The Impact of Surgical Amputation and Valproic Acid on Pain and Functional Trajectory: Results from the Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER) Randomized, Double-Blinded Placebo-Controlled Trial.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:To determine if the perioperative administration of valproic acid reduces the incidence of chronic pain three months after amputation or revision surgery. DESIGN:Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. SETTING:Academic, military, and veteran medical centers. SUBJECTS:One hundred twenty-eight patients undergoing amputation or amputation revision surgery at Duke University Hospital, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, or the Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center for either medical disease or trauma. METHODS:Patients were randomized to placebo or valproic acid for the duration of hospitalization and treated with multimodal analgesic care, including regional anesthetic blockade. Primary outcome was the proportion of patients with chronic pain at three months (average numeric pain score intensity of 3/10 or greater). Secondary outcomes included functional trajectories (assessed with the Brief Pain Inventory short form and the Defense and Veterans Pain Rating Scale). RESULTS:The overall rate of chronic pain was 68.2% in the 107 patients who completed the end point assessment. There was no significant effect of perioperative valproic acid administration, with a rate of 65.45% (Nā€‰=ā€‰36) in the treatment group and a rate of 71.15% (Nā€‰=ā€‰37) in the placebo group. Overall, pain scores decreased from baseline to follow-up (median = -2 on the numeric pain scale). Patients additionally experienced improvements in self-perceived function. CONCLUSIONS:The rate of chronic pain after amputation surgery is not significantly improved with the perioperative administration of valproic acid. In this cohort treated with multimodal perioperative analgesia and regional anesthetic blockade, we observed improvements in both pain severity and function.

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Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1093/pm/pnz067

Publication Info

Buchheit, Thomas, Hung-Lun John Hsia, Mary Cooter, Cynthia Shortell, Michael Kent, Mary McDuffie, Andrew Shaw, Chester Trip Buckenmaier, et al. (2019). The Impact of Surgical Amputation and Valproic Acid on Pain and Functional Trajectory: Results from the Veterans Integrated Pain Evaluation Research (VIPER) Randomized, Double-Blinded Placebo-Controlled Trial. Pain medicine (Malden, Mass.), 20(10). pp. 2004ā€“2017. 10.1093/pm/pnz067 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/19641.

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Scholars@Duke

Buchheit

Thomas Edward Buchheit

Associate Professor of Anesthesiology

Dr. Buchheit serves as Director of the Regenerative Pain Therapies Program in the Duke Center for Translational Pain Medicine (CTPM), and practices Pain Medicine at both Duke University and the Durham VAMC. His research focus is on the local and systemic inflammatory mechanisms that drive pain in arthritis and nerve injury. He has led and participated in several multicenter research projects that have studied patients at Duke, the Durham VAMC, and Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, clarifying post-amputation pain phenotypes and mechanisms that drive the chronification of pain. These research pursuits have guided the clinical and translational programs of CTPM that strive develop biologically-based methods for the treatment of arthritis and degenerative musculoskeletal conditions. The programā€™s overarching goal is to move beyond opioids, steroids and anti-inflammatory medications for the treatment of pain. 

Dr. Buchheit currently serves on the Editorial Board of Pain Medicine and recently completed service as Pain Medicine Division Chief in the Duke Department of Anesthesiology. He also serves on the Board of The Pain Society of the Carolinas and previously on the American Society of Anesthesiologists Pain Medicine Committee, (2012-2014), as an American Board of Anesthesiology Question Author (2011-2014), and President of Pain Society of the Carolinas (2015-2017).  

Shortell

Cynthia Keene Shortell

Professor of Surgery
Kent

Michael Lewis Kent

Associate Professor of Anesthesiology
Van de Ven

Thomas John Van de Ven

Associate Professor of Anesthesiology

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