MedPath

Morphine intravenous vs. Acetaminophen intravenous in neonates and young infants undergoing major non-cardiac surgery. - Morphine iv vs. Acetaminophen iv

Conditions
Patients after non-cardiac thoracic or abdominal major surgery receive Morphine as pain relief medication whereas this is associated with Morphine related side effects. In these patients a non-opioid drug could be appropriate for postoperative pain relief. Intermittent administration of intravenous Acetaminophen, to young infants up to 48 hrs after major surgery e.g. thoracic and abdominal, will lead to a clinically significant (>30%) morphine sparing effect
Registration Number
EUCTR2007-005619-24-NL
Lead Sponsor
ErasmusmMC/ Sophia Children Hospital
Brief Summary

Not available

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
Authorised-recruitment may be ongoing or finished
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
0
Inclusion Criteria

-Informed consent
-Neonate / child under the age of one year.
-Minimal post conceptual age of 35 weeks.
-Minimal body weight of 1500 grams.
-Major thoracic (non cardiac) or abdominal surgery, including urological surgery.

Are the trial subjects under 18? yes
Number of subjects for this age range:
F.1.2 Adults (18-64 years) no
F.1.2.1 Number of subjects for this age range
F.1.3 Elderly (>=65 years) no
F.1.3.1 Number of subjects for this age range

Exclusion Criteria

-Withdrawal of informed consent
-Neonates with neurological, renal insufficiency, or hepatic dysfunction.
-Chronic (more than one day) opioid or psychotropic drug (e.g. antiepileptics, benzodiazepines, antidepressants) exposure pre- or postnatally
-Opioid exposure <24 hrs before surgery
-Receiving ECMO-therapy.
-Known allergy / intolerance for acetaminophen or morphine.

Study & Design

Study Type
Interventional clinical trial of medicinal product
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Main Objective: The aim of this study is to test the hypothesis that intravenous acetaminophen will reduce morphine requirements in postoperative infants significantly (>30%).;Secondary Objective: a. number of patients needing extra Morphine boluses<br>b. the incidence of opioid related adverse effects <br>c. average pain scores<br>d. % of time patient is adequately pain free<br>e. body part activity scores <br>f. saliva cortisol levels (as surrogate marker of stress)<br>e. renal clearance of Acetaminophen and glucuronidation and sulphate formation.<br>g. pharmacogenetic markers (e.g. CYP polymorphisms)<br>;Primary end point(s): Mean morphine dose over 48 h in µg/kg/h
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath