Title: Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting
1Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting
2Overview
- Physiology of PONV and risk factors
- Review of literature
- PONV prophylaxis
- Treatment of PONV - a possible protocol for PACU
and the wards
3Overview of PONV
4Patient perceptions
- Macario A. et al. Which Clinical Anesthesia
Outcomes Are Important to Avoid? The Perspective
of Patients. Anesth Analg 199989652-8. - Patients studied rated nausea and vomiting as the
1st or 2nd most undesirable outcome from surgery
(equal to or more important than adequate pain
relief)
5Physiology of PONV
- Vomiting is primarily controlled by the vomiting
centre in the dorsolateral reticular formation of
the medulla. - The vomiting center receives input from several
anatomical sites and vomiting is effected via
neuromuscular responses in the gut,
thoracoabdominal wall and pharynx. - Nausea is poorly understood but is likely to
involve the cortex as requires conscious
perception. - EEG activation of temporofrontal cortical areas
6ACTIVATORS and neurotransmitters
- CTZ (chemoreceptor trigger zone) emetic drugs,
bacterial toxins, metabolic disorders (5-HT3, M1,
H1, D2 receptors) - Gastric irritants gastroduodenal vagal afferents
(5-HT3 receptors) - Noxious thoughts or smells cortex
- Gag reflex activation cranial nerves
- Labyrinthine apparatus (M1 and H1 receptors)
- Peripheral pain receptors
Fig.1 Vomiting activators and neurotransmitters (h
ttp//www.frca.co.uk/article.aspx?articleid354)
7Coordination of emesis
- Vomiting centre integrates responses gt brainstem
nuclei - Contraction of inspiratory thoracic and abdominal
wall muscles increases intrathoracic and
intra-abdominal pressure - Gastric cardia herniates across diaphragm
larynx moves upwards - Normal gut slow waves replaced by retrograde
spikes
8Risk Factors for PONV
9Risk factors for PONV
- There are few independent predictors for PONV1,2
Patient Anaesthetic Surgical
Female Volatile agents Duration
Nonsmoking Nitrous oxide Type of surgery strabismus, laparoscopy, laparotomy, gynaecological, neurological, maxillofacial
History of PONV/motion sickness Intra-/postoperative opioids Type of surgery strabismus, laparoscopy, laparotomy, gynaecological, neurological, maxillofacial
1. Gan et al. Society for Ambulatory Anesthesia
Guidelines for the Management of Postoperative
Nausea and Vomiting. Anesth Analg
2007105161528 2. Apfel CC et al. Comparison of
surgical site and patients history with a
simpli?ed risk score for the prediction of
postoperative nausea and vomiting. Anaesthesia,
2004 59 1078-1082
10A Simplified Risk Score for PONV - Adults
Score Risk of PONV
0 10
1 20
2 40
3 60
4 80
Risk Factor Score
Female 1
Non-smoker 1
History of PONV 1
Postoperative opioids 1
11A Simplified Risk Score for PONV - Children
Score Risk of PONV
0 10
1 10
2 30
3 55
4 70
Risk Factor Score
Surgery 30 mins 1
Age 3 yrs 1
Strabismus surgery 1
History of/relatives with PONV 1
12Questions
- What drug (or combination of drugs) is most
effective at preventing PONV? - Which patients would benefit from prophylaxis and
what is the most effective strategy? - How can treatment of PONV be optimised in PACU
and on the wards?
13Evidence
14Cochrane Review 2006
- Carlisle JB, Stevenson CA. Drugs for preventing
postoperative nausea and vomiting. Cochrane
Database of Systematic Reviews 2006, Issue 3.
Art. No. CD004125. DOI 10.1002/14651858.CD004125
.pub2. - 737 studies, n 103 237
- 8 drugs were effective in preventing PONV
compared with placebo - Droperidol, metoclopramide, ondansetron,
tropisetron, dolasetron, granisetron,
dexamethasone, cyclizine - Relative risk reduction 0.6-0.8
- We did not find reliable evidence that one drug
was better than another. - Effects were additive when drugs were given
together
15The IMPACT Trial
- Apfel CC et al. A Factorial Trial of Six
Interventions for the Prevention of Postoperative
Nausea and Vomiting. N Engl J Med 2004 350
2441-51 - RCT (factorial design) involving 28 centers,
n5199 - Evaluated 6 individual treatments and in
combination - Ondansetron 4mg dexamethasone 4mg droperidol
1.25mg propofol instead of volatile agent
nitrogen or nitrous oxide remifentanil or
fentanyl
16IMPACT Trial Results
- Each antiemetic drug had a similar relative risk
reduction (Table 1) - No significant differences between antiemetics
Intervention RRR (95 CI) p value
Ondansetron 4mg -26 (-31.5 to -19.9) lt0.0001
Dexamethasone 4mg -26.4 (-31.9 to -20.4) lt0.0001
Droperidol 1.25mg -24.5 (-30.2 to -18.4) lt0.0001
Propofol -18.9 (-25 to -12.3) lt0.0001
Nitrogen as carrier -12.1 (-19.3 to -4.3) 0.003
Remifentanil 5.2 (-2.9 to 13.8) 0.21
17IMPACT Trial Results
- 26 relative risk reduction for each additional
antiemetic used - This has implications for who benefits most from
prophylaxis
10 risk of PONV 80 risk of PONV
Risk after 1 intervention 7 59
ARR 3 21
NNT 40 5
18Maxolon
19Maxolon
- Wallenborn J et al. Prevention of postoperative
nausea and vomiting by metoclopramide combined
with dexamethasone randomised double blind
multicentre trial. BMJ 2006 333 (7653) 324-330. - Previous meta-analysis 10mg ineffective1
- Complex mode of action metoclopramide binds to
dopamine, serotonin and histamine receptors. - Double blind RCT of 3140 patients
- Dexamethasone alone vs in combination with 10mg,
25mg and 50mg of metoclopramide (iv 30-60 min
before anticipated end of surgery)
1. Henzi I, Walder B, Tramer MR. Metoclopramide
in the prevention of postoperative nausea and
vomiting a quantitative systematic review of
randomized, placebo-controlled studies. Br J
Anaesth 199983761-71.
20Results
Dexamethasone 8mg plus metoclopramide Incidence of PONV (CI) NNT
0mg 23.1 (20.2-26)
10mg 20.6 (17.8-23.4) 40
25mg 17.2 (14.6-19.8) 17
50mg 14.5 (12-17) 12
21Conclusions
- 25mg as effective as 50mg but 50mg more effective
at preventing late PONV (gt12 hrs post-op) - But its a high dose!
- Adverse effects?
- Contraindications
22Aprepitant
- Lai M et al. Combining aprepitant with
dexamethasone for the prevention of postoperative
nausea and vomiting. Abstract presented at
ANZCA/ASM2008 3-7 May 2008 p76-77. - Substance P/Neurokinin 1 Receptor antagonist
- Double blind, randomised study. n240
- Groups Aprepitant 80mg, dexamethasone 4mg, and
in combination.
23Results
- Similar efficacy to dexamethasone
- Significantly more effective in combination
- Used mainly in chemotherapy at present
Aprepitant 80mg Dexamethasone 4mg Aprepitant 80mg dexamethasone 4mg
0-6h 27 21 6
6-48h 5 7 2
0-48h 31 28 8
24Prophylaxis
25Optimising prophylaxis
- Relative risk reduction of approximately 26 for
each antiemetic (and each additional antiemetic) - Patients who will benefit the most (lower NNT)
are those at higher risk - Also important for optimising cost/benefit and
minimising adverse effects
26Prophylactic Strategy1
1. Gan et al. Society for Ambulatory Anesthesia
Guidelines for the Management of Postoperative
Nausea and Vomiting. Anesth Analg 2007105161528
27PACU Ward Protocols
28RPAH
- Protocol initiated with signed order PONV
Treatment Protocol (do not require
countersigning) - Stepwise protocol with
- Prochlorperazine (Stemetil)
- Tropisetron
- Droperidol
- Takes account of intraoperative dosing
29North Shore Hospital, Auckland NZ
30Royal Adelaide Hospital
- Metoclopramide no longer recommended
- Identifies high risk patients with intraoperative
therapy and postoperative standing orders - Coming soon...
31Conclusion
32Conclusion
- Prophylaxis is effective
- Identify patients at moderate to high risk
- Most patients should get at least one form of
prophylaxis consider other interventions (e.g.
TIVA) - Most of the commonly used drugs are equally
effective - PACU and ward protocols/standing orders can be
effective
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