Topical analgesia treats pain and decreases propofol use during lumbar punctures
in a randomized pediatric leukemia trial.
Author(s): Whitlow PG(1), Saboda K, Roe DJ, Bazzell S, Wilson C.
Affiliation(s): Author information:
(1)Division of Oncology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center,
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Publication date & source: 2015, Pediatr Blood Cancer. , 62(1):85-90
BACKGROUND: Lumbar punctures are frequently performed in pediatric leukemia for
central nervous system leukemic prophylaxis. The contribution of local anesthetic
with deep sedation is unknown. The objective was to evaluate EMLA (eutectic
mixture of local anesthetics) cream as a pain reliever in conjunction with
propofol in the setting of routine lumbar punctures.
PROCEDURE: We included patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia aged 3-21 years
requiring at least two routine lumbar punctures. Patients were randomly assigned
to receive EMLA or placebo cream and the alternate treatment with the second
procedure. Patients, personnel and outcome assessors were blinded to allocation.
The primary outcome included three indirect measures of pain: total median
propofol doses, patient movement and heart rate changes at the time of skin
puncture in both treatment groups.
RESULTS: Twenty-six patients were enrolled and 25 were analyzed. With EMLA cream,
4 mg/kg (median) of propofol was required (95% CI 3.5-4.4). With placebo, 4.9
mg/kg of propofol was needed (95% CI 4.3-5.6; P = 0.008). When EMLA cream was
applied, 8% of patients moved, whereas 84% moved with placebo cream (P < 0.0001).
There was a lower average heart rate by seven beats in the EMLA treatment
compared to placebo (95% CI -2.3-4.3; 4.1-12.4; P = 0.009). There were no adverse
events in either treatment group.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that the combination of EMLA cream with
propofol is beneficial. Topical analgesics are at the discretion of the
oncologist, allowing us to advocate for patients by providing safe and
efficacious pain management for lumbar punctures.
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