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About
This study is a non-inferiority phase III randomized trial evaluating the effect of intranasal midazolam versus intramuscular loxapine on the rapid tranquilization of agitated patient in emergency department. Intranasal midazolam is safe and may allow a management of extreme agitation state and prevent adverse effects.
Full description
This study is a prospective, multicenter, open-label randomized, controlled, parallel-group 2-arm phase III non-inferiority trial. Patients with agitation at emergency department will be randomized to two arms of treatment: one experimental arm with intranasal midazolam 5mg (investigational medicinal product), and one control arm with comparator treatment intramuscular loxapine 100mg. The duration of participation for each patient is at least 28 days (+7 days if follow-up not completed on D28). An endpoint Adjudication Committee will be scheduled.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Major criteria :
Agitation Pain Tolerance Tachypnea ( fr > 20)
And 1 minor criteria among :
Sweating Tactile Hyperthermia Medical care Non compliance Lack of tiring Unusual Strenght Inappropriately clothed, nudity
• Medical insurance The protocol can start if the THREE major inclusion criteria and ONE of the minor inclusion criteria are checked PRESENT and ALL the non-inclusion criteria are checked no.
Exclusion criteria
Subjects who meet any of the following criteria will be excluded from randomization into the study:
Pregnancy
Prisoners
Contraindications to intranasal Midazolam or intramuscular Loxapine :
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Frédéric Adnet, MD, PhD; Eric Vicaut, MD, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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