Back to Search Start Over

Impact of long-acting local anesthesia on clinical and financial outcomes in laparoscopic colorectal surgery

Authors :
Sergio Ibarra
Rodrigo Pedraza
Eric M. Haas
Reena N. Tahilramani
Deborah S. Keller
Juan R. Flores-Gonzalez
Source :
American journal of surgery. 214(1)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Our objective was to assess clinical and financial outcomes with long-acting liposomal bupicavaine (LB) in laparoscopic colorectal surgery.Patients that received local infiltration with LB were strictly matched to a control group, and compared for postoperative pain, opioid use, length of stay (LOS), hospital costs, and complication, readmission, and reoperation rates.A total of 70 patients were evaluated in each cohort. Operative times and conversion rates were similar. LB patients had lower post-anesthesia care unit pain scores (P = .001) and used less opioids through postoperative day 3 (day 0 P.01; day 1 P = .03; day 2 P = .02; day 3 P.01). Daily pain scores were comparable. LB had shorter LOS (mean 2.96 vs 3.93 days; P = .003) and trended toward lower readmission, complication, and reoperation rates. Total costs/patient were $746 less with LB, a savings of $52,200 across the cohort.Using local wound infiltration with LB, opioid use, LOS, and costs were improved after laparoscopic colorectal surgery. The additional medication cost was overshadowed by the overall cost benefits. Incorporating LB into a multimodal pain regiment had a benefit on patient outcomes and health care utilization.

Details

ISSN :
18791883
Volume :
214
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e473c158ca7cffcbd2fa0e0ed8be3ae1