Intercostal Nerve Block in Uniportal Video-Assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery: A Propensity-Score Matched Single-Center Study of Early Postoperative Pain and Opioid Use
Fahim Kanani, Narmin Zoabi, Eduard Khabarov, Zoey Berdan, Moshe Argaman, Mirit Meller, Rijini Nugzar, Oren Fruchter, Mohammad Eid Al Mohtasib, Mordechai Shimonov, Anas Salhab, Moshe Kamar, Firas Abu AkarBackground: Acute pain after video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) promotes respiratory splinting, impaired cough, and pulmonary complications, and predicts persistent opioid use. Surgeon-administered intercostal nerve block (ICNB) is a simple regional technique, but its independent effect on early pain and opioid requirement in a contemporary uniportal VATS (UVATS) pathway is incompletely defined. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study of 456 consecutive patients undergoing UVATS at a single Israeli center between 2017 and 30 May 2025. Patients receiving an intercostal block were compared with those who did not. Baseline covariates were balanced by 1:1 nearest-neighbor propensity-score matching (caliper 0.2 SD of the logit propensity score). The primary endpoints were pain on postoperative day (POD) 1 (visual analog scale, VAS) and postoperative opioid use; secondary endpoints included later pain, analgesic regimen, postoperative pneumonia, and mortality. Results: Matching yielded 159 patients per group (n = 318) with all clinically relevant covariates balanced (standardized mean difference [SMD] < 0.13). Median POD1 VAS was lower with the block (4 [IQR 3–4] vs. 5 [5–7]; p < 0.001), and 76.1% of block patients were opioid-free versus 10.7% who were not (p < 0.001). The effect was concentrated early and attenuated by POD3. In multivariable analysis the block was independently associated with lower POD1 VAS (adjusted β = −1.64, 95% CI −2.00 to −1.29; p < 0.001). Postoperative pneumonia was less frequent in the block group (5.7% vs. 20.1%; p < 0.001). Thirty-day and one-year mortality did not differ significantly. Conclusions: In UVATS, a surgeon-placed intercostal nerve block was associated with lower early postoperative pain that persisted after adjustment for operating surgeon and surgical era, concordant with pooled meta-analytic estimates; associated reductions in opioid use and pneumonia were confounded with surgeon and secular trend and are hypothesis-generating. These single-center, retrospective findings require prospective, protocol-randomized confirmation.