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.
Cleft palate surgery is associated with moderate-to-severe postoperative pain. Effective pain control should improve surgical outcomes and reduce stress and agitation in children following surgical correction of cleft palate, which may otherwise increase the risk of complications such as wound dehiscence and development of fistulae (Shin 2022).
However, the difficulty of assessing postoperative pain in the paediatric population and the limited evidence for appropriate analgesia after cleft palate surgery means that pain management is often inadequate.
This review (Suleiman 2023) aimed to evaluate the available evidence and to develop recommendations for optimal pain management after cleft palate surgery using procedure-specific postoperative pain management (PROSPECT) methodology.
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. The methodology has been updated now for future reviews (Joshi 2023).
Literature databases were searched for randomised controlled trials and systematic reviews assessing pain in children (under 18 years of age) undergoing cleft palate repair, published in the English language, from July 2002 to August 2023. 19 randomised controlled trials and 4 systematic reviews met the inclusion criteria.
PROSPERO registration number: CRD42022364788.
COX, cyclooxygenase; NSAIDs, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Analgesic interventions that are not recommended* for pain management in patients undergoing cleft palate repair.
*Some of these techniques may potentially be effective but there is not yet enough data available to consider a recommendation.
Of note, pre-incisional local anaesthetic infiltration and dexamethasone were administered as a routine in several studies. However, because of limited procedure-specific evidence, their contribution to pain relief after cleft palate surgery remains unknown. Future well-designed studies are necessary to examine the role of surgical site infiltration and dexamethasone as components of the recommended multimodal analgesia.
PROSPECT recommendations for cleft palate repair surgery_Infographic
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