Fentanyl Administered Intraorally for Rapid Treatment of Orthopedic Pain
- Conditions
- Pain, Fracture, Sprain
- Interventions
- Registration Number
- NCT00685295
- Lead Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital
- Brief Summary
Assess whether transbuccal fentanyl provides more rapid relief of orthopedic pain, than does the comparator Percocet
- Detailed Description
Patients will be initially deemed eligible for study consideration if, after MGH ED nursing triage, an X-ray is ordered for suspected isolated extremity injury and the triage acuity level is "Minor". Study staff (physicians) will monitor the ED registration and triage areas to assess whether triaged patients are potentially eligible.
For ED patients with minor isolated injuries, X-rays are often ordered from triage, where there is a supervising physician (or nurse practitioner) available to examine patients and direct care. Either at triage (for patients undergoing care at that location) or when patients are moved to the ED's Minor Surgery area, the supervising healthcare provider will be approached immediately after that individual's evaluation of the patient, and before any pain medication is administered, to begin the process of eligibility ascertainment.
If the provider agrees that the patient may be a candidate for the study, the next step will be for the provider to ask the patient if study staff may approach to discuss the trial.
If the patient agrees to have study staff approach to discuss the trial, study personnel (all EM resident or Attending-level physicians) will be introduced by healthcare providers to potential subjects. Study staff will then converse with the patients about the study's aims, methodology, and risks, confirming eligibility and determining if patients will consent to participate.
Patients who are approached, but who are determined to be ineligible, will have no data recorded, other than their age and race/ethnicity and the reason they were ineligible.
If eligible patients provide written consent in the manner and form dictated by Partners guidelines, the study procedures will commence.
For eligible patients who do not give consent, study physicians will emphasize that patient care will be unaffected by their decision. No further contact will occur between study staff and those patients. No identifying information about such patients will be recorded, but their age and race/ethnicity will be recorded. (Recording this information will allow for subsequent assessment for selection bias, and will also help search for patterns in patient types refusing analgesia trial participation.)
The actual medication administration will involve the following steps:
1. Patients participating in the study will be identified and placed in a "room" (stretcher or actual ED room) in the MGH ED's Minor Multipurpose (MIMP) area;
2. RNs will obtain the study medication pairs (buccal tablet + oral tablet) from the computerized medication storage area - RNs will take the next-numbered medication pair from the MGH Research Pharmacy-prepared drug packaging;
3. Actual medications will be administered by a licensed physician (a study co-investigator, EM resident or Attending physician at MGH), who is not the co-investigator monitoring the patient for endpoint assessment - the physician administering the medication/placebo will inform neither the patient nor the clinical or study staff, the identity of the medication/placebo pair given.
Patients will be monitored by a study physician co-investigator physically present with the patient, for a total of 120 minutes after administration of medication. They will be asked q-5-minutes, through 60 minutes, to rate their pain and degree of nausea, as well as to describe any adverse reactions to the medication. Both pain and nausea levels will be recorded using 10-point scales. Use of such scales is common in the pain literature, and is an emerging tool for evaluation of nausea.1,2 Data collection for analgesia efficacy will cease after 60 minutes, but patients will be monitored for at least another 60 minutes to maximize safety; patients will be assessed for discharge suitability by treating clinicians/nurses in the same fashion as other ED patients who receive opioids.
Vital signs (respiratory rate, blood pressure, heart rate, pulse oximetry) will be monitored for the two hours of the study. Continuous pulse oximetry will be used during the first study hour, and q5-minute spot-check pulse oximetry will be used during the second study hour; pulse oximetry monitoring will be changed to continuous mode during the second study hour if any spot-check reading falls below 98%. Other (non-pulse oximetry) vital signs will be monitored q5-minutes during the first study hour, and q15-minutes during the second study hour. These vital signs monitoring parameters represent the minimum for study subjects; treating clinicians or study staff physicians can increase the frequency of vital signs monitoring at their discretion. Any study subject not admitted to the hospital, will be discharged under the care of a responsible adult.
At the conclusion of the data collection period, patients will be asked if they would want to receive the same medication in the future. Other than a 24-hour telephone call (made only if patients agree), intended to assess for delayed problems such as nausea/vomiting, there will be no other study procedures or interventions.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 60
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Arm 2 / Percocet/Prevacid Lansoprazole Active Comparator Group: Subject receives: 1. Oxycodone/APAP (Percocet) 5/325 mg oral/swallowed pill 2. Lansoprazole 15 mg (Prevacid) comparator rapidly dissolving transbuccal tablet Arm 1 / Fentora Fentanyl Intervention Group: Subject receives: 1. placebo oral/swallowed pill 2. Fentanyl (Fentora) 100mcg rapidly dissolving transbuccal tablet Arm 2 / Percocet/Prevacid Oxycodone Active Comparator Group: Subject receives: 1. Oxycodone/APAP (Percocet) 5/325 mg oral/swallowed pill 2. Lansoprazole 15 mg (Prevacid) comparator rapidly dissolving transbuccal tablet
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Time to Analgesia 60 minutes Time it took for subjects to achieve a pain score reduction of 2 units (on a 0 to 10 scale)
Pain Reduction 60 minutes Number of subjects who reached pain reduction. A subject was deemed to have reached pain reduction if there was a two-point drop in pain scale (0-10).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Occurrence of Untoward Opioid Side Effects 120 minutes Subjects were monitored for any signs of untoward opioid side effects.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Massachusetts General Hospital
🇺🇸Boston, Massachusetts, United States