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Laparoscopic assisted TAP block reduces morphine consumption after elective minimally invasive colon surgeryL-TAP block reduces morphine use after colon surgery

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Key Takeaway
Laparoscopic-assisted TAP block reduces postoperative morphine use and is non-inferior to ultrasound-guided TAP blocks.

This multicenter randomized controlled trial evaluated the efficacy of different transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block techniques in 340 patients undergoing elective minimally invasive colon surgery. The study specifically compared the laparoscopic-assisted TAP (L-TAP) block and ultrasound-guided TAP (US-TAP) block against a placebo control.

Results indicated that the L-TAP technique was superior to placebo, showing a significant reduction in 24-hour postoperative morphine equivalent consumption. Specifically, the L-TAP approach achieved a reduction of 5.9 mg compared to the control group (p=0.01).

When comparing the two active interventions, the L-TAP block was found to be non-inferior to the US-TAP block. However, the US-TAP block did not show a significant difference in morphine consumption when compared to the placebo group.

A notable limitation identified was that neither block technique reached the predetermined minimal clinically important difference of 10 mg morphine. Despite this, the findings suggest L-TAP provides a measurable benefit in opioid-sparing analgesia for this surgical population.

Researchers conducted a multicenter clinical trial involving 340 patients undergoing elective minimally invasive colon surgery. The study compared different methods of nerve blocks, specifically the laparoscopic-assisted TAP (L-TAP) block and the ultrasound-guided TAP (US-TAP) block, against a placebo.

The results showed that the L-TAP block was superior to a placebo in reducing morphine equivalent consumption during the first 24 hours after surgery. Additionally, the L-TAP block was found to be non-inferior to the US-TAP block. However, the US-TAP block did not show a significant difference from the placebo.

It is important to note that neither type of nerve block met the researchers' predetermined goal of reaching a minimal clinically important difference of 10 mg of morphine. While these findings are promising for managing pain after surgery, the clinical impact of this reduction remains small.

Patients should view these results as an indication of how different surgical techniques might influence pain management. More research may be needed to understand the full practical impact of these specific nerve blocks on recovery.

What this means for you:
L-TAP nerve blocks may reduce morphine use after colon surgery, but the reduction was smaller than researchers hoped.

Study Details

Study typeRct
Sample sizen = 340
EvidenceLevel 2
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block is the most widely used abdominal field block in colorectal surgery with a postoperative enhanced recovery pathway. We aimed to determine whether the laparoscopic-assisted and ultrasound-guided TAP (US-TAP) blocks provide superior pain relief compared with placebo. We separately investigated whether the laparoscopic-assisted technique was non-inferior to the ultrasound-guided technique in providing pain relief, with a non-inferiority margin of 10 mg morphine dose equivalents. METHODS: 340 patients undergoing elective minimally invasive colon surgery were randomly allocated to one of three groups: (1) US-TAP block, (2) laparoscopic-assisted TAP (L-TAP) block, or (3) placebo. Superiority and non-inferiority were tested for the primary outcome: 24-hour postoperative morphine equivalent consumption. Secondary outcomes, including patient-reported quality of recovery, were included in the superiority analysis. RESULTS: 127 patients were included in each block group and 86 in the placebo group. The US-TAP block was no different from placebo at -1.4 mg morphine (97.5% CI -6.8 to 4.0 mg; p=0.55). The L-TAP block was superior to placebo at -5.9 mg morphine (97.5% CI -11.3 to -0.5 mg; p=0.01) and non-inferior to the US-TAP block at -4.5 mg morphine (98.75% CI -10.0 to 1.1 mg). CONCLUSION: The L-TAP block was superior to placebo and non-inferior to the US-TAP block. However, neither met our predetermined estimate of the minimal clinically important difference of 10 mg morphine. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04311099.
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