ED90 of spinal 2-chloroprocaine 1% in ambulatory knee arthroscopy up to 45 min: a randomized biased-coin- up-and-down sequential allocation trial

Elsbeth J Wesselink, Seppe J Koopman, Rien van der Vegt, Peter M van de Ven, Jan P van der Aa, Carlijne Stapper, Friso Wesdorp, Laura de Kok, Yiyi Zhang, Eric J Franssen, Eleonora L Swart, Christa Boer, Marcel A de Leeuw

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A short acting spinal anesthetic facilitates smooth flow since quick recovery of motor function will facilitate unassisted ambulation. The aim of this study was to estimate the effective dose (ED90) of intrathecal 2-chloroprocaine 1% in outpatient knee arthroscopy.

METHODS: Two cohorts were included in two different hospitals. In cohort I, a randomized biased-coin up-and-down design with 40 patients was used to find the ED90. Four dose-levels of plain 2-chloroprocaine 1% were used: 25, 30, 35 and 40 mg. The identified primary outcome, the ED90, was validated in 50 patients in cohort II with an open label design. Secondary outcomes included time to complete recovery from motor and sensory block with spinal injection as time zero, peak sensory block level, urine retention and time until hospital discharge.

RESULTS: Forty patients were included in the final analysis in cohort I. The ED90 was estimated at 27.8 mg, successful spinal anesthesia was obtained in 38 patients (95%). Fifty patients were included in the final analysis in cohort II, 49 patients had successful anesthesia with a fixed round dose of 28 mg. In this Cohort, peak sensory block was T10/T11 (range: (L4-T4)). The median time to full recovery of the motor block was 60 min (45-60) and 90 min (75-105) for the sensory block. The mean time to hospital discharge was 2.9 hours (0.7).

CONCLUSION: The ED90 of 2-chloroprocaine 1% in knee arthroscopy was estimated to be 27.8 mg. In an external population, the ED90 resulted in successful anesthesia in 98% of the patients (95% CI 89% to 100%).

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Netherlands Trial Registry (NL6769).

Original languageEnglish
Article number103089
Pages (from-to)212-216
Number of pages5
JournalRegional anesthesia and pain medicine
Volume47
Issue number4
Early online date13 Jan 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2022

Keywords

  • ambulatory care
  • anesthesia
  • injections
  • local
  • lower extremity
  • pharmacology
  • spinal

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