 0.25 %, applying 2 ml under the aponeurotic layer in each port
****5 mg of subcutaneous morphine

Transverses abdominis plane block (TAP) block

The use of TAP block technique has been rising since its description in 2001. Designed to provide anesthesia in the anterior abdominal wall (T6-L1) it has demonstrated a reduction in pain scores and opioid consumption in early post operatory for abdominal and gynecological surgery.7

Studies performed in bariatric surgery include a single-port laparoscopy for sleeve gastrectomy cohort study in which pain scores 12-24h post surgery were significantly better but no differences in opioid consumption were achieved,8 nonetheless a recent Randomized Clinical Trial (RCT) concluded that TAP blocks do not provide additional analgesic benefit when added to trocar insertion site anesthetic infiltration with systemic analgesia for laparoscopic gastric-bypass surgery.9

Because of the difficulty of anatomical references in obese patients, ultrasound guided (USG) TAP blocks have been reevaluated.10 Sinha et al.,11 demonstrated improvement of three different variables: lower pain scores in VAS, less need for opioids (Tramadol) therefore allowing for less sedation and early ambulation. Patient satisfaction scores were also significantly higher.11

Analgesia Exclusively

Stage

Protocol

Premedication

Acetaminophen 2g

Pregabalin 300/150mg (BMI adjusted)

Dexmetomedine 2ug/kg/h*

Induction

Fentanyl 100ug

Maintenance

Dexmetomedine > 0.2ug/kg/h

Intraoperative analgesia

Ketamine bolus 0.3mg/kg (intermittent 0.2mg/kg/h afterwards)

Parecoxib 40mg

Tramadol 100mg

Local anesthetic infiltration**

Rescue analgesia in PACU

Pethidine iv 20mg with Ketamine iv 5 mg if necessary

Routine analgesia in ward

Etoricoxib 120mg po daily

Pregabalin 75 mg at night

Rescue analgesia in ward

Pethidine im 50mg every 4 hours as required

Table 3 Multimodal Analgesia Protocol Lam et al [22]

*Using LBW (lean body weight)
**Levopubivacaine 0.5% 20 ml.

Local anesthetics: port site infiltration

A prospective randomized study of patients undergoing laparoscopic sleeve gastrectomy compared three analgesic strategies finding no differences in operation time, complications, mortality or hospital stay.12 Strategies and positive clinical findings in pain reduction and opioid use are summarized in Table 3. A different finding was achieved in a retrospective randomized study where VAS scores were lower in the study group (bupivacaine infiltration) in the first 4h postoperatively without reaching statistical significance and did not differ in any other period of time. Also, no statistically significant differences in pain perception or the need for rescue medication were evidenced.13

Local anesthetics: intraperitoneally - subfascially/subcutaneously

Two different studies evaluated intraperitoneal infiltration of bupivacaine with improved pain scores within the first 24h postoperatively and reduction of postoperative hydrocodone/acetaminophen requirements compared with the placebo group although study quality was poor and both results lacked clinical relevance.14,15 Postoperative subfascial/subcutaneous infusion of bupivacaine had no effect compared to placebo on pain, opioid use or hospital length stay.16

Dexmetomedine: The use of Dexmetomedine (DXM) has been studied in two recent papers due to its safety profile regarding respiratory depression and better hemodynamic stability. Intraoperative fentanyl and propofol were reduced as well as pain scores and postoperative use of PCA (patient-controlled analgesia).17 Another study demonstrated reduced desflurane and rescue fentanyl/antiemetic requirement in the PACU with lower arterial blood pressure measurements.18

NSAIDs: A non placebo-controlled study comparing Ketorolac and Remifentanyl infusion during surgery found lower requirements of PCA, nausea/vomiting, duration of stay in PACU and improved pain scores.19

Ketamine: The placebo-controlled study against ketamine administration showed intraoperative reduction of Remifentanyl and Propofol requirements as well as improved pain scores and less use of PCA morphine in the PACU.20

Acetaminophen: A study evaluating the effectiveness of IV Acetaminophen in perioperative opioid reduction found lower cumulative 24-hour opioid use with mean reductions of morphine equivalents being 21.1mg for the LSG group, 32.6mg for the LRYGB group, and 27.7mg for the combined group. No differences in mean pain scores were achieved.21

Multimodal analgesia in bariatric surgery

The combination of different analgesic therapies is not a new concept. Its purpose is to target more than one pain mechanism, overall diminishing pain perception and providing a reduction in dosages and adverse effects.

Taking into account the importance of multimodal analgesia in the perioperative period, bariatric surgery has several issues that demand this approach. With a wide variety of alternatives available in the intraoperative, the PACU and the surgical ward some pharmacological therapies are contraindicated or have serious adverse effect in obese patients. Although there are no controlled trials comparing multimodal approaches, bariatric surgery departments are creating protocols aiming to diminish opioid and NSAID use.

In a prospective observational study, Lam et al. used a multimodal analgesia regimen with a combination of acetaminophen, pregabalin, COX-2 inhibitors, tramadol, ketamine, dexmedetomidine, and local anaesthetic wound infiltration achieving no opioid use in up to 46% and rescue opioids exclusively in the post-anesthetic care unit in another 20%. Table 4 summarizes their analgesia regimen.22

Preoperatory

Intraoperative

PACU

Surgical Ward

Strong Recommendation

 

Acetaminophen

Tramadol

NPCOIA**

Pregabalin

TAP* Block

NSAID

Acetaminophen

NPCOIA

NSAID**

Local anesthetic/Epidural

NSAID

Acetaminophen

Pregabalin

Dexamethasone

NSAID

Moderate Recommendation

DXM*****

DXM

PCOIA***

PCOIA

Ketamine

Ketamine

Weak Recommendation

COX-2****

COX-2

Scheduled Opioids

Other modalities

Other modalities

COX-2

COX-2

Table 4 Suggested Therapeutic Approaches

* Transversus Abdominis Plane
**Non-patient controlled opioid IV analgesia
***Patient-controlled Opioid IV analgesia
****Cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitor
*****Dexmetomedine

Discussion

As described by several authors, obese patients have special characteristics that lead to a different approach in anesthetic and analgesic management. Physiological aspects include OSA, a main risk factor in preoperative hypoxia, different biodistribution of medical compounds and cardiovascular impairments. The use of Lean Body Weight LBW appears to be a more accurate way to determine dosage and prescription by excluding body fat from the total body weight equation.5,22

Research on adequate postoperative pain management is a current trend in post-anesthetic and surgical areas. Objective assessment and patient satisfaction degree are parameters of quality medical attention. Duration of high pain scores increase the incidence of post-operative morbidity and lead to delayed recovery, prolonged hospital stay and increased healthcare costs.

After a complete and thorough medical literature review we found a lack of high quality evidence studies to support individual and combined therapies. No multicenter randomized clinical trials and consensuses are focused in pain management in the bariatric surgery field, only observational and single-site case series suggest and propose therapeutic approaches.

Veerabhadram has described a general overview of actual postoperative pain management. The basis of it being to eliminate pain with as little side effects as possible, taking into account special populations and procedure specifics. The different modalities (patient controlled/“as needed”), routes (oral, IV, regional and neuraxial) and agents (opioid/non-opioid) used can determine a modifiable regimen. Their approach includes preoperative Acetaminophen and Ketorolac, intraoperative wound infiltration, and postoperative Acetaminophen, Ibuprofen, PCIA and Oxycodone.23

In a prospective observational study published in 2013 by Dr. Aliya Ahmed et al.,24 authors outlined pain management strategies used after major abdominal surgeries in a tertiary care hospital. Patients undergoing major abdominal surgery were included in the study and clinical outcomes such as postoperative analgesic strategies, analgesics used, pain and sedation scores, collateral symptoms were evaluated, ultimately analyzing patient satisfaction. Over 100 patients enrolled the clinical study showing that epidural analgesia was used in 61%; PCIA was found in 21% and opioid infusion in around 14 patients. Multimodal analgesia was employed in 98 patients. 99 patients reported a satisfactory experience with the analgesic alternative.24

Vallano et al.,25 described the patterns of prescription and administration of analgesic drugs used for the postoperative pain after abdominal surgery in Spanish hospitals. Authors planned to know the prevalence and severity of postoperative pains amongst the participating centers. The study was designed as a descriptive cross-sectional multicenter drug utilization study in twelve reference hospitals in Spain. 993 patients were included in this trial and the most common surgeries performed were inguinal hernia repair, cholecystectomy, appendectomy, bowel resection and gastric surgery. 55% of patients only received non-opioid analgesics, 9% received only opioid analgesics and 27% received both. The most common analgesics used were Metamizol and Pethidine.25

These studies give a general overview of commonly used pain management strategies in abdominal surgeries, being for the greater part a combination of routes, agents and dosages. Their importance relies on the demonstration that multimodal analgesia is a not a concept, it is an ongoing strategy with multiple variables, yet to be specified and instituted as a guideline.

The multimodal protocol proposed by Lam et al has several limitations if used as a guideline. There is no way to assess the effectiveness of single therapy versus multimodal regimen or differences with other protocols. Also, rescue opioid was administered differently and intramuscular dosage route can have an erratic absorption. The individual efficacy of each therapy can be discussed in light of other studies.

In recent years a number of physical therapies have been proposed for postoperative pain relief, nevertheless the only modality with sufficient evidence for recommendation is transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) as adjunctive to other approaches, with no specific studies performed in WLS.26

Gabapentinoids are gaining importance in multimodal approach. In a recent meta-analysis by Zhang et al including mainly abdominal and gynecological trials, Pregabalin demonstrated a dose-related nausea/vomiting and opioid use reduction but increased visual disturbances.27 With few adverse effects and promising results this pharmacological group can be added to ongoing protocols.

COX-2 inhibitors have to be used with cautiousness because cardiovascular mortality is a major issue in patients undergoing bariatric surgery, often presenting various risk factors. In 2013 the FDA (US Food and Drug Administration) issued a warning regarding their use due to increased CV mortality, life-threatening skin reactions and lack of superior efficacy compared to other NSAIDs. Studies in colorectal procedures and animal models have correlated NSAIDS with anastomotic leakage,28 representing a potential risk in bariatric surgery, not studied up to date. Positive findings with Ketorolac use are not exempt of the same risks and adverse effects, addressing potentially serious gastrointestinal bleeding. Despite these associations, there appears to be no additional harm regarding NSAIDS in a short (perioperative) course.

Infiltration of incision sites in laparoscopy has shown low quality evidence with conflicting findings in a series of studies, hence the latest pain management guidelines recommendation to decide based on procedure-specific results.5 In a randomized, controlled study in laparoscopic cholecystectomy, incision infiltration proved to be better at reducing postoperative pain than in the intraperitoneal group.29 US-guided TAP block is a promising approach but well-controlled clinical trials need to evaluate its efficacy compared to placebo, epidural and local (port-site, intraperitoneal) infiltration.

Historically, the World Health Organization proposed an ascending ladder guiding pain management therapy for both acute and chronic pain. Opioids were divided into strong and weak opioids based on a theoretical better safety profile of the latter but there is no evidence supporting this assumption. At equivalent analgesic effect, weak opioids such as tramadol have no additional differences compared to NSAIDs and can have the serious adverse effects usually attributed to strong opioids. Tramadol is frequently used in the intraoperative and postoperative setting as part of multimodal approach, in the absence of strong evidence against its use it is a valid alternative.

Schnabel et al found intraoperative DXM leads to lower postoperative pain, reduced opioid consumption, and a lower risk for opioid-related adverse events. In bariatric surgery, studies evaluating its effectiveness failed to perform control groups with specific analgesia strategies and clinical relevance of findings appears to be minimal. Some adverse effects such as hypotension and bradycardia require caution in patients at risk.30

In May 2016, a meta-analysis from Cochrane including 7200 patients from 75 studies determined that with a single 500-1000mg postoperative dose of IV Acetaminophen, 36% of patients could have a 50% pain relief over 4-6hours compared to placebo. Opioid use was also reduced, although no change in opioid-induced adverse events was observed.31 Preoperative acetaminophen in abdominal hysterectomy was able to reduce opioid consumption and related adverse effects without a significant reduction in pain scores.32

A meta-analysis conducted in 2011 included 24 randomized trials in perioperative Dexamethasone, having as primary outcome pain scores (acute/late) and 24h opioid consumption. Their conclusions were that an intermediate dose of 0.11-0.2mg/kg (more clearly with preoperative administration) had opioid-sparing effects, less nausea/vomiting and lower pain scores.33

In a recent updated Cochrane review on patient controlled opioid analgesia versus non-patient controlled opioid analgesia in the treatment of postoperative pain author’s evaluated efficacy and safety as primary outcomes. Patients often preferred PCA and pain scores were slightly lower in this group, this can be attributed to a minor increase in opioid doses. Side effects were similar apart from higher pruritus presented in PCA group.34

Based on previous studies and analyses performed by experts in the field we suggest a multimodal approach with specific recommendations grouped by levels of efficacy, safety and availability (Table 4). Our intention is merely to encourage the creation of protocols in each institution by the medical team including anesthesia, surgery, nurse staff and adjoined departments.

One of the most important limitations of this manuscript (literature review) is reliance on previously published studies and their proven appropriate methods and methodologies.

In the near future, multidisciplinary teams should be able to gradually introduce protocols in pain management of the obese patient in the preoperative as individual and multimodal regimens are supported by evidence. The aim is to reduce or eliminate the need for opiates therefore having less respiratory depression, nausea/vomiting and postoperative ileus. On the other hand, it is expected that researchers in the pharmaceutical industry, develop new generations of analgesics with better safety profile and higher efficacy.

Conclusion

WLs is a growing field in medicine; as surgical approaches become less invasive with new techniques, surgeons are able to lower complications and mortality to a minimum rate. Pain is rarely viewed as a complication thus its poor management in a wide proportion of postoperative patients. Obese patients require a special approach mainly because of cardiovascular risk factors, obesity itself and OSA, limiting both pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments.

The need for opioid and pain experience reduction in the preoperative has encouraged the study and use of other alternatives. Specific, head-to-head studies and critical analyses of available data in bariatric surgery are yet to be conducted regarding multimodal analgesia and single therapeutic alternatives. There are institutional protocols based on preliminary encouraging results that have reduced main variables (pain scores, opioid use, mobilization and hospital stay), however randomized clinical trials are still needed to clarify preliminary data and establish international guidelines with strong evidence.

Acknowledgements

None.

Conflict of interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

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