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Post-operative Pain Control After Pediatric Adenotonsillectomy

Phase 4
Terminated
Conditions
Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Sleep Disordered Breathing
Adverse Reaction to Drug
Recurrent Tonsillitis
Interventions
Drug: Hydrocodone-Acetaminophen
Registration Number
NCT02296840
Lead Sponsor
Emory University
Brief Summary

Adenotonsillectomy is one of the most common surgical procedures performed in the pediatric population in the United States. It is generally a well-tolerated procedure with post-operative bleeding risk ranging from 3-5% in children. Post-operative pain following adenotonsillectomy has significant morbidity and may result in prolonged hospital stay or re-admission to the hospital. Post-operative analgesia is most commonly managed with narcotic-containing pain medication. In recent years however, there is evidence that some patients may manifest increased sensitivity to narcotics, resulting in life-threatening respiratory compromise. Though there is a theoretical risk that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) increase bleeding time by disrupting platelet aggregation, evidence of detrimental effects (i.e. increased risk of postoperative bleeding) remains inconclusive for these generally well-tolerated medications. The goal of this study is to determine the incidence of post-operative bleeding and to determine the efficacy of NSAIDs in the management of post-operative pain following pediatric adenotonsillectomy, versus more commonly used narcotic pain medication. The study design will be an initial retrospective study to collect pilot data on the incidence of postoperative hemorrhage and indicators of adequate/inadequate pain control in children age 4 to 17 undergoing adenotonsillectomy. This will be followed by a prospective, randomized, single-blind controlled study in which orally-administered ibuprofen (test intervention) is compared to acetaminophen-hydrocodone (control intervention) in the postoperative period following adenotonsillectomy.

Detailed Description

Post-operative pain management in pediatric patients undergoing adenotonsillectomy is challenging not only for the child, but also for the clinician and caregiver. Uncontrolled pain carries a high level of morbidity and can result in prolonged hospital stay and/or readmission, dehydration, weight loss, and other undesirable effects. In light of recent high-profile controversies regarding the safety of codeine the search for effective and safe analgesia continues. The American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (AAO-HNS) guidelines suggest that NSAIDs are safe to use in the post-operative period. Here, the investigators compare bleeding risk and pain control using acetominophen-hydrocodone (control) versus ibuprofen (intervention) in the post-operative period in pediatric patients undergoing adenotonsillectomy. The investigators hypothesize that ibuprofen will not be associated with increased bleeding risk and will control post-operative pain as well as acetominophen-hydrocodone.

Initial retrospective chart review (Data to be extracted from the patients' charts):

* Demographic data

* Surgical data

* Postoperative data

* Descriptive analysis to determine incidence of postoperative bleeding following adenotonsillectomy and its relation to demographic factors or surgical factors, incidence of postoperative pain problems and relation to demographic or surgical factors.

Prospective, randomized, single-blind trial:

* Study Group Allocation/Randomization: Study participants will be randomized into two post-operative pain medication treatment arms, using block randomization. Patients who are randomized into the test intervention arm will receive ibuprofen (10mg/kg/day every 6-8 hours) after surgery. Patients who are randomized into the control intervention will receive hydrocodone-acetaminophen (0.15mg/kg/day every 4-6 hours). This randomization will be performed by Ansley Roche MD, a co-investigator. The operating surgeons will be unaware of the group assignments at the time of randomization, at the time of surgery, and in the post-operative period. (The participant and caregiver will not be blinded to the type of post-operative pain medication they will receive.) Once a study participant has been randomized to group, the group assignment information will be provided to the otolaryngology resident at Egleston. The resident will write the appropriate prescription and provide this to the patient's family prior to discharge.

* Postoperative pain assessment: Using the Faces Pain Scale , the pediatric patient will indicate his/her pain level at scheduled intervals. Pain level will be recorded by the caregiver and pain medication will be administered appropriately based on level of patient's self-reported pain. A log of pain medication administered will be kept for each dose given. The total amount of pain medication administered per kg per day will be calculated by the study staff upon completion of the pain medication logs. Prior to surgery, a member of the study team will conduct a brief standard training session for parents to teach them how to correctly complete the medication log.

* Breakthrough pain: Patients who are randomized into the test intervention arm will receive ibuprofen (10mg/kg/day every 6-8 hours) after surgery. Patients who are randomized into the control intervention will receive hydrocodone-acetaminophen (0.15mg/kg/day every 4-6 hours). Both post-operative intervention groups in this study will have surgery for the same preoperative indications (adenotonsillitis or sleep disordered breathing). If patients experience pain that is not controlled with the specified intervention group medication, there will be a protocol in place for breakthrough pain, as indicated below. Surgeons will be blinded to the intervention arm. For patients who have pain that is not controlled by the randomized intervention, a breakthrough pain protocol will be enacted. The protocol is as follows:

* Test intervention arm

1. Give hydrocodone-acetaminophen (0.15mg/kg/day hydrocodone) for pain score ≥6 no more than ever 6 hours. If uncontrolled pain, see next bullet point.

2. Increase hydrocodone-acetaminophen dose to 0.2mg/kg/day hydrocodone per dose.

* Control intervention arm

1. Increase dose of hydrocodone-acetaminophen to 0.2 mg/kg/day hydrocodone For pain score ≥ 6. If uncontrolled pain, see next bullet point.

2. Ibuprofen 10mg/kg/day no more than every 6 hours. If uncontrolled pain, see next bullet point.

3. Acetaminophen 10mg/kg/day every 6 hours as needed.

Implementation of the breakthrough pain protocol will be documented. In order to maintain surgeon blinding throughout the study, patient phone calls will be routed to the chief resident on call who will follow the above breakthrough pain protocol.

A study staff member, excluding the surgeon, will contact parents/caretakers on post-operative day 3 and post-operative day 7 to assist with medication log completion and answer medical questions.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
TERMINATED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
45
Inclusion Criteria
  • ≥4 and ≤17 years old
  • Meeting criteria for tonsillectomy based on AAO-HNS clinical guidelines: Adenotonsillectomy is indicated for patients with recurrent adenotonsillitis and sleep disordered breathing. Both groups in this study will have surgery for the same preoperative indications
Exclusion Criteria
  • <4 or >17 years old
  • Known bleeding diathesis (or family history of bleeding diathesis)
  • Known allergy to any study medication
  • participant/caregiver inability to understand or complete the required study documentation (pain scales, medication logs)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Hydrocodone-acetaminophen (Control)Hydrocodone-AcetaminophenAfter undergoing adenotonsillectomy, patients who are randomized into the control intervention will receive hydrocodone-acetaminophen (0.15mg/kg/day every 4-6 hours).
IbuprofenIbuprofenAfter undergoing adenotonsillectomy, patients who are randomized into the test intervention arm will receive ibuprofen (10mg/kg/day every 6-8 hours) after surgery.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Faces Pain Score2 weeks after surgery

Using the Faces Pain Scale, the pediatric patient will indicate his/her pain level at scheduled intervals (7 times per day) for 14 days post-surgery.The Faces Pain Scale Revised is a dimensionless 10 point likert scale used to assess self-reported pain intensity on a scale from 0 (no pain) to 10 (most pain you can imagine). Greater pain scores are indicative of more severe pain. For this analysis, participant pain scores were summed and the mean per group was calculated. Total summed scores could range from 0 to 980.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of Participants With Post-operative Bleeding2 weeks after surgery

The occurrence of post-operative bleeding at the surgical site for each participant will be assessed by review of the participant's study records and clinical records and by questioning the caregiver in follow-up. If postoperative bleeding has occurred, details of the episode of bleeding will also be obtained (requirement for surgical intervention, observation at home, or observation at the hospital).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA)

🇺🇸

Atlanta, Georgia, United States

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