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"The Efficacy of Exparel Versus a Multidrug Cocktail in Soft Tissue Tumors"

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Atlantic Health System

Status and phase

Terminated
Phase 2

Conditions

Musculoskeletal Diseases
Soft Tissue Mass

Treatments

Drug: Exparel Injectable Product
Drug: Multi-Drug Cocktail (Ropivicaine, Epinephrine, Ketolorac, Clonidine)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05355597
1429450

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this proposed project is to determine which local anesthetic is more efficacious for use in soft tissue tumors: Exparel (liposomal bupivacaine) or a cocktail of Ropivicaine, Epinepherine, Ketolorac and Clonidine. This study will examine patients' post-operative pain levels as well as their narcotic consumption after removal of a soft tissue tumor while hospitalized and then twice daily through postoperative day 14.

Full description

In recent years, there has been a substantial push to create a post-surgical protocol consisting of multimodal analgesia across multiple surgical subspecialties to decrease narcotic consumption and cost1. The negative side effects of narcotics and their addiction potential are well understood.

One of the modes of analgesia currently in use to mitigate surgical pain is some form of local anesthetic. Increasing the duration of analgesia has been sought after since its inception. Subsequently, longer acting anesthetics like bupivacaine have been implemented as well as supplementing their use with other drugs, such as epinephrine, to increase their effect duration and overall efficacy2. This has led to the development of Liposomal Bupivicaine or Exparel (TM, Parsippany NJ etc.) Exparel works by infusing liposomes in the administration of the long acting local analgesic which entrap the biologically active drug and slowly release it over a period of 72-96 hours 3-4. Thus, post-operative pain can be managed via direct injection of the drug at the surgical site with upwards to four days of pain relief.

Exparel has been studied extensively in the surgical literature; although within orthopedics, it has been primarily in regard to arthroplasty5. There has yet to be a study to illicit the best form of post-operative pain control in the world of orthopedic oncology, specifically in soft tissue tumors.

The objective of this proposed project is to determine which local anesthetic is more efficacious for use in soft tissue tumors: Exparel (liposomal bupivacaine) or a cocktail of Ropivicaine, Epinepherine, Ketolorac and Clonidine. This study will examine patients' post-operative pain levels as well as their narcotic consumption after removal of a soft tissue tumor while hospitalized and then twice daily through postoperative day 14.

Enrollment

116 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All primary soft tissue tumors
  • Any adult patient (over 18 years old) with a soft tissue tumor confirmed with advanced imaging.

Two different study groups will be examined:

  • Those patients undergoing resection of their soft tissue tumor intraoperatively injected with Exparel
  • Those patients undergoing resection of their soft tissue tumor intraoperatively injected with the cocktail.
  • Those two groups will be further stratified by anatomic location; Upper vs lower extremity, size; tumors ≥ 10cm, tumors ≥ 5cm, tumors < 5cm, and depth; superficial vs deep.

Exclusion criteria

  • Pediatric Patients
  • Patients without soft tissue tumors
  • Tylenol or oxycodone allergy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

116 participants in 2 patient groups

Exparel Group
Experimental group
Description:
70 subjects will receive Exparel
Treatment:
Drug: Exparel Injectable Product
Multi-Drug Cocktail Group
Experimental group
Description:
70 subjects will receive a Multi-drug Cocktail
Treatment:
Drug: Multi-Drug Cocktail (Ropivicaine, Epinephrine, Ketolorac, Clonidine)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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