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A Systematic Review of Multimodal Analgesic Effectiveness on Acute Postoperative Pain After Adult Cardiac Surgery

journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-12, 04:05 authored by Rochelle WynneRochelle Wynne, Rebecca JedwabRebecca Jedwab, Kari Hanne Gjeilo, Suzanne Fredericks, Rosalie Magboo, Emily K Phillips, Mohammad Goudarzi Rad, Sheila O'Keefe‐Mccarthy, Lisa Keeping‐Burke, Jo Murfin, Tieghan Killackey, Jill Bruneau, Stacey Matthews, Tracey Bowden, Julie Sanders, Irene Lie
ABSTRACTAimTo synthesise the best available empirical evidence about the effectiveness of multimodal analgesics on pain after adult cardiac surgery.DesignA systematic review with meta‐analysis.MethodsIndexed full‐text papers or abstracts, in any language, of randomised controlled trials of adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery investigating multimodal postoperative analgesic regimen effect on mean level of patient‐reported pain intensity at rest.Data SourcesEight databases, via two platforms and three trial registries were searched from 1 January 1995 to 1 June 2024 returning 3823 citations.ResultsOf the 123 full‐text papers assessed, 29 were eligible for inclusion. Data were independently extracted by a minimum of two reviewers in Covidence. There were 2195 participants, aged 60.4 ± 6.6 (range 40–79) years, who were primarily male (n = 1522, 76.1%), randomised in the included studies. Risk of bias was high and reporting quality was poor. Patient‐reported pain was measured at rest in 28 (96.6%) trials. Data were suitable for pooled analysis from 10 (34.5%) of these trials with an average rest pain intensity of 3.3 (SD 1.5) in the control and 2.7 (SD 1.9) in the intervention groups, respectively. No trials compared combinations of nonopioid, opioid‐agonist–antagonist, partial opioid agonists or full opioid agonists. Most trials (n = 11, 37.9%) compared two different full opioid options for less than 72 h (n = 24, 82.7%).ConclusionsRobust trials are needed to determine which multimodal analgesic combination will optimise patient recovery after adult cardiac surgery. There is an urgent need to test and refine high‐quality end‐point measures.Implications for Patient CareAdequate assessment precedes ideal pain treatment. The findings from this review reveal neither are sufficient, and the impact of suboptimal pain management on postoperative recovery is grossly underinvestigated.ImpactThe optimal combination of multimodal analgesics is unknown despite being recommended in best practice guidelines for enhanced recovery after cardiac surgery. Almost 30% of adults continue to experience ongoing pain up to a year after cardiac surgery, and findings from this review reveal a dearth of robust empirical evidence for optimal pain management, and heterogeneity in the way pain is assessed, measured and managed. This review provides a premise for robust trials focused on acute postoperative recovery in cardiac surgery and beyond.Reporting MethodThis review was conducted in accordance with the PRISMA‐P statement.Patient or Public ContributionThere was no patient or public contribution.Protocol RegistrationPROSPERO: CRD42022355834

History

Journal

Journal of Advanced Nursing

Volume

81

Pagination

2757-2792

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • No

ISSN

0309-2402

eISSN

1365-2648

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

Wiley

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