Prolonging the duration of single-shot intrathecal labour analgesia with morphine: A systematic review

Author:

Al-Kazwini Hadeel1,Sandven Irene2,Dahl Vegard34,Rosseland Leiv Arne45

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anaesthesia , Skien Hospital, Telemark Hospital Trust , Skien , Norway

2. Oslo Centre for Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Research Support Services , Oslo University Hospital , Oslo , Norway

3. Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine , Akershus University Hospital , Loerenskog , Norway

4. Faculty of Medicine , Institute of Clinical Medicine , University of Oslo , Oslo , Norway

5. Department of Research and Development, Division of Emergencies and Critical Care , Oslo University Hospital , Oslo , Norway

Abstract

Abstract Background and aims Single-shot spinal with bupivacaine plus fentanyl or sufentanil is commonly used as analgesia during labour, but the short duration limits the clinical feasibility. Different drugs have been added to prolong the analgesic duration. The additional effect of intra-thecal morphine has been studied during labour pain as well as after surgery. We assessed whether adding morphine to intra-thecal bupivacaine + fentanyl or sufentanil prolongs pain relief during labour. Methods Meta-analysis of placebo-controlled randomized clinical trials of analgesia prolongation after single-shot intrathecal morphine ≤250µg during labour when given in combination with bupivacaine + fentanyl or sufentanil. After identifying 461 references, 24 eligible studies were evaluated after excluding duplicate publications, case reports, studies of analgesia after caesarean delivery, and epidural labour analgesia. Mean duration in minutes was the primary outcome measure and was included in the calculation of the standardized mean difference. Duration was defined as the time between a single shot spinal until patient request of rescue analgesia. All reported side effects were registered. Results of individual trials were combined using a random effect model. Cochrane tool was used to assess risk of bias. Results Five randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials (286 patients) were included in the metaanalysis. A dose of 50–250µg intrathecal morphine prolonged labour analgesia by a mean of 60.6 min (range 3–155 min). Adding morphine demonstrated a medium beneficial effect as we found a pooled effect of standardized mean difference = 0.57 (95% CI: –0.10 to 1.24) with high heterogeneity (I 2 =88.1%). However, the beneficial effect was statistically non-significant (z =1.66, p = 0.096). The lower-bias trials showed a small statistically non-significant beneficial effect with lower heterogeneity. In influential analysis, that excluded one study at a time from the meta-analysis, the effect size appears unstable and the results indicate no robustness of effect. Omitting the study with highest effects size reduces the pooled effect markedly and that study suffers from inadequate concealment of treatment allocation and blinding. Trial quality was generally low, and there were too few trials to explore sources of heterogeneity in meta-regression and stratified analyses. In general, performing meta-analyses on a small number of trials are possible and may be helpful if one is aware of the limitations. As few as one more placebo-controlled trial would increase the reliability greatly. Conclusions Evidence from this systematic review suggests a possible beneficial prolonging effect of adding morphine to spinal analgesia with bupivacaine + fentanyl or +sufentanil during labour. The study quality was low and heterogeneity high. No severe side effects were reported. More adequately-powered randomized trials with low bias are needed to determine the benefits and harms of adding morphine to spinal local anaesthetic analgesia during labour. Implications Epidural analgesia is documented as the most effective method for providing pain relief during labour, but from a global perspective most women in labour have no access to epidural analgesia. Adding morphine to single shot spinal injection of low dose bupivacaine, fentanyl or sufentanil may be efficacious but needs to be investigated.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Clinical Neurology

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