Background: Emergence delirium complicates up to 40% of paediatric sevoflurane anaesthetics. Remimazolam is an ultra-short-acting benzodiazepine with organ-independent esterase metabolism, offering rapid and predictable recovery. We tested whether remimazolam monotherapy could serve as a volatile-free alternative to reduce emergence delirium. Methods: We conducted a prospective, randomised, assessor-blinded trial (ChiCTR2500095974). One hundred children aged 3– 12 years (ASA I–II) undergoing circumcision were randomised 1:1 to remimazolam (0.3 mg kg − 1 induction; 0.75 mg kg − 1 h − 1 maintenance) or sevoflurane (8% induction; 1.5– 2.5 MAC maintenance). All received penile nerve block. The co-primary outcomes were induction and emergence times. The key secondary outcome was emergence delirium (PAED score ≥ 12). Results: Emergence was faster with remimazolam (10.7 SD 3.9 vs 13.5 3.7 min; P< 0.001). Induction was slower (80.8 9.8 vs 52.3 8.2 s; P< 0.001) due to the slow-injection protocol. Emergence delirium occurred in 6/50 (12%) remimazolam patients versus 18/50 (36%) sevoflurane patients (relative risk 0.33; 95% CI 0.14– 0.77; P=0.009; NNT 4.2). PACU stay was shorter (33.4 8.5 vs 40.7 10.9 min; P< 0.001). Guardian anxiety reduction was threefold greater with remimazolam. Hypotension occurred in 6/50 (12%) remimazolam versus 1/50 (2%) sevoflurane patients (P=0.11); all cases were fluid-responsive. Conclusion: Remimazolam monotherapy reduced emergence delirium by 67% compared with sevoflurane, yielding faster recovery and improved family experience. However, a trend towards transient hypotension warrants appropriate preoperative fluid management. Larger multicentre trials are needed to confirm safety and broader applicability. Plain Language Summary: Emergence delirium affects up to 40% of children after sevoflurane anaesthesia, causing distress to patients and families.Remimazolam monotherapy reduced emergence delirium from 36% to 12% versus sevoflurane (relative risk 0.33; NNT 4.2).Remimazolam provided faster emergence (21% reduction) and shorter PACU stay (18% reduction).Transient hypotension occurred more frequently with remimazolam (12% vs 2%) but responded to fluid therapy.These findings support remimazolam as a volatile-free alternative for paediatric ambulatory anaesthesia. Keywords: anaesthesia, paediatric, anaesthetics i.v., remimazolam, anaesthetics volatile, sevoflurane, complications, emergence delirium, randomised controlled trial
Zhang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.