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Suzetrigine Versus Usual-care Opioids for Postop Pain in Sports

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Phase 4

Conditions

Postoperative Pain Management

Treatments

Drug: Suzetrigine
Drug: Multimodal Pain Regimen

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07355166
IRB-25-2108

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a Suzetrigine-based multimodal pain regimen can reduce the volume of opioid consumption while maintaining non-inferior pain control compared to an opioid-based multimodal pain regimen after common ambulatory orthopaedic sports procedures. The main questions it aims to answer are:

  1. Does including Suzetrigine in the multimodal pain regimen lower the volume of opioids consumed by participants while maintaining non-inferior pain control?
  2. How does the side-effect profile of a Suzetrigine-based multimodal postop pain regimen compare to that of an opioid-based multimodal postoperative pain regimen?

Eligible participants will be assigned to receive one of the postop pain regimens and report their opioid use, their pain level, and the side effects they faced every day for 7 days.

Full description

Pain control after most arthroscopic and open orthopaedic sports surgeries in the ambulatory setting is dependent on multimodal pain regimens that include the use of narcotics. These medications are often considered necessary for appropriate pain control but pose risks of harm to patients through systemic side effects, potential for overdose, and potential for long-term dependence. They also pose risks to society through diversion, fueling the economically burdensome opioid crisis, and being a nidus for drug-related crimes. Suzetrigine (Journavx) was FDA-approved in January of 2025 for use in the management of acute pain. It is the first non-opioid analgesic approved since celecoxib (anti-inflammatory) in the late 1990's and has been shown to provide non-inferior pain control when compared to placebo as well as to opioid-based drug regimens in some postoperative settings. It's efficacy in reducing postoperative opioid exposure without sacrificing pain control after common ambulatory orthopaedic sports procedures that already use multimodal/regional anesthesia has yet to be studied in a controlled fashion.

At the University of Califronia Los Angeles (UCLA), multimodal strategies for patients undergoing common ambulatory orthopaedic sports procedures like primary ACL reconstruction or rotator cuff repair currently include regional anesthesia, acetaminophen, NSAIDs, and opioids. Since FDA approval, Suzetrigine has been incorporated into postoperative pain management at UCLA for select patients, but has not been uniformly adopted. Evaluating its role in a controlled, randomized setting among patients undergoing common ambulatory Orthopaedic sports procedures will provide important data on best practices when incorporating it within current multimodal protocols as well as its impact on postoperative opioid use in these settings.

This study aims to evaluate its efficacy and opioid-sparing potential in patients undergoing an archetypal outpatient, Orthopaedic sports knee procedure - primary ACL reconstruction - and to inform its potential integration into enhanced recovery pathways.

This aim will be achieved by investigating whether a Suzetrigine based multimodal regimen affects total opioid consumption over 7 days after surgery when compared to an opioid-based multimodal regimen, while maintaining non-inferior pain control at 48 hours

Enrollment

140 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients undergoing reconstruction of primary ACL tear

Exclusion criteria

  • Concurrent ligamentous injuries requiring surgical intervention
  • Full thickness cartilage injury requiring discrete surgical intervention
  • Chronic opioid use
  • Significant hepatic disease (Child/Pugh C)
  • Women who are pregnant or breastfeeding
  • Women of childbearing age using hormonal contraceptives containing progestins other than levonorgestrel and norethindrone
  • Allergies or intolerance to any study medications
  • Inability to complete ePROs (due to literacy or infirmity)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

140 participants in 2 patient groups

Suzetrigine Arm
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in both groups will receive a common multimodal pain control regimen which includes a preoperative regional anesthesia, a 14-day supply of 1000mg acetaminophen BID, and a 14-day supply of 500mg naproxen BID. Patients randomized to the Suzetrigine arm will receive a loading dose of Suzetrigine 100mg in PACU postoperatively and a 7-day supply of 50mg suzetrigine BID for 1 week total. Patients in this group will also receive 25 tablets of 5mg of oxycodone for rescue pain control.
Treatment:
Drug: Suzetrigine
Opioid Arm
Experimental group
Description:
Patients in both groups will receive a common multimodal pain control regimen which includes a preoperative regional anesthesia, a 14-day supply of 1000mg acetaminophen BID, and a 14-day supply of 500mg naproxen BID. Patients randomized to the Opioid arm will also receive 25 tablets of 5mg of oxycodone and will not receive a Suzetrigine prescription.
Treatment:
Drug: Multimodal Pain Regimen

Trial contacts and locations

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Central trial contact

Jomar Aryee, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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