Gabapentin and rapidity of recovery among patients undergoing minimally invasive ambulatory uro-oncologic surgeries Journal Article


Authors: Kohilakis, E.; Assel, M.; Serafin, J.; Mehta, M.; McCready, T. M.; Tokita, H. K.; McCormick, P. J.; Vickers, A. J.; Carlsson, S. V.; Laudone, V. P.; Afonso, A. M.
Article Title: Gabapentin and rapidity of recovery among patients undergoing minimally invasive ambulatory uro-oncologic surgeries
Abstract: Introduction:Gabapentin has been used in enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) pathways for pain control for patients undergoing ambulatory uro-oncologic surgery; however, it may cause undesirable side effects. We studied the causal association between gabapentin and rapidity of recovery and perioperative pain management after minimally invasive uro-oncologic surgery.Methods:We identified 2397 patients <= 65 years undergoing prostatectomies or nephrectomies between 2018 and 2022; 131 (5.5%) did not receive gabapentin. We tested the effect of gabapentin use on time of discharge and perioperative opioid consumption, respectively, using multivariable linear regression adjusting for potential confounders including age, gender, BMI, American Society of Anesthesiologists score, and surgery type.Results:On adjusted analysis, we found no evidence of a difference in discharge time among those who did vs did not receive gabapentin (adjusted difference 0.07 hours shorter on gabapentin; 95% CI -0.17, 0.31; P = .6). There was no evidence of a difference in intraoperative opioid consumption by gabapentin receipt (adjusted difference -1.5 morphine milligram equivalents; 95% CI -4.2, 1.1; P = .3) or probability of being in the top quartile of postoperative opioid consumption within 24 hours (adjusted difference 4.2%; 95% CI -4.8%, 13%; P = .4). We saw no important differences in confounders by gabapentin receipt suggesting causal conclusions are justified.Conclusions:Our confidence intervals did not include clinically meaningful benefits from gabapentin, when used with an ERAS protocol, in terms of length of stay or perioperative opioid use. These results support the omission of gabapentin from ERAS protocols for minimally invasive uro-oncologic surgeries.
Keywords: nephrectomy; prostatectomy; postoperative pain; management; gabapentin; double-blind; efficacy; prevention; ambulatory surgery; preoperative gabapentin; bladder discomfort
Journal Title: Urology Practice
Volume: 11
Issue: 4
ISSN: 2352-0779
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins  
Date Published: 2024-07-01
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:001266167600026
DOI: 10.1097/upj.0000000000000570
PROVIDER: wos
PMCID: PMC11192234
PUBMED: 38899668
Notes: The MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) is acknowledge in the PDF -- Corresponding authors is MSK author: Anoushka M. Afonso -- Source: Wos
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MSK Authors
  1. Vincent Laudone
    137 Laudone
  2. Andrew J Vickers
    882 Vickers
  3. Sigrid Viktoria Carlsson
    221 Carlsson
  4. Meghana Mehta
    18 Mehta
  5. Melissa Jean Assel
    110 Assel
  6. Anoushka Maria Afonso
    47 Afonso
  7. Hanae Tokita
    27 Tokita
  8. Joanna Serafin
    12 Serafin