Metoclopramide for analgesia in renal colic: a narrative systematic review

Andrew Tabner, Adithan Ganesh, Lucy Hobbs, Nikhil Prasanna Ponna, Matthew J Reed, Apostolos Fakis, Suzanne Toft, Graham Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Metoclopramide, a prokinetic antiemetic with activity at multiple receptor types, may be a useful treatment for renal colic pain. This review investigated whether metoclopramide is an effective analgesic in the management of adults with renal colic.Eligible studies were randomised, quasi-randomised or case-control trials of metoclopramide for the management renal colic pain. Electronic database searches were performed in November 2022. Screening was performed by two authors independently; disagreement was resolved by discussion or by adjudication by a third author. The Cochrane Collaboration Risk of Bias Tool v2.0 was used to assess bias.Two studies were included, enrolling 279 patients. Heterogeneity of primary outcome measurement and comparators rendered meta-analysis inappropriate; a narrative review is presented. Both studies showed some evidence of analgesic effect. The largest study had a low risk of bias in all assessed domains, whilst the smaller study was at a high risk of bias.There is limited evidence that metoclopramide may be an effective analgesic in the management of renal colic, with the highest quality study demonstrating analgesic properties similar to an intravenous non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication.Protocol registration Prospero (CRD42022346618).

Original languageEnglish
Article number240
Number of pages7
JournalBMC urology
Volume24
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2024

Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)

  • Humans
  • Metoclopramide/therapeutic use
  • Renal Colic/drug therapy

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