• Langenbecks Arch Surg · Mar 2008

    Controlled Clinical Trial

    Opioid use determines success of videothoracoscopic splanchnicectomy in chronic pancreatic pain patients.

    • Tomasz Stefaniak, Ad Vingerhoets, Wojciech Makarewicz, Lukasz Kaska, Jarek Kobiela, Barbara Kwiecińska, Aleksander Stanek, Andrzej J Lachinski, and Zbigniew Sledziński.
    • Department of General, Endocrine and Transplant Surgery, Medical University of Gdansk, Gdansk, Poland. wujstef@amg.gda.pl
    • Langenbecks Arch Surg. 2008 Mar 1;393(2):213-8.

    ObjectiveVideoscopic splanchnicectomy (VSPL) is a method of pain relief in chronic pancreatitis patients. Because this method is not equally effective in all patients, this study was designed to identify the factors determining the unfavorable results of VSPL.Materials And MethodsThis is a non-randomized prospective case-controlled study designed to compare a group of patients suffering from chronic pancreatitis treated with VSPL (N = 48) versus a group of patients treated symptomatically (N = 42). The outcome was measured as the intensity of pain ailments [visual analog scale (VAS)-pain scale] and subjective satisfaction of the patients from the surgical treatment [Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Treatment Satisfaction (FACIT-TS)]. The predictive variables considered in this study were: age, sex, emotional status, social support (the two last variables were measured by subscales of quality-of-life questionnaire from the group of FACIT), history of previous surgical treatment, and opioid use for at least 3 months before VSPL. The follow-up was 18 months. Logistic regression was performed using dichotomized pain as outcome variable: high score more than 66.7 on VAS scale and low under 50 points on VAS scale 18 months after VSPL.ResultsVSPL significantly reduced the pain ailments at all points of the study when compared to the control. However, the pain intensity at the end of the study was higher than directly after the surgery. In the patients treated with opioids before the surgery, the pain intensity was significantly higher than in the patients not using this group of drugs. Logistic regression revealed that opioid administration before VSPL was the most important predictor of high pain scores 18 months after the surgery.ConclusionWhen planning the VSPL in the treatment of pain in patients suffering from chronic pancreatitis, it is necessary to take into consideration the previous chronic use of opioids, as this variable can significantly influence poorer results of this surgical pain management.

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