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Postoperative Vomiting in Children: Comparison Tri - Versus bi -Prophylaxis (VPOP2)

A

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Status

Completed

Conditions

Postoperative Vomiting

Treatments

Drug: Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Placebo
Drug: Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Droperidol

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01739985
2009-017293-20 (EudraCT Number)
P081228

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the benefit of addition of droperidol to prophylaxis with ondansetron and dexamethasone in children with high risk of postoperative vomiting (POV). In adults some authors showed that the effectiveness of prophylaxis is correlated to the number of molecules or specific procedures used.

Full description

The overall incidence of postoperative vomiting between 25 and 30% for the pediatric population, but it can reach a much higher incidence associated with certain types of surgery, about 80% in some studies like strabismus surgery for example. The identification of patients at high risk of POV is possible through the use of risk score. It is currently only one pediatric validated risk score, but the investigators conducted a multicenter study on this subject, whose results are being analyzed. This should allow us to identify children at high risk of POV. In this targeted population, the prophylaxis should allow a significant reduction in the incidence of POV. In children only one study tried to evaluate the association of ondansetron, dexamethasone and droperidol to prevent postoperative vomiting. However, different doses of the different molecules were combined, the extremely complicated design of this study and important methodological bias do not provide evidence about the superiority of the combination of three anti-emetics compared with two anti-emetics. Our present randomized, double-blind study is designed to compare the effectiveness of Droperidol in combination with a conventional bi-prophylaxis (dexamethasone/ondansetron) to the conventional bi-prophylaxis alone to decrease the occurrence of postoperative vomiting in children at high risk. The combination ondansetron and dexamethasone is frequently assessed as an association to prevent postoperative vomiting also in the adult population and in the pediatric population.

Enrollment

322 patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children scheduled for surgery and with high risk of postoperative vomiting, i.e. with VPOP score up to 4
  • Between 3 to 18 years
  • Informed consent signed or the owner (s) of parental
  • Children receiving a social security system

Exclusion criteria

  • Ambulatory surgery
  • Preoperative corticosteroids
  • Postoperative sedation
  • Allergy known to droperidol, ondansetron or dexamethasone
  • Known hypokaliemia
  • Known hypomagnesemia
  • Bradycardia (<55 bpm)
  • Congenital long QT syndrome
  • Treatment that induce prolonged QT
  • Pheochromocytoma
  • Severe depressive syndrome

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

322 participants in 2 patient groups

Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Placebo
Active Comparator group
Description:
dexamethasone + ondansetron + Placebo
Treatment:
Drug: Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Placebo
Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Droperidol
Experimental group
Description:
dexamethasone + ondansetron + Droperidol
Treatment:
Drug: Dexamethasone + ondansetron + Droperidol

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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