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CompletedNCT02179294

A Randomised Controlled Trial of Remifentanil Intravenous Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) Versus Intramuscular Pethidine for Pain Relief in Labour

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
401 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Birmingham · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
16 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Childbirth can be an extremely painful and the provision of pain relief during labour is a vital component of a positive maternal experience. The majority of women who deliver in modern obstetric units choose a pharmacological method of pain relief, including Entonox, the injection of opioids or epidural placement. The commonest opioid used in labour is pethidine administered by intramuscular (im) injection. The effectiveness of pain relief provided by pethidine has long been challenged. Its shortcomings are more serious when set against known side effects including maternal sedation, nausea and potential transfer across the placenta to the foetus. More than a third of women who receive pethidine subsequently require an epidural due to inadequate pain relief. Epidurals provide highly effective pain relief, but increase the risk of a forceps or suction delivery resulting in prolonged hospital stay. Therefore, there is a clear need for a safe, effective, easy to administer analgesic alternative.

Detailed description

Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) comprises drug administration into an intravenous drip with a small dose given each time a woman presses a button, giving her control over her own pain relief. The pump is programmed to ensure that the maximum dose allowable is within the safe range. This form of delivery of pain relief matches the drug dose to pain sensation within the relevant time frame, which is not possible using a single dose intramuscular injection. Whilst PCA is in widespread use for acute pain relief it has only a limited role in obstetrics. The most common drug given by PCA is morphine, however, since it has a long duration of action and crosses the placenta, the potential for accumulation in the foetus and consequent neonatal sedation at delivery restricts its utility (within obstetrics) to contexts where neonatal status is not relevant, such as intra-uterine foetal death or foetal abnormality incompatible with survival. Remifentanil is a novel synthetic opioid with a very rapid onset (blood-brain equilibration 1.2-1.4 minutes) and short duration of action (context specific half-life 3 minutes), giving it an analgesic profile which potentially makes it ideal for providing pain relief over 1-2 uterine contractions after a single intravenous dose. It is subject to rapid redistribution and metabolism by non-specific blood and tissue esterases negating the potential for accumulation in mother or foetus. Administration of remifentanil by PCA has been investigated in several small studies in comparison to pethidine and shown to provide useful, although not complete, pain relief in labour.10-12 Thus far, there is no evidence of detrimental neonatal effects in comparison to other opioids.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGPethidine100mg by intramuscular injection, up to 4 hourly in frequency (up to a maximum of 4 doses). The maximum dose being 400mg in 24 hours.
DRUGRemifentanilDedicated intravenous cannula for remifentanil administration PCA protocol * PCA bolus remifentanil 40 μg * Lockout interval 2 minutes In the event of excess sedation being recorded by regular observation of respiratory function, the regimen will be altered by reduction of the remifentanil bolus dose to 30 μg with a lock-out interval of 2 minutes.

Timeline

Start date
2014-05-01
Primary completion
2016-09-01
Completion
2016-09-01
First posted
2014-07-01
Last updated
2018-10-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02179294. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

A Randomised Controlled Trial of Remifentanil Intravenous Patient Controlled Analgesia (PCA) Versus Intramuscular Pethid (NCT02179294) · Clinical Trials Directory