Survey of administration of intravenous ketamine for perioperative pain management in Australia and New Zealand.

Anaesthesia and intensive care  – May 01, 2025

Source: PubMed

Summary

Ketamine, traditionally known for its role in anaesthesia, is emerging as a powerful tool for pain management during and after surgery. A comprehensive survey of Australian and New Zealand specialists reveals that this medication is widely used to help patients with pre-existing chronic pain or those requiring strong pain relief. Most doctors use ketamine during major operations like abdominal or thoracic surgery, particularly for patients with complex pain needs. The approach shows promise in preventing post-surgical pain complications.

Abstract

Ketamine is an N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist approved for use in anaesthesia, with analgesic properties. Despite publication of numerous trials and expert guidelines on its use for pain management, administration of ketamine as part of multimodal perioperative analgesia remains 'off-label'. We conducted an online, prospective survey of ANZCA Fellows, exploring current prescribing practices of intravenous ketamine for perioperative analgesia. We surveyed 2000 Fellows and received 806 responses. The factors mostly likely to influence their administration of perioperative ketamine included pre-existing chronic pain, and heavy or multiple opioid use by patients preoperatively. Amongst respondents, less senior anaesthetists and those working in public hospitals were more likely to administer intraoperative ketamine. The surgical procedures most likely to result in ketamine administration intraoperatively were open pelvic/abdominal, thoracic and major spinal surgery, where ketamine administration was likely practice for the majority of respondents, with typical loading doses that ranged widely. The commonest choices of intraoperative loading dose were between 0.2 mg kg-1 and 0.6 mg kg-1. The commonest choice of intraoperative and postoperative infusion rate was in the range of 0.1-0.2 mg kg-1 h-1. Postoperative ketamine infusion was most commonly prescribed as third-line or rescue analgesia. The majority of respondents thought it either 'likely' or 'very likely' ketamine would reduce postoperative chronic pain after thoracic surgery, but not in other surgical categories. Our findings suggest that off-label perioperative administration of ketamine at analgesic dose ranges is routine or common practice in major surgery for a majority of specialist anaesthetists in Australia and New Zealand.

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