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Personalizing Perioperative Analgesia in Children

S

Senthil Sadhasivam

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Postoperative Pain

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01140724
R01HD089458 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY21070173

Details and patient eligibility

About

In the United States alone, each year approximately 5 million children undergo painful surgery, many of them experience serious side-effects with opioids and inadequate pain relief. Safe and effective analgesia is an important unmet critical medical need in children and its continued existence is an important perioperative safety and economic problem. Inadequate pain relief and serious side effects from perioperative opioids occur frequently in up to 50% of children. Morphine, the most commonly used perioperative opioid, has a narrow therapeutic index and large inter-patient variations in analgesic response and serious side effects. Frequent inter-individual variations in responses to morphine have significant clinical and economic impact with inadequate pain relief at one end of the spectrum of responses and serious adverse effects such as respiratory depression at the other end. Much of the inter-individual variability in response to a dose of morphine following surgical procedures can be explained by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a subset of the genes that encode proteins involved in pain mechanisms and opioid pathway.

Full description

Measures and Procedures: Participants will receive standard care, standard anesthetic and an intraoperative dose of morphine per the clinical team.

Research procedures will include:

  1. Blood draws for genotyping candidate genes and exploratory genes
  2. Standardized PACU (post anesthesia care unit) Protocol: Subjective pain assessments: Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0 to 10. Objective assessment with FLACC (facial expression; leg movement; activity; cry; and consolability) scale, 0-10.
  3. Significant postoperative pain will be managed in the PACU with rescue doses of morphine and opioids by the clinical team. Analgesic interventions and morphine requirements are collected
  4. Effects of opioids on pupil measures
  5. Respiratory response to 5% carbon dioxide preoperatively and postoperatively (first 350 patients only). Another measure of end tidal carbon dioxide will be implemented when the device is clinically available.
  6. Serial blood draws for morphine pharmacokinetic modeling (through subject #351).
  7. Opioid adverse effects in PACU and at home.

Enrollment

1,200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 15 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • boys and girls,
  • 3-15 years of age,
  • all races,
  • American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status 1,2, and 3,
  • children with history of significant snoring suggestive of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA),
  • Scheduled for tonsillectomy (T) or tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (T and A).

Exclusion criteria

  • allergic to study medications
  • developmental delay,
  • liver and renal diseases,
  • preoperative pain requiring analgesics,
  • children who have problems with pupil or pupillary reaction due to disease
  • preoperative medications influencing pupillary size
  • non-English speaking participants and families
  • Body Mass Index ≥30
  • Participants undergoing additional procedures during surgery
  • Children with certain cardiac conditions
  • Children with severe lung disease
  • Children with a history of seizures currently treated on medication
  • Children with psychiatric/psychological conditions for which patient currently takes medication

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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