Effectiveness of dexmedetomidine during surgery under general anaesthesia on patient-centred outcomes: a systematic review and Bayesian meta-analysis protocol

Author:

Verret MichaelORCID,Le John Bao Phuc,Lalu Manoj MORCID,McIsaac Daniel IORCID,Nicholls Stuart,Turgeon Alexis FORCID,Hutton BrianORCID,Zivkovic Fiona,Graham Megan,Le Maxime,Geist Allison,Berube MelanieORCID,Gilron IanORCID,Poulin Patricia,Daudt Helena,Martel GuillaumeORCID,McVicar Jason,Moloo Husein,Fergusson Dean AORCID

Abstract

IntroductionDexmedetomidine is a promising pharmaceutical strategy to minimise opioid use during surgery. Despite its growing use, it is uncertain whether dexmedetomidine can improve patient-centred outcomes such as quality of recovery and pain.Methods and analysisWe will conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis following the recommendations of theCochrane Handbook for Systematic Reviews. We will search MEDLINE, Embase, CENTRAL, Web of Science and CINAHL approximately in October 2023. We will include randomised controlled trials evaluating the impact of systemic intraoperative dexmedetomidine on patient-centred outcomes. Patient-centred outcome definition will be based on the consensus definition established by the Standardised Endpoints in Perioperative Medicine initiative (StEP-COMPAC). Our primary outcome will be the quality of recovery after surgery. Our secondary outcomes will be patient well-being, function, health-related quality of life, life impact, multidimensional assessment of postoperative acute pain, chronic pain, persistent postoperative opioid use, opioid-related adverse events, hospital length of stay and adverse events. Two reviewers will independently screen and identify trials and extract data. We will evaluate the risk of bias of trials using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool (RoB 2.0). We will synthesise data using a random effects Bayesian model framework, estimating the probability of achieving a benefit and its clinical significance. We will assess statistical heterogeneity with the tau-squared and explore sources of heterogeneity with meta-regression. We have involved patient partners, clinicians, methodologists, and key partner organisations in the development of this protocol, and we plan to continue this collaboration throughout all phases of this systematic review.Ethics and disseminationOur systematic review does not require research ethics approval. It will help inform current clinical practice guidelines and guide development of future randomised controlled trials. The results will be disseminated in open-access peer-reviewed journals, presented at conferences and shared among collaborators and networks.PROSPERO registration numberCRD42023439896.

Funder

Canadian Blood Services

Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé

Ottawa Hospital

Anesthesia Alternate Funds Association

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Université Laval

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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