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UltrasouNd-guided Percutaneous Intercostal Nerve Cryoneurolysis for Analgesia Following Traumatic Rib Fracture

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Pain, Acute
Trauma
Pain
Rib Fractures
Rib Fracture Multiple
Trauma Injury
Rib; Fracture, With Flail Chest
Pain, Chronic
Interventions
Procedure: Sham Cryoneurolysis
Procedure: Cryoneurolysis
Registration Number
NCT05865327
Lead Sponsor
Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre
Brief Summary

Traumatic rib fractures (i.e., broken ribs caused by a physical injury) are common and very painful. They also often lead to serious complications, more time spent in hospital, and can even lead to death. Even after rib fractures have healed, they can lead to long-term pain and a lower quality of life.

A technology called cryoneurolysis, which acts to freeze nerves causing pain using a small tool which can turn very cold, is a promising new way to manage rib fracture pain. This study is a test with a small number of people to see if it is feasible to use this technology for patients with rib fractures. If this is successful, we will recruit more people for a larger study to see if cryoneurolysis, along with standard pain control techniques, is better at stopping pain, compared to just the normal techniques alone. Participants in our study will be asked to rate their pain, and record pain medications that they take for 3 months after their pain procedure.

Detailed Description

More than 100,000 people a year suffer from traumatic rib fractures. Pain from rib fractures impairs the ability to inspire deeply and cough effectively, predisposing patients to severe, potentially life threatening complications and increased healthcare costs. For many patients, this pain can also persist long after the acute injury has healed, delaying recovery and reducing quality of life.

Current pain interventions, including multimodal analgesia and local anesthetic-based nerve blocks, are useful, but are limited by a short duration of effectiveness, and/or risk of complications. Cryoneurolysis (CN) is a new method to control pain which acts to freeze intercostal nerves (ICNs) associated with fractured ribs using a handheld device. This freezing action causes neurons to undergo Wallerian degeneration distally from the site of ablation and thus exhibit an extended but reversible block.

This study is a single-site, randomized, pilot study to assess the feasibility of recruitment, randomization, and protocol adherence of providing cryoneurolysis for patients with traumatic rib fractures. Secondary data from the pilot trial designed to assess the effectiveness of the intervention (pain scores, opioid usage, etc.) will be included in the analysis of the full trial if feasible. The objective of the full trial is to demonstrate that cryoneurolysis of ICN, in addition to standard analgesic practice, provides superior, prolonged analgesia.

Participants (individuals aged 18-85, with 3-8 unilateral traumatic rib fractures) will be randomized 1:1 in blocks of 4, stratified by number of rib fractures (\> 4 or ≤4) and the presence/absence of flail segment, to receive the current standard of practice for rib fractures (multimodal analgesia and erector spinae plane (ESP) catheter infusion) with or without the addition of CN. Participants in the standard care group will receive a sham CN procedure to maintain blinding.

All participants (both groups) will receive standard of care analgesia. Specifically, an ultrasound-guided ESP catheter will be placed as per standard protocols. 20cc of 0.5% ropivacaine and 1% lidocaine will be injected through the catheter, followed by a basal infusion of 2 cc/hr of 0.2% ropivacaine (to maintain catheter patency) with an on demand patient controlled regional anesthesia (PCRA) dose of 10cc 0.2% ropivacaine available hourly until patient has met criteria for APS discharge or pain is controlled such that PCRA use is \< 2 boluses over 12 hrs and NRS \< 3 with deep breathing and coughing.

Standard multimodal analgesia including Tylenol 1000mg QID, Celebrex 200mg BID (or ketorolac 7.5 QID), Pregabalin 50mg BID, and/or PRN oral hydromorphone (1-4mg) will also be provided. Additional analgesics include intravenous ketamine at a dose of 0.1-0.2 mg/kg/hr of lean body weight in the event of consistent NRS pain scores \> 6, and up to 0.05 mg/kg of intravenous midazolam for anxiolysis and 1mcg/kg of intravenous fentanyl for comfort during positioning, as required.

Participants will remain in the study for 3 months from the date of the block procedure. They will be followed daily while in hospital and using a pain diary following discharge (weekly pain scores and daily opioid usage). Additionally, follow-ups will be completed at 1h, 24h, 48h, 1 week, 1 month, and 3 months post block procedure.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
24
Inclusion Criteria
  • Aged ≥18
  • Unilateral traumatic rib fractures (3 to 8)
  • Candidate for ESP block catheter
  • Within 48hrs of admission to hospital
Exclusion Criteria
  • Lack of patient consent; unlikely to comply with follow up
  • Unable to use Patient Controlled Regional Analgesia (Ventilated/sedated patients or Moderate to severe traumatic brain injury)
  • Chronic pain (opioid use > 30mg oral morphine equivalent per day)
  • Substance use disorder
  • CrCl < 50
  • BMI > 45
  • Significant distracting injuries (unreduced long bone fractures, unstable pelvic or spine fractures and patients requiring trauma laparotomy- also preclude positioning for block placement (lateral decubitus or sitting up))
  • Contraindications for ESP catheter placement (pre-existing medical/neurological/hematologic diseases, localized infection/trauma at site of intervention, allergy to amide local anesthetics)
  • Contraindications to CN (cryoglobulinemia, paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria, multiple myeloma and cold urticarial).
  • Unable to return to Trauma Recovery Clinic (in-person or virtual) at 3 months

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Standard Care GroupSham CryoneurolysisParticipants in the control group will receive all standard of care analgesia treatments as well as sham CN (i.e., application of device without skin puncture or activation of unit) to maintain participant blinding.
Cryoneurolysis GroupCryoneurolysisIn addition to all standard of care analgesia treatments, CN will be performed on the ICN of each broken rib using the Iovera CN device and Generation 2 Iovera tip under ultrasound guidance.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of participants randomized over an 8 month periodEntire pilot study (approximately 8 months)

Goal of 3 participants per month for 8 months

Rate of Adverse events3 month follow-up

Ensure no adverse events (short or long term) associated with CN

Number of participants able to adhere to the protocolEntire pilot study (approximately 8 months + 3 month follow-up)

Goal of \> 90%

Number of participants able to adhere to the follow-up3 month follow-up

Goal of \> 90%

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Length of Stay in hospitalDate of admission to date discharge

Hospital discharge date

Pain Severity during deep inspiration 24 hours post ESP catheter placement24 hours post placement of ESP catheter

Pain measured using Numeric Pain Rating Scale

Time to discontinuation of ESP catheterUntil ESP catheter removal (usually < 7 days)

Based on when patient has met criteria for APS discharge or pain is controlled such that PCRA use is \< 2 boluses over 12 hrs and NRS \< 3 with deep breathing and coughing

ESP catheter useUntil ESP catheter removal (usually < 7 days)

Cumulative volume of local anesthetic solution used via ESP catheter patient controlled reginal analgesia

Opioid consumption in hospital and after dischargeDaily for 90 days after block placement

Determined from medical records (in-hospital) and via a daily pain diary (post-discharge). Calculated in Oral Morphine Equivalents.

Oxygen requirementsPre-intervention, post intervention, then daily until discharge

Room air oxygen saturation (SpO2) and requirement for supplementary O2 to maintain SpO2 \> 92%

Pulmonary Function TestingPre-intervention, post intervention, then daily until discharge

Peak Expiratory Flow

Length of Stay on acute pain service (APS)Date of admission to date of discharge from acute pain service

Criteria include on oral meds without continuous regional analgesia or intravenous opioids

Time to achieve discharge criteria for isolated chest injuryDate of admission until discharge criteria met

Criteria include on oral meds without continuous regional analgesia, chest tube out and chest well evacuated (e.g. no evidence of retained hemothorax), and no supplemental O2

Incidence of chronic rib fracture pain3 month follow-up

As assessed using Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) questionnaire

Pain Intensity at 1 and 3 months1 and 3 month follow-ups

As measured using Numeric Pain Rating Scale (0-10) , at rest and during deep inspiration

Patient satisfaction48 post block procedure, and 1 week, 1 month and 3 month follow-ups

Patient satisfaction assessed using Patients' Global Impression of Change (PGIC) scale

Adverse eventsuntil 3 month follow-up

Adverse events to be recorded include: local anesthetic complications, catheter related complications (clotting, migration), procedural complications (pneumothorax, bleeding, infection), and neurological disturbances (dysesthesia, hyperalgesia, allodynia) in area of rib fracture

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

🇨🇦

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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