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In Infants With Laryngomalacia, Does Acid-Blocking Medication Improve Respiratory Symptoms?

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Stanford University

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Stridor
Acid Reflux
Laryngomalacia

Treatments

Drug: ranitidine or famotidine
Drug: Placebo

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02700087
IRB-35551

Details and patient eligibility

About

All neonates, ages 0 to 4 months, presenting to LPCH pediatric ENT clinic for airway difficulties or stridor will be screened for inclusion. As is consistent with an acceptable standard of medical care, these children will undergo a flexible nasal endoscopic exam to make the diagnosis of laryngomalacia, as well as be weighed and a breastfeeding history taken. If laryngomalacia is present, the study staff with then administer the Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire (IGERQ) and an airway symptoms questionnaire (ASQ).

Those babies with an IGERQ score of less than sixteen (no more than mild reflux) and an ASQ score greater than six will be eligible for randomization. The patient will then be randomly placed in the control group (placebo) or the intervention group (ranitidine 2mg/kg every 12 hours or famotidine 0.5 mg/kg daily). Patients will stay on medication for a minimum of 6 months, or until symptoms resolve. Patients will be seen in follow up at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 10 months. At which time I-GERQ, ASQ and weights will be taken. The primary outcome measure will be the time for the ASQ score to drop to normal on ranitidine or famotidine versus placebo.

A secondary outcome will be weight gain in percentile. If the patient's I-GERQ score goes above 16 at any time in the study, the patient will be crossed over to the treatment arm and started on medical treatment.

Full description

Laryngomalacia, or a soft, floppy upper airway, is the most common cause of noisy breathing in neonates. It is caused by a combination of factors including neuromuscular weakness, cartilaginous inadequacy, and anatomic abnormalities in the voice box. The majority of affected babies' symptoms resolve by one year without intervention, but around 5% of cases require surgical intervention to treat failure to thrive or obstructive sleep apnea.

Many babies with laryngomalacia are treated empirically with H2 blockers such as ranitidine or famotidine to prevent reflux of stomach acid from causing further inflammation in an already compromised upper airway. However, to date no study has been performed to show a definitive benefit of these medications.

The investigators hope to determine whether H2 blockers such as ranitidine and famotidine improve airway symptoms in babies with laryngomalacia. This will have an effect on practice guideline for one of the most common problems encountered in pediatric otolaryngology.

All neonates, ages 0 to 4 months, presenting to LPCH pediatric ENT clinic for airway difficulties or stridor will be screened for inclusion. As is consistent with an acceptable standard of medical care, these children will undergo a flexible nasal endoscopic exam to make the diagnosis of laryngomalacia, as well as be weighed and a breastfeeding history taken. If laryngomalacia is present, the study staff with then administer the Infant Gastroesophageal Reflux Questionnaire (IGERQ) and an airway symptoms questionnaire (ASQ).

Those babies with an IGERQ score of less than sixteen (no more than mild reflux) and an ASQ score greater than six will be eligible for randomization. The patient will then be randomly placed in the control group (placebo) or the intervention group (ranitidine 2mg/kg every 12 hours or famotidine 0.5 mg/kg daily). Patients will stay on medication for a minimum of 6 months, or until symptoms resolve. Patients will be seen in follow up at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 10 months. At which time I-GERQ, ASQ and weights will be taken. The primary outcome measure will be the time for the ASQ score to drop to normal on ranitidine or famotidine versus placebo.

A secondary outcome will be weight gain in percentile. If the patient's I-GERQ score goes above 16 at any time in the study, the patient will be crossed over to the treatment arm and started on medical treatment.

Sex

All

Ages

Under 4 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • age 0 - 4 months old
  • stridor and flexible laryngoscopy demonstrating laryngomalacia
  • airway symptom score over 4
  • only has physiologic GER (I-GERQ < 16)

Exclusion criteria

  • requiring surgery for LGM
  • other airway dz seen on flexible laryngoscopy
  • history of or already on PPI therapy
  • minimal/mild airway symptoms (airway score < 4)
  • pathologic GERD (I-GERQ greater than 16) - These pts cannot be randomized because this is the standard score in Pediatric GI literature strongly indicating anti-reflux meds
  • premature birth (< 36 weeks)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

0 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

H2 blocker versus placebo
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
The patient will then be randomly placed in the control group (placebo) or the intervention group (ranitidine 2mg/kg every 12 hours or famotidine 0.5 mg/kg daily). Patients will stay on medication for a minimum of 6 months, or until symptoms resolve. Patients will be seen in follow up at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 10 months. At which time I-GERQ, ASQ and weights will be taken. The primary outcome measure will be the time for the ASQ score to drop to normal on ranitidine or famotidine versus placebo.
Treatment:
Drug: Placebo
Drug: ranitidine or famotidine
Treatment arm
Active Comparator group
Description:
Patients who develop severe airway symptoms while they are in the H2 blocker versus placebo arm will then cross over to the treatment arm of the study. These patients will exit randomization and be unblinded. These patients will all be given H2 blockers, and the effects of the H2 blockers will be monitored and studied. Alternatively, patients' families may also elect to undergo surgery to treat laryngomalacia.
Treatment:
Drug: ranitidine or famotidine

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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