The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if using methadone and ketamine during an adult deceased donor liver transplant can help decrease pain after surgery. The main questions it aims to answer are: * What impact does using methadone and ketamine during a deceased donor liver transplant have on pain after surgery? * Does the use of methadone and ketamine also have an impact on mental confusion (delirium) after surgery? Researchers will compare the use of methadone and ketamine to standard of care to see if the two drugs work to decrease pain and impact delirium after liver transplant. Participants will: * Receive either methadone and ketamine or standard of care during their deceased donor liver transplant. * Allow researchers to follow medical care throughout inpatient stay.
Pain control following liver transplantation (LT) has been the subject of interest of many research projects due to invasive nature of the procedure, significant comorbidities of recipients, effect of hepatic metabolism on many common pain medications and difficulties in performing some neuraxial and regional techniques given patient coagulopathy. Some newer regional nerve blocks such as External Oblique Intercostal (EOI) block has also been successfully utilized in pain management of patients undergoing liver resections but their utilization in perioperative setting for high-MELD patients and after-hour operations are limited. Methadone and ketamine are well-known drugs that have been recently emerged as components of new pain management pathways in many open surgeries due to their availability, cost, well-known metabolism, good safety profile and prolonged effects. Evidence has emerged that their use is associated with decreased likelihood of development of chronic pain and need for long term opioids. The combination of methadone and ketamine has been shown to be superior to opioids alone due to synergistic effect on N-methyl-d-aspartate and μ-opioid receptors. But these medications have not been extensively studied in LT recipients except for a few case reports and small studies. Current standards of care for intraoperative pain management during LT are systemic short and medium long-acting opioids such as fentanyl and hydromorphone which both have numerous concerns such as respiratory depression and opioid dependency. The aim of this study is to prospectively evaluate the effect of intraoperative methadone and ketamine administration on postoperative pain in liver transplant recipients. These drugs have been safely used during liver transplantation at LHMC and other centers and showed to be effective and safe, but the exact dosing and timing of administration requires further studies.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
50
Participants in this group will receive one bolus dose of intravenous Methadone and Ketamine at the start of operation
Participants in this group will receive one bolus dose of intravenous Methadone and Ketamine at the start of operation
Participants in this group will receive standard of care for pain with either intravenous fentanyl and/or hydromorphone boluses during the procedure
Participants in this group will receive standard of care for pain with either intravenous fentanyl and/or hydromorphone boluses during the procedure
Lahey Hospital and Medical Center
Burlington, Massachusetts, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGLahey Hospital and Medical Center
Burlington, Massachusetts, United States
RECRUITINGPostoperative Pain
postoperative opioid consumption (measured as morphine milligram equivalents ((MME)) 48 hours after surgery
Time frame: 8, 16, 24, 32, 40 and 48hours post-surgery finish
Postoperative Pain
Subjective postoperative pain scores measured as 0-10 (10 being the worst pain)
Time frame: 8, 16, 24, 32, 40 and 48hours post-surgery finish
Length of stay in intensive care unit
Duration of length of stay in intensive care unit in hours
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from intensive care unit, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Length of stay in hospital
Duration of length of stay in the hospital in days
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from hospital, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Delirium
Incidence of postoperative delirium measured by standard CAM-ICU scores, ICD-10 diagnosis of delirium, any use of anti-agitation medication such as haloperidol, dexmedetomidine or seroquel
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from intensive care unit, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Respiratory complications
Any significant respiratory complications such as re-intubation, need for invasive ventilation such as BIPAP or CPAP
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from intensive care unit, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Narcotics reversal agent
Any need for narcotics reversal agents such as Naloxone after administration of study drugs
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from intensive care unit, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Postoperative adjunct pain modalities
Incidence of usage of any additional pain modalities such as nerve blocks, neuraxial anesthesia, non-narcotic pain medications such as additional ketamine dose, ketorolac, methocarbamol, ketorolac, etc
Time frame: Post surgery finish until discharge from intensive care unit, or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 30 days
Correlation Between Study Drug Exposure and Early Post-Transplant Laboratory Markers of Liver Dysfunction
Unit of measure: Correlation coefficient (r) describing the association between study drug exposure and postoperative laboratory markers of liver dysfunction during the first 24hrs post surgery. Independent variables (study drug exposure): * Randomized study drug assignment (e.g., ketamine vs methadone vs standard of care) * Total intraoperative dose of each study drug (total mg) Dependent variables (markers of postoperative liver dysfunction): Correlation coefficients will be calculated between study drug exposure and the following laboratory values measured during first postoperative days : * Peak alanine aminotransferase (ALT), IU/L * Peak aspartate aminotransferase (AST), IU/L * Peak total bilirubin, mg/dL * Peak international normalized ratio (INR)
Time frame: Immediate to 24hrs post surgery finish
Correlation Between Donor and Surgical Factors and Postoperative Opioid Use (MME)
Unit of measure: Correlation coefficient (r) describing the association between each donor/surgical factor and total postoperative opioid consumption (MME) during postoperative days 0-2. Total MME will be calculated by converting all administered opioids into morphine milligram equivalents using standard conversion factors. Factors assessed (independent variables): * Donor age (years) * Donation type (donation after brain death vs donation after circulatory death) * Use of normothermic machine perfusion (yes/no) * Cold ischemia time (hours) * Warm ischemia time (minutes) * Surgical technique characteristics (e.g., piggyback vs caval replacement approach, vascular anastomosis techniques, use of veno-venous bypass), coded as categorical variables
Time frame: From the end of surgery through 48hr post surgery
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