The Perioperative Pain Management Bundle is Feasible: Findings from the PAIN OUT Registry.

Stamenkovic, Dusica; Baumbach, Philipp; Radovanovic, Dragana; Novovic, Milos; Ladjevic, Nebojsa; Dubljanin Raspopovic, Emilija; Palibrk, Ivan; Unic-Stojanovic, Dragana; Jukic, Aleksandra; Jankovic, Radmilo; Bojic, Suzana; Gacic, Jasna; Stamer, Ulrike M; Meissner, Winfried; Zaslansky, Ruth (2023). The Perioperative Pain Management Bundle is Feasible: Findings from the PAIN OUT Registry. The clinical journal of pain, 39(10), pp. 537-545. Wolters Kluwer Health 10.1097/AJP.0000000000001153

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OBJECTIVES

The quality of postoperative pain management is often poor. A 'bundle', a small set of evidence-based interventions, is associated with improved outcomes in different settings. We assessed whether staff caring for surgical patients could implement a 'Perioperative Pain Management Bundle' and whether this would be associated with improved multi-dimensional pain-related Patient-Reported-Outcomes (PROs).

METHODS

PAIN OUT, a perioperative pain registry, offers tools for auditing pain-related PROs and obtaining information about perioperative pain management during the first 24 hours after surgery. Staff from 10 hospitals in Serbia used this methodology to collect data at baseline. They then implemented the 'perioperative pain management bundle' into the clinical routine and collected another round of data. The bundle consists of four treatment elements: (1) a full daily dose of 1-2 non-opioid analgesics (e.g. paracetamol, NSAIDs); (2) at least one type of local/regional anesthesia; (3) pain assessment by staff; (4) offering patients information about pain management. The primary endpoint was a multi-dimensional pain composite score (PCS), evaluating pain intensity, interference and side-effects: It was compared between patients who received the full bundlevs.not.

RESULTS

Implementation of the complete bundle was associated with a significant reduction in the PCS (P<0.001, small-medium effect size [ES]). When each treatment element was evaluated independently, non-opioid analgesics were associated with a higher PCS (i.e. poorer outcome; negligible ES); the other elements were associated with a lower PCS (all negligible-small ES). Individual PROs were consistently better in patients receiving the full bundle compared to 0-3 elements. The PCS was not associated with surgical discipline.

DISCUSSION

We report findings from using a bundle approach for perioperative pain management in patients undergoing mixed surgical procedures. Future work will seek strategies to improve the effect.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

ClinicalTrials.gov identified NCT02083835.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Anaesthesiology (DINA) > Clinic and Policlinic for Anaesthesiology and Pain Therapy

UniBE Contributor:

Stamer, Ulrike

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1536-5409

Publisher:

Wolters Kluwer Health

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

21 Aug 2023 15:15

Last Modified:

18 Aug 2024 00:25

Publisher DOI:

10.1097/AJP.0000000000001153

PubMed ID:

37589465

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/185544

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/185544

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