Automated mandatory bolus versus basal infusion for maintenance of epidural analgesia in labour

Ban Leong Sng, Yanzhi Zeng, Nurun Nisa A de Souza, Wan Ling Leong, Ting Ting Oh, Fahad Javaid Siddiqui, Pryseley N Assam, Nian-Lin R Han, Edwin Sy Chan, Alex T Sia, Ban Leong Sng, Yanzhi Zeng, Nurun Nisa A de Souza, Wan Ling Leong, Ting Ting Oh, Fahad Javaid Siddiqui, Pryseley N Assam, Nian-Lin R Han, Edwin Sy Chan, Alex T Sia

Abstract

Background: Childbirth may cause the most severe pain some women experience in their lifetime. Epidural analgesia is an effective form of pain relief during labour and is considered to be the reference standard. Traditionally epidural analgesia has been delivered as a continuous infusion via a catheter in the epidural space, with or without the ability for the patient to supplement the analgesia received by activating a programmable pump to deliver additional top-up doses, known as patient-controlled epidural analgesia (PCEA). There has been interest in delivering maintenance analgesic medication via bolus dosing (automated mandatory bolus - AMB) instead of the traditional continuous basal infusion (BI); recent randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have shown that the AMB technique leads to improved analgesia and maternal satisfaction.

Objectives: To assess the effects of automated mandatory bolus versus basal infusion for maintaining epidural analgesia in labour.

Search methods: We searched CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, the World Health Organization International Clinial Trials Registry Platform (WHO-ICTRP) and ClinicalTrials.gov on 16 January 2018. We screened the reference lists of all eligible trials and reviews. We also contacted authors of included studies in this field in order to identify unpublished research and trials still underway, and we screened the reference lists of the included articles for potentially relevant articles.

Selection criteria: We included all RCTs that compared the use of bolus dosing AMB with continuous BI for providing pain relief during epidural analgesia for labour in women.

Data collection and analysis: We used the standard methodological procedures expected by Cochrane. Our primary outcomes were: risk of breakthrough pain with the need for anaesthetic intervention; risk of caesarean delivery; risk of instrumental delivery. Secondary outcomes included: duration of labour; local anaesthetic consumption. We used GRADE to assess the certainty of evidence for each outcome.

Main results: We included 12 studies with a total of 1121 women. Ten studies enrolled healthy nulliparous women only and two studies enrolled healthy parous women at term as well. All studies excluded women with complicated pregnancies. There were variations in the technique of initiation of epidural analgesia. Seven studies utilized the combined spinal epidural (CSE) technique, and the other five studies only placed an epidural catheter without any intrathecal injection. Seven studies utilized ropivacaine: six with fentanyl and one with sufentanil. Two studies used levobupivacaine: one with sufentanil and one with fentanyl. Three used bupivacaine with or without fentanyl. The overall risk of bias of the studies was low.AMB probably reduces the risk of breakthrough pain compared with BI for maintaining epidural analgesia for labour (from 33% to 20%; risk ratio (RR) 0.60; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.39 to 0.92, 10 studies, 797 women, moderate-certainty evidence). AMB may make little or no difference to the risk of caesarean delivery compared to BI (15% and 16% respectively; RR 0.92; 95% CI 0.70 to 1.21, 11 studies, 1079 women, low-certainty evidence).AMB may make little or no difference in the risk of instrumental delivery compared to BI (12% and 9% respectively; RR 0.75; 95% CI 0.54 to 1.06, 11 studies, 1079 women, low-certainty evidence). There is probably little or no difference in the mean duration of labour with AMB compared to BI (mean difference (MD) -10.38 min; 95% CI -26.73 to 5.96, 11 studies, 1079 women, moderate-certainty evidence). There is probably a reduction in the hourly consumption of local anaesthetic with AMB compared to BI for maintaining epidural analgesia during labour (MD -1.08 mg/h; 95% CI -1.78 to -0.38, 12 studies, 1121 women, moderate-certainty evidence). Five out of seven studies reported an increase in maternal satisfaction with AMB compared to BI for maintaining epidural analgesia for labour; however, we did not pool these data due to their ordinal nature. Seven studies reported Apgar scores, though there was significant heterogeneity in reporting. None of the studies showed any significant difference between Apgar scores between groups.

Authors' conclusions: There is predominantly moderate-certainty evidence that AMB is similar to BI for maintaining epidural analgesia for labour for all measured outcomes and may have the benefit of decreasing the risk of breakthrough pain and improving maternal satisfaction while decreasing the amount of local anaesthetic needed.

Conflict of interest statement

Ban Leong Sng: none known.

Yanzhi Zeng: none known.

Fahad Javaid Siddiqui: none known.

Pryseley N Assam: none known.

Edwin SY Chan: none known.

Wan Ling Leong: none known.

Ting Ting Oh: none known.

Alex T Sia is an author of six of the studies that are included in this review: Chua 2004; Leo 2010; Lim 2005; Lim 2010; Sia 2007; Sia 2013. The variable frequency automated mandatory bolus technique described in Sia 2013 prompted the filing of a patent for the technique.

Nurun Nisa Amatullah de Souza: none known.

Nian‐Lin R Han: none known.

Figures

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1
Study flow diagram.
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Risk of bias summary: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item for each included study.
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Risk of bias graph: review authors' judgements about each risk of bias item presented as percentages across all included studies.
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Funnel plot of comparison: 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, outcome: 1.2 Breakthrough pain (epidural vs CSE).
1.1. Analysis
1.1. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 1 Breakthrough pain.
1.2. Analysis
1.2. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 2 Breakthrough pain (epidural vs CSE).
1.3. Analysis
1.3. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 3 Breakthrough pain (PCEA vs no PCEA).
1.4. Analysis
1.4. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 4 Breakthrough pain (nulliparous vs multiparous).
1.5. Analysis
1.5. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 5 Caesarean delivery.
1.6. Analysis
1.6. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 6 Caesarean delivery (LA + opioids vs LA alone).
1.7. Analysis
1.7. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 7 Caesarean delivery (epidural vs CSE).
1.8. Analysis
1.8. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 8 Caesarean delivery (PCEA vs no PCEA).
1.9. Analysis
1.9. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 9 Caesarean delivery (nulliparous vs multiparous).
1.10. Analysis
1.10. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 10 Instrumental delivery.
1.11. Analysis
1.11. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 11 Instrumental delivery (LA + opioids vs LA alone).
1.12. Analysis
1.12. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 12 Instrumental delivery (epidural vs CSE).
1.13. Analysis
1.13. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 13 Instrumental delivery (PCEA vs No PCEA).
1.14. Analysis
1.14. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 14 Instrumental delivery (nulliparous vs multiparous).
1.15. Analysis
1.15. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 15 Duration of labour in minutes.
1.16. Analysis
1.16. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 16 Duration of labour in minutes (LA + opioids vs LA alone).
1.17. Analysis
1.17. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 17 Duration of labour in minutes (epidural vs CSE).
1.18. Analysis
1.18. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 18 Duration of labour in minutes (PCEA vs no PCEA).
1.19. Analysis
1.19. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 19 Duration of labour in minutes (nulliparous vs multiparous).
1.20. Analysis
1.20. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 20 LA consumption per hour.
1.21. Analysis
1.21. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 21 LA consumption per hour (LA + opioids vs LA alone).
1.22. Analysis
1.22. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 22 LA consumption per hour (epidural vs CSE).
1.23. Analysis
1.23. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 23 LA consumption per hour (PCEA vs no PCEA).
1.24. Analysis
1.24. Analysis
Comparison 1 Automated mandatory bolus vs basal infusion, Outcome 24 LA consumption per hour (nulliparous vs multiparous).

Source: PubMed

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