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CompletedNCT03679013

Effectiveness of an Opioid Sparing Pain Regimen in Cardiac Surgery

A Pilot Study Comparing the Effectiveness of an Opioid- Sparing Analgesic Regimen and an Opioid Based Regimen on Post- Operative Pain Control in Cardiac Surgery Patients (INOVA OPIOID

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
19 (actual)
Sponsor
Inova Health Care Services · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 85 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The Inova Heart and Vascular Institute (IHVI) perform over 300 coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgeries per year. While opioid medications are the institutional standard of care for post-operative pain therapy little is known about the variation in pain scores, incidence of post- operative complications, and cost of hospitalization when an alternative multimodal pain regimen consisting of oral Gabapentin and intravenous Acetaminophen (IV APAP) is utilized. The objective is to determine whether there is a substantial difference in pain scores, incidence of post-operative complications, and costs associated with hospitalization when a non-opioid multimodal pain regimen is utilized A single- center, open label, prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial comprised of 20 total patients who have undergone isolated CABG at the IHVI will be conducted. Separate cohorts will include patients receiving opioid medications post-operatively (Group 1) and patients receiving the non-opioid regimen of oral Gabapentin and IV APAP (Group 2) to be followed for 72 hours post CABG surgery. Main outcome measures include pain scores in both study groups, requests for breakthrough pain medication in both groups, gastrointestinal and respiratory complications of ileus and reduction in tidal volumes or forced vital capacity (FVC) at baseline and at 72 hours,increase in serum AST/ALT, and comparison of cost of hospitalization between groups. The objective of this pilot study is to provide evidence that multimodal pain therapy utilizing IV APAP and PO Gabapentin will provide more effective pain relief than standard of care opioids as evidenced by pain scores \<2. And the reduced consumption of opioids will lead to a reduction in ileus, no increase in AST/ALT, post-operative tidal volumes as assessed by incentive spirometry comparable to pre- surgical values, while also showing a positive effect on the cost of hospitalization.

Detailed description

The Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit (CVICU) of the Inova Heart and Vascular Institute (IHVI) will be the setting of this clinical trial involving two groups of subjects and comparing the opiate based standard of care regimen currently adopted (Group 1) at the IHVI with a treatment group (Group 2). Group 2 will receive a scheduled multimodal pain regimen consisting of PO (pro ora \[oral\]) Gabapentin paired with intravenous Acetaminophen. Opioids will be available for breakthrough pain in the treatment group for pain scores greater than 4. The outcomes of total opioid consumption and minimum/ maximum pain scores will be assessed at the 24 hours, 48 hours, 72 hours, and PRN (pro re nata \[as the situation demands\]) timepoints. Assessment will include amount of opioids consumed in both groups as well as number of requests for breakthrough pain medication in Group 2. Minimum and maximum pain scores in all study groups will be assessed via Numeric Rating Scale (0-10) as per Inova Health System (IHS) policy; 'Pain Management for the Adult Population', at 24 hours, 48 hours, 72 hours, and PRN with opioid requests in all groups and opioid administration follow up within one hour as per IHS inpatient medication administration policy. Follow up medication administration scores will not be recorded as part of study results. Secondary assessments will include the incidence of ileus both during hospitalization, increase in aspartate aminotransferase (AST)/ alanine aminotransferase (ALT), post-operative tidal volumes as assessed by incentive spirometry as compared to pre- surgical values, time from Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit (CVICU) arrival to extubation in both groups, and the effects of an opioid based regimen versus an opioid sparing regimen on cost of medication and hospitalization. The investigators hypothesize that a scheduled opioid- sparing pain regimen consisting of intravenous Acetaminophen IV APAP and PO Gabapentin for 48 hours post- operatively will reduce opioid consumption while maintaining adequate pain relief as evidenced by pain scores less than two (2), and a reduction in opioid consumption, and that reduced opioid consumption will lead to a reduction in the incidence of ileus, an opioid related side effect, no increase in AST/ALT, post-operative tidal volumes as assessed by incentive spirometry comparable to pre- surgical values, and demonstrate a positive effect on the cost of medication and hospitalization.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGOral Gabapentin and Intravenous Acetaminophen (IV APAP)Scheduled multimodal pain regimen consisting of oral Gabapentin paired with intravenous Acetaminophen following cardiopulmonary bypass surgery.
DRUGOpiate based pain regimen.Standard of care opiate based pain regimen.

Timeline

Start date
2019-04-19
Primary completion
2019-07-12
Completion
2019-07-12
First posted
2018-09-20
Last updated
2022-11-08
Results posted
2022-11-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03679013. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.