Abstract
Introduction
Postoperative pain remains incompletely controlled for decades.
Recently, multimodal analgesia is emerging as a potential approach in
the management of postoperative pain. Therein, S(+)-ketamine is
appealing as an adjuvant drug in multimodal analgesia due to its unique
pharmacological advantages. This pragmatic clinical trial (SAFE-SK-A
trial) is designed to investigate the analgesic effect and safety of
S(+)-ketamine for acute postoperative pain in adults and explore the
optimal strategy of perioperative intravenous S(+)-ketamine in a
real-world setting.
Methods and analysis
This multicentre, randomised, open-label, positive-controlled,
pragmatic clinical trial (SAFE-SK-A study) is planned to conduct in 80
centres from China and recruit a total of 12 000 adult participants
undergoing a surgical procedure under general anaesthesia. Patient
recruitment started in June 2021 and will end in June 2022. Participants
will be randomised in a ratio of 2:1 to either receive perioperative
intravenous S(+)-ketamine plus conventional anaesthesia or conventional
anaesthesia only. Given the pragmatic nature of the study, no specific
restriction as to the administration dosage, route, time, synergistic
regimen or basic analgesics. Primary endpoints are the area under the
broken line of Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) scores for pain intensity
and the total opioid consumption within 48 hours postoperative.
Secondary endpoints are postoperative NRS scores, the anaesthesia
recovery time, time of first rescue analgesia, the incidence of rescue
analgesia, the incidence of postoperative delirium, patient
questionnaire for effect, changes from baseline in cognitive function
and anxiety and depression, as well as the adverse events and
pharmacoeconomic outcomes. The general linear model will be used for the
primary endpoint, and appropriate methods will be used for the secondary
endpoints.
Ethics and dissemination
This trial has been approved by the local Institutional Review Board
(S2021-026-02) and conducted following the Declaration of Helsinki.
Results of this trial will be publicly disclosed and published in
scientific journals.
Trial registration number
NCT04837170; Pre-results.
Funder
the
National Key Research and Development Program of
China