Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05853263

Morphine IV vs Paracetamol IV in Neonates and Infants After Cardiac Surgery

Pediatric Analgesia After Cardiac Surgery; Morphine IV Versus Paracetamol IV After Cardiac Surgery in Neonates and Infants.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
208 (actual)
Sponsor
Erasmus Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
1 Day – 36 Months
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare pain management in neonates and infants under 3 years of age undergoing cardiac surgery with use of cardiopulmonary bypass. Patients will be randomized to either continuous morphine IV (standard) of intermittent paracetamol IV (intervention). The investigators' hypothesis is that intermittent IV paracetamol is effective as the primary analgesic drug in post-cardiac surgery patients up to 3 years of age and that the use of IV paracetamol will reduce overall morphine requirements.

Detailed description

Congenital heart disease accounts for almost one third of all congenital anomalies. Surgical intervention is necessary in 55% within the first year of life and in 67% during the first three years of life. Morphine is the drug of first choice worldwide for pain relief after major surgery in neonates and children. However, morphine can cause unwanted hemodynamic and respiratory reactions and therefore patients could potentially benefit from a non-opioid analgesic. In a recent randomized controlled trial, intravenous (IV) paracetamol was compared with morphine as a primary analgesic drug in non-cardiac post-operative children up to 1 year. IV paracetamol was equally effective in pain relief, and no difference in rescue analgesics was shown between groups. The IV paracetamol group had a lower cumulative morphine dose the first 48 h after surgery and less adverse drug reactions. Whether these results also apply to neonates and children after cardiac surgery is unclear. Pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters are assumed to be different in patients during and after cardiac surgery compared with non-cardiac surgery due to use of the cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Hypothesis The investigators' hypothesis is that intermittent IV paracetamol is effective as the primary analgesic drug in post-cardiac surgery patients up to 3 years of age and that the use of IV paracetamol will reduce overall morphine requirements. This hypothesis is currently being tested at three level-4 PICUs in the Netherlands and Belgium (Erasmus MC-Sophia Rotterdam, Wilhelmina Children's Hospital University Medical Center (UMC) Utrecht, Beatrix Children's Hospital UMC Groningen, University Hospital (UZ) Leuven). All participants will receive a loading dose of morphine after cardiac surgery. After this, participants will be randomized to either standard care (morphine continuous IV) or intervention group (intermittent paracetamol IV). Validated pain and sedations assessment tools will be used to adjust pain treatment if necessary. Rescue morphine as available for both groups. A double blind study design is used, with a dummy saline continuous infusion in the paracetamol group and a dummy saline intermittent infusion in de continuous morphine group. Study medication is stopped 48 hours after surgery and patients are transferred to open label morphine and paracetamol when applicable.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGparacetamolparacetamol IV to substitute morphine IV.
DRUGMorphinestandard care

Timeline

Start date
2016-03-09
Primary completion
2020-07-11
Completion
2020-07-20
First posted
2023-05-10
Last updated
2023-05-10

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05853263. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.