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Acute pain episodes associated with sickle cell disease (SCD) are very difficult to manage effectively. Opioid tolerance and side effects have been major roadblocks in our ability to provide these patients with adequate pain relief. This pilot study is designed to examine the safety and feasibility of using ketamine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, in the inpatient seeing with children and adolescents who have sickle cell vasoocclusive pain. Previous research suggests that in subanesthetic doses, ketamine may be able to prevent the development of opiate tolerance and facilitate better pain relief with lower opiate doses, allowing for less respiratory depression, less sedation, easier ambulation, less deconditioning, shorter hospital stays, and better quality of life. The goal of this pilot study is to evaluate the safety and feasibility of using a continuous infusion of ketamine, in conjunction with opiates, in the inpatient setting for sickle cell vasoocclusive pain. It is hypothesized that using a low dose ketamine infusion in conjunction with opiates will be a safe and feasible practice for the treatment of sickle cell pain.
Full description
3.2 Study Design/Type
Patient meeting inclusion/exclusion criteria is enrolled up to 24 hours after admission for a vasoocclusive episode.
Prior to onset of ketamine infusion, the following information is collected:
Ketamine infusion is begun at 0.05 mg/kg/hour.
After infusion is initiated:
The infusion may be discontinued or decreased at any time due to unacceptable side effects as determined by the clinician, patient, parent, or principal investigator.
Agents designed to reduce ketamine side effects [midazolam (Versed), clonidine, lorazepam (Ativan), or diazepam (Valium)] may be administered at the discretion of the attending physician or the principal investigator.
4 hours or more after infusion begins, the infusion rate may be increased to 0.1 mg/kg/hour if the following parameters are met:
4 hours or more after the previous increase the ketamine infusion may be increased to 0.15 mg/kg/hour per parameters.
4 hours of more after the previous increase the ketamine infusion may be increased to 0.2 mg/kg/hour per parameters.
The ketamine infusion will be discontinued at the time of transition to oral pain medication, or no more than 72 hours after initiation, or at the request of the clinician, patient, parent, or principal investigator.
Pain scores, vital signs, sedation score, opiate use, APPT body outline figure, and KES score will be recorded as above for the remainder of the hospitalization.
Total length of hospitalization will be recorded.
Patient will be contacted on a weekly basis for 4 weeks following hospitalization for review of potential side effects, pain episodes, or events leading to re-admission.
The patient's medical record will be reviewed to determine duration of previous hospitalizations for SCD pain in the previous 24 months and opiate utilization, pain scores, and transition to oral opiates during those hospitalizations.
3.3 Randomization
This will be conducted as a pilot study; patients will not be randomized.
3.4 Duration
The length of the patient's participation in this study is the duration of their hospitalization, as well as 4 weeks worth of follow-up phone calls.
3.5 Discontinuation
Individual patients will stop receiving ketamine if they develop acute chest syndrome (ACS), have a stroke, are transferred to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), if their hemoglobin falls below 5 mg/dl, if they experience unacceptable side effects, or at the request of the PI, attending, patient, or parent. However, they will continue to be in the study and all data will be collected throughout the duration of their hospitalization.
The entire trial will be terminated when 20 patients have completed the protocol, or if there is an unexpected rate of acute chest syndrome or admissions to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU).
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3 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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