Multimodal analgesia linked to lower opioid use and pain scores after endometrial cancer surgery
This retrospective cohort study compared four perioperative analgesic regimens in 650 women undergoing elective surgery for endometrial cancer at a tertiary teaching hospital in Southwest China. The regimens included opioid-dominant IV PCA, opioid-sparing plus NSAIDs, epidural/regional adjunct, and fully multimodal analgesia combining regional techniques with NSAIDs/acetaminophen and reduced opioids. The primary outcomes were prolonged hospitalization (>7 days) and any postoperative complication of Clavien–Dindo grade II or higher.
Patients receiving multimodal or regional-based regimens had significantly lower opioid consumption and mean pain scores on postoperative day 1 compared to other groups, with a mean numeric rating scale (NRS) score of 3.2 versus 4.8 (P < 0.001). Secondary outcomes included pain scores, incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting, time to first ambulation/flatus, and perioperative immune-inflammatory markers. Safety and tolerability data were not reported.
Key limitations include the retrospective design, which prevents causal inference, and the potential for unmeasured confounding. The study provides disease-specific, large-scale comparative evidence supporting the growing advocacy for multimodal analgesia in gynecologic oncology. However, these associations should be interpreted cautiously until confirmed by prospective, randomized studies.