RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 OP037 The analgesic effect of ultrasound guided erector spinae plane block versus ultrasound guided caudal epidural block for abdominal surgery in pediatric patients – a parallel group, patient and assessor blind, randomized study JF Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine JO Reg Anesth Pain Med FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP A21 OP A22 DO 10.1136/rapm-2023-ESRA.37 VO 48 IS Suppl 1 A1 Pandey, Ashutosh A1 Ahmad, Zainab A1 Jain, Shikha A1 Pakhare, Abhijit A1 Tejpal, Sunaina Karna A1 Kumar, Pramod Sharma A1 Singh, Pooja A1 Mandal, Pranita YR 2023 UL http://rapm.bmj.com/content/48/Suppl_1/A21.2.abstract AB Please confirm that an ethics committee approval has been applied for or granted: Yes: I’m uploading the Ethics Committee Approval as a PDF file with this abstract submission Application for ESRA Abstract Prizes: I don’t wish to apply for the ESRA PrizesBackground and Aims Pediatric literature on erector spinae plane block (ESPB) versus caudal epidural block is scanty. Hence, we aimed to compare the effect of ultrasound (USG) guided ESPB with USG guided CEB as a component of multimodal analgesia in pediatric patients undergoing abdominal surgery.Methods This was a randomised, parallel group, outcome and assessor blind study. After institutional ethics committee approval and informed consent, fifty-two patients, aged 1 to 9 were randomized into two equal groups. ESPB group received unilateral or bilateral USG guided ESPB at T10 vertebral level with 0.5 ml/kg 0.25% bupivacaine per side. CEB group received ultrasound guided CEB with 1 ml/kg 0.25% bupivacaine. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients requiring rescue analgesia in the 1st 24 hours after surgery. Secondary outcomes were the duration of post-operative analgesia and FLACC scores.Results Significantly more patients belonging to ESPB than CEB group required rescue analgesia (88.4% versus 42.3% respectively, p value <0.001) in the 1st 24 hours after surgery. The duration of analgesia was shorter in the ESPB group by 9.54 hours (95% CI: 4.51 to 14.57 hours, p=0.000). Though ESPB group patients had satisfactory FLACC scores, they were inferior to CEB group for the first 6 hours after surgery. No adverse effects were reported in both the groups.Conclusions Both ESPB and CEB were safe and efficacious. CEB provided a longer duration and better quality of analgesia especially in the first 6 hours postoperatively. ESPB may be considered in pediatric patients undergoing abdominal surgery when CEB is contraindicated or difficult.