ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Perioperative Intravenous Nimodipine Trial

U

University of Ioannina

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Pain, Acute
Pain, Postoperative
Colectomy
Pain
Open Surgery

Treatments

Drug: Nimodipine
Drug: Isotonic Saline

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07048522
18-4_2024-12-05

Details and patient eligibility

About

The role of perioperative IV administration of nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel antagonist which is capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier, on peri-operative opioid and anesthetics requirements, pain intensity, opioid-related side effects and early postoperative bowel mobility in patients undergoing surgical treatment for bowel cancer with open radical colectomy remains scarcely explored. A prospective double-blind, randomized controlled trial investigating the effect of perioperative IV administration of nimodipine in patients undergoing open colectomy for cancer treatment is therefore conducted.

Full description

Background with aim: Acute postoperative pain is still of major clinical concern for a large number of patients undergoing surgery worldwide. Despite advances in pain management strategies, many patients continue to suffer from moderate-to-severe pain during the early postoperative period, while opioids are still largely over-prescribed. Not effectively and especially unrelieved pain can result in decreased patient satisfaction, increased morbidity, prolonged hospital length-of-stay and increased risk of persistent pain. Furthermore, effective treatment of acute postoperative pain using opioid analgesics remains the core treatment for postoperative pain. Although the potential benefits of opioid therapy for acute pain lead to a short-term pain control there are several potential severe side-effects associated with opioid use which may outweigh the benefits including sedation, nausea, vomiting, constipation especially in bowel surgery, and the risk of long-term use. Although various non-opioid drugs have been investigated over the past decades, information regarding L-type calcium channel blockers in acute postoperative pain is limited. In this respect, the perioperative use of nimodipine, a drug which furthermore crosses the blood-brain barrier and has direct effects on the Central Nernous System (CNS) could potentiate the effects of opioid analgesia and intraoperative anesthetic requirements, providing improved analgesia and potentially reduce for opioids in the perioperative period. Therefore, the investigators decided to carry out the present study with the aim to examine the analgesic efficacy and safety of perioperatively administered IV nimodipine in patients undergoing open colectomy on perioperative opioid and anesthetic consumption, pain intensity, opioid-related side effects and early postoperative bowel mobility.

Method: A power analysis based on a previous preliminary study using IV nimodipine for medium risk general surgery (open cholecystectomy) showed that 9 patients would provide a power greater than 0.9 (α = 0.05) for detection of differences of pain scores and cumulative opioid consumption over time (up to 48 h). Therefore, 40 patients undergoing open colectomy will be included in this prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial with two arms: an intervention arm (IV nimodipine 4 mg/h starting 1h prior to surgery until one h after the start of surgery, followed by 2 mg/h until 24 h post-operation) and a control arm (isotonic saline 20 ml/ h 1h prior to and until one h after start of surgery, followed by 10 ml/h until 24 h post-operation). The study is approved by the local hospital scientific board (#18-4_2024-12-05).

Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesize that perioperative intravenous administration of nimodipine, an L-type calcium channel antagonist, will be effective in reducing intraoperative anesthetic requirements, as well as intra- and postoperative opioid requirements, as well as postoperative pain intensity and opioid-related side effects.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients scheduled for open surgical treatment of bowel cancer at the General Hospital of Patra

Exclusion criteria

  • Age < 18 years, > 75 years
  • American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status > III
  • Allergy to nimodipine
  • Inability to provide informed consent
  • Known severe renal insufficiency
  • Known severe bradyarrhythmia
  • Daily opioid consumption the last 7 days before surgery
  • Pain intensity assessed using the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS; 0-10), with scores greater than 5 reported on more than half of the days during the past month.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Nimodipine
Experimental group
Description:
Prepared (coded) by the pharmacy 50 ml solutions of nimodipine (2 mg/10 ml) with blinded 50 ml syringes will be used in each patient.
Treatment:
Drug: Nimodipine
Isotonic saline
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Prepared (coded) by the pharmacy 50 ml solutions with blinded 50 ml syringes of isotonic saline will be used in each patient.
Treatment:
Drug: Isotonic Saline

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Maria-Theodora Filou, MD; Ourania Patroni, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems