Role of Oral Tramadol 50 mg in Reducing Pain During Colposcopy-Directed Cervical Biopsy: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Fatma Faisal Darweesh & Ahmed A. Metwally et al.

Objective

The aim of the study was to assess safety and efficacy of 50-mg tramadol in reducing patient-perceived pain during colposcopy.

Material and Methods

We conducted a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial in the colposcopy unit of a tertiary referral hospital, Cairo, Egypt, from April 2018 to October 2018. Our primary outcome was pain during colposcopy-guided ectocervical punch biopsy. Our secondary outcomes were pain during speculum insertion, acetic acid application, Lugol iodine application, endocervical curettage (ECC), endocervical brushing, 10-minute postprocedure, and additional analgesia requirement. Pain was assessed using 10-cm visual analog scale.

Results

One hundred fifty women were randomized into 2 groups: tramadol group (n = 75) received oral 50-mg tramadol tablets, and control group (n = 75) received placebo tablets. Both groups showed no significant difference in anticipated pain score (p = .56), pain scores during speculum insertion (p = .70), application of acetic acid (p = .40), and Lugol iodine (p = .79). However, the mean pain scores were significantly lower in tramadol group compared with placebo at ectocervical biopsy (p = .001), ECC (p = .001), endocervical brushing (p = .001), and 10 minutes after colposcopy (p = .001). Need for additional analgesia was significantly lower in tramadol group (p = .03).

Conclusions

Oral tramadol 50 mg significantly reduces pain perception during colposcopy-guided ectocervical biopsy, ECC, endocervical brushing, and 10 minutes after colposcopy with tolerable adverse effects.

Authors
Fatma Faisal Darweesh, Ahmed Samy, Abdalla Mohamed Mousa, Ahmed Tarek Abdelbar, Mostafa Mahmoud, Ahmed Mohamed Abdelhakim, Ahmed A. Metwally