Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5825313 Clinical Therapeutics 2015 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
Use of multimodal analgesic regimens is a practical way to achieve good postsurgical analgesia while minimizing reliance on opioids and associated adverse events. Taken as a whole, evidence from the clinical studies of liposome bupivacaine suggests this local anesthetic formulation may be a useful component of multimodal analgesic regimens for managing postsurgical pain in select patients, with the potential to reduce opioid use and opioid-related ADEs in the postsurgical setting. As with bupivacaine, appropriate use of liposome bupivacaine to optimize clinical effects, economic implications, and patient tolerability will depend on appropriate patient selection, practitioner training, and institutional protocols. As a component of a multimodal analgesic regimen, liposome bupivacaine represents a new approach to extending the duration of postsurgical analgesia. Further studies across a range of surgical settings should help clarify the most appropriate roles for this prolonged-release formulation of bupivacaine.
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