Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Many patients with cancer experience moderate to severe pain that requires treatment with strong opioids, of which oxycodone and morphine are examples, they are widely applied in clinical treatment because of sustained-released formulation can reduce dosing frequency. Goal of pain management is get adequate analgesia and minimize the adverse event at the same time, but in fact there are about 10%-30% patients can't get adequate analgesia because of intolerable adverse event. The common adverse event of Controlled-Release Oxycodone(CR Oxycodone ) are nausea (29.9%)、constipation (25.4%)、dizziness(22.4%) and vomit(11.9%),about 32.8% patients treatment was discontinued because of these adverse event. The peak concentration of opioid is related to adverse event, while the valley concentration is correlated to the analgesic effect. Therefore, if we keep the daily dose while increase the dose frequency so that reduce the single dose, it's will help to avoid intolerable adverse event caused by excessive opioid peak concentration and keep the opioid analgesia at the same time. It's a reasonable way to solve the side effects of opioid.
In order to explore the effect of change the dosing frequency of CR Oxycodone to treat refractory pain, pre-experiment have done by several clinical centrals in Fujian province. Preliminary results show that for the patients who can't accept the current opioid dose because of intolerable side effect, changing the dosing frequency is a safe and effect way.
Full description
This is a multicenter、singe arm、prospective study.
Study population:
Moderate to severe cancer pain (4-6 on the standard Numerical Rating Scale [NRS], range 0-10) patients with unsatisfactory pain control because of intolerable nausea、vomit or dizziness during accept CR Oxycodone treatment.
Therapeutic schemes:
Patients are satisfied with the pain control, but unable to tolerate nausea、vomit or dizziness, and can't get satisfactory pain control if reducing the CR oxycodone dose.
Patients are unsatisfied with the pain control, but can't increase the CR oxycodone dose because of intolerable nausea、vomit or dizziness.
Primary end point:
The effective rate of treatment: the rate of patients who get satisfactory pain control without intolerable adverse event in two consecutive day .
Secondary end point:
The time of reach effective treatment; The degree of pain reduction; The incident rate of adverse drug reaction The reduction rate of adverse drug reaction The change of plasm concentration after change the dose frequency; The relationship between peripheral blood gene and analgesia effect; The relationship between peripheral blood gene and adverse event;
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal