International journal of obstetric anesthesia | 2021

Quantifying the incidence of clinically significant respiratory depression in women with and without obesity class III receiving neuraxial morphine for post-cesarean analgesia: a retrospective cohort study.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nObesity is a suspected risk factor for respiratory depression following neuraxial morphine for post-cesarean analgesia, however monitoring guidelines for obese obstetric patients are based on small, limited studies. We tested the hypothesis that clinically significant respiratory depression following neuraxial morphine occurs more commonly in women with body mass index (BMI) ≥40\u202fkg/m2 compared with BMI <40\u202fkg/m2.\n\n\nMETHODS\nWe conducted a single-center, retrospective chart review (2006-2017) of obstetric patients with clinically significant respiratory depression following neuraxial morphine, defined as: (1) opioid antagonist administration; (2) rapid response team activation (initiated in April 2010); or (3) tracheal intubation due to a respiratory event. The incidence of respiratory depression was compared between women with BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2 and BMI <40\u202fkg/m2.\n\n\nRESULTS\nIn total, 11 327 women received neuraxial morphine (n=1945 BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2; n=9382 BMI <40\u202fkg/m2). Women with BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2 had higher rates of sleep apnea, hypertensive disorders, and magnesium administration. Sixteen cases of clinically significant respiratory depression occurred within seven days postpartum. The incidence did not significantly differ between groups (odds ratio 2.2, 95% CI 0.6 to 6.9, P=0.174). Neuraxial morphine was not deemed causative in any case, however women with BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2 had higher rates of tracheal intubation unrelated to neuraxial morphine (2/1945 vs. 0/9382, P=0.029).\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nRespiratory depression in this population is rare. A larger sample (∼75\u202f000) is required to determine whether the incidence is higher with BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2. Tracheal intubation was higher among the BMI ≥40\u202fkg/m2 cohort, likely due to more comorbidities.

Volume None
Pages \n 103187\n
DOI 10.1016/j.ijoa.2021.103187
Language English
Journal International journal of obstetric anesthesia

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