Summary Recommendations - ESRA
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Summary Recommendations

PROSPECT provides clinicians with supporting arguments for and against the use of various interventions in postoperative pain based on published evidence and expert opinion. Clinicians must make judgements based upon the clinical circumstances and local regulations. At all times, local prescribing information for the drugs referred to must be consulted.

Open colorectal surgery is associated with significant postoperative pain (Gerbershagen 2013). The aim of this systematic review (Uten 2024) was to update the available literature and develop recommendations for optimal pain management after colorectal surgery, using PROSPECT methodology. The previous recommendations, based on a systematic review of 93 randomised controlled trials, are available on the PROSPECT website (Archive: Open Colorectal Surgery 2016).

The unique PROSPECT methodology is available at https://esraeurope.org/prospect-methodology/. The methodology requires that the included studies are critically assessed, taking into consideration their clinical relevance, use of basic analgesia, and the effectiveness, adverse effects, and invasiveness of each analgesic or anaesthetic technique (Joshi 2019).  The methodology has been updated now for future reviews (Joshi 2023).

Literature databases were searched for randomised controlled trials and meta-analyses, published in the English language, which evaluated the effects of analgesic, anaesthetic and surgical interventions on pain after open colorectal surgery from January 2016 to January 2022. 13 new studies met the inclusion criteria.

This review is registered on PROSPERO (CRD4202338800).

Summary of recommendations and key evidence for pain management in patients undergoing open colorectal surgery

Systemic analgesia

IV paracetamol and NSAID/COX-2 inhibitors are recommended for colonic surgery; paracetamol is recommended for rectal surgery; these should be administered pre-operatively or intra-operatively and continued postoperatively, if there are no contraindications

  • No new procedure-specific studies were identified but these agents are recommended as part of basic multimodal analgesia in accordance with PROSPECT methodology
  • PROSPECT recommends NSAIDs/COX-2 specific inhibitors for colonic, but not for rectal surgery, given concern over potential anastomotic leakage (Holte 2009; Bhangu 2014; Iversen 2018; Modasi 2019; Chen 2022; Chapman 2019)
IV lidocaine is recommended when epidural analgesia is not feasible or contra-indicated

  • No change to the 2016 recommendation
  • In the updated literature review, one RCT reported significantly reduced rescue opioid consumption with similar pain scores with intravenous lidocaine compared to placebo, in the absence of basic analgesia (Ho 2018)
  • Safety considerations: No other continuous infusion of local anaesthetic should be administered when infusing IV lidocaine (Foo 2021; Shanthanna 2021). Moreover, a nerve block and an IV lidocaine infusion cannot be combined at the same time. Careful dosing and monitoring are necessary to prevent systemic absorption and toxicity
Opioids should be reserved as rescue analgesia in the postoperative period

  • Although opioids are effective for pain relief, they can cause side effects and should only be used as rescue analgesia when other options are insufficient

Regional techniques

Low continuous TEA is recommended as first-line treatment

  • Continuous TEA was also recommended in 2016
  • In the updated literature review, procedure-specific evidence showed reduced pain scores at rest and movement with TEA vs systemic analgesia (Falk 2021; Radovanović 2017)
  • In one study (Falk 2021), patients in the epidural group needed vasopressors for haemodynamic stability
Preoperative bilateral TAP block is recommended if TEA is not feasible or contra-indicated

  • This is a change from the 2016 recommendations
  • In the updated literature review, procedure-specific evidence showed reduced pain scores with bilateral TAP block vs systemic analgesia (Zhan 2020; Qazi 2017). Qazi 2017 also found a reduction in postoperative opioid consumption
Postoperative continuous pre-peritoneal infusion of LA is recommended when epidural analgesia is not feasible or contra-indicated

  • No change to the 2016 recommendation; the updated literature review found no new studies of continuous pre-peritoneal infusion of LA

Surgical techniques

Laparoscopic colorectal surgery is recommended over open colon surgery

  • No change to the 2016 recommendation; the updated literature review found no new studies of surgical techniques
Diathermy is recommended over the scalpel

  • No change to the 2016 recommendation; the updated literature review found no new studies of surgical techniques
Horizontal/curved (transverse) incision is recommended over a vertical incision

  • No change to the 2016 recommendation; the updated literature review found no new studies of surgical techniques

COX, cyclooxygenase; IV, intravenous; LA, local anaesthetic; NSAID, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug; RCT, randomised controlled trial; TAP, transabdominal plane; TEA, thoracic epidural analgesia.

Analgesic interventions that are not recommended* for pain management in patients undergoing open colorectal surgery.

Intervention

Reason for not recommending

Systemic analgesia
Extended-release dinalbuphine Insufficient evidence
Dexmedetomidine Insufficient evidence
Pregabalin Insufficient evidence
Duloxetine Insufficient evidence
Regional techniques
Erector spinae block Insufficient evidence
Bilateral rectus sheath block Insufficient evidence

*The studies on open colectomy are too few or inconclusive for a number of interventions in this list of not recommended options.

COX, cyclooxygenase; IV, intravenous; LA, local anaesthetic; NSAID, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug; TAP, transabdominal plane; TEA, thoracic epidural analgesia.