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Long-term Outcomes of Lidocaine Infusions for Post-Operative Pain (LOLIPOP) Trial

Long-term Outcomes of Lidocaine Infusions for Post-Operative Pain (LOLIPOP) Trial

Recruiting
18 years and older
Female
Phase 4

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Overview

The LOLIPOP Trial is a large (n=4,300 patients) pragmatic, international, multicentre, prospective, randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled, parallel assessment, safety and effectiveness superiority study.

Description

The Trial's purpose is to evaluate the effectiveness of lidocaine infusions commenced during surgery and extending up to 24 hours postoperatively, on the incidence of moderate or severe chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP) detected one year following surgery in female patients undergoing elective breast cancer surgery. The trial has 90% power to detect a clinically meaningful (25%) reduction in the incidence of the primary outcome. Secondary outcomes include safety events, analgesic efficacy (pain scores and opioid consumption), neuropathic characteristics of CPSP, and psychological and quality of life outcomes.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Consenting adult female patients (≥18 years) undergoing mastectomy (unilateral or bilateral) or breast conserving surgery (unilateral or bilateral) for the primary excision of confirmed or suspected breast cancer under general anaesthesia (including those with simultaneous insertion of tissue expanders or implants).
  • American Society of Anaesthesiologist (ASA) physical scale 1-3

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Pre-existing pain at site of surgery, axilla, ipsilateral side of chest wall or the ipsilateral upper arm
  • Re-excision procedures where the margins at the index surgery have been deemed insufficient
  • When immediate autologous reconstruction surgery is planned
  • Where delayed autologous reconstruction surgery on the operative breast within one year is planned
  • Planned use of regional analgesia infusions
  • Impaired cognition
  • Pregnant or lactating females
  • Transgender patients
  • Known metastatic disease
  • History of anaphylaxis, sensitivity or known contraindication to lidocaine (or other amide local anaesthetic agents e.g. other amide local anaesthetic agents: ropivacaine, bupivacaine, mepivacaine, prilocaine, etidocaine), including patients with porphyria or methaemoglobinaemia
  • History of epilepsy
  • Baseline heart rate < 50 bpm or systolic blood pressure < 100mmHg.
  • Acute coronary event in the last three months
  • Cardiac conduction abnormalities, including; Atrial fibrillation, Heart block (all degrees), Bundle Branch Block or Fascicular block, Prolonged QT interval, Wolf Parkinson White syndrome, channelopathy such as Brugada syndrome. A preoperative Electrocardiogram (ECG) is not mandatory, unless clinically indicated
  • Abnormal serum potassium concentration (based upon site laboratory reference ranges)
  • Abnormal serum sodium concentration (based upon site laboratory reference ranges)
  • Active liver disease e.g. viral hepatitis, alcoholic liver disease, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, haemochromatosis, other rarer causes)
  • Medications within the last 7 days which are known / suspected to slow lidocaine metabolism (amiodarone, beta blockers, cimetidine, fluoroquinolones, fluvoxamine, imidazoles, macrolides, verapamil, HIV drugs)
  • Cardiac Failure
  • Severe Renal Failure (Creatinine Clearance of less than 30ml/min or dialysis dependent)
  • Co-administration of lidocaine within 24 hours prior to surgery for other reasons (e.g. lidocaine patches

Study details
    Breast Cancer
    Breast Cancer Female
    Breast Conserving Surgery
    Mastectomy

NCT05072314

Monash University

17 February 2024

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