Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06297499

Ondansetron Use for Preventing Pruritus in Patients Undergoing Cesarean Section

Timing of Ondansetron Use for Maximum Efficacy in Preventing Pruritus in Patients Undergoing Cesarean Section Under Spinal Anesthesia with Preservative Free Morphine.

Status
Recruiting
Phase
Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
66 (estimated)
Sponsor
Wayne State University · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Opioids are often added with a local anesthetic to enhance the duration and quality of spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery patients. However, spinal opioids are associated with a wide variety of side effects such as nausea, vomiting, (N/V) and pruritus (itching). The occurrence of pruritus can vary between 30% and 100% making pruritus the most common side-effect of intrathecal opioids and this rate is even higher in pregnant patients. Pruritus may require treatment which can be ineffective or sometimes reverse the analgesic effect of the opioids. Ondansetron is a safe and very commonly used Serotonin receptor antagonist treatment for local anesthetic opioid-induced pruritus used in pregnancy. The effect of different administration times of ondansetron in reducing pruritus or N/V in cesarean section (CS) cases has not been extensively studied and thus, this prospective study can help guide future clinical management of side effects caused by spinal intrathecal morphine administration.

Detailed description

Opioids are often added with a local anesthetic to enhance the duration and quality of spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery patients. However, spinal opioids are associated with a wide variety of side effects such as nausea, vomiting, (N/V) and pruritus (itching). The occurrence of pruritus can vary between 30% and 100% making pruritus the most common side-effect of intrathecal opioids and this rate is even higher in pregnant patients. Pruritus may require treatment which can be ineffective or sometimes reverse the analgesic effect of the opioids. Ondansetron is a safe and very commonly used Serotonin receptor antagonist treatment for local anesthetic opioid-induced pruritus used in pregnancy. The effect of different administration times of ondansetron in reducing pruritus or N/V in cesarean section (CS) cases has not been extensively studied and thus, this prospective study can help guide future clinical management of side effects caused by spinal intrathecal morphine administration. The primary aim of this study is to observe in a randomized double-blinded trial if the timing of prophylactic administration of intravenous ondansetron can reduce the incidence and severity of intrathecal morphine-induced pruritus in patients undergoing Cesarean section (CS). The secondary aim is to establish the effect of intravenous ondansetron given at different time intervals following CS for postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV). The primary study hypothesis is that patients receiving prophylactic intravenous ondansetron (15-30 minutes prior to intrathecal morphine) will experience a lower incidence and severity of intrathecal morphine-induced pruritus than patients receiving ondansetron administered at the time of umbilical cord clamping. The secondary study hypothesis is that CS patients receiving intravenous ondansetron 15-30 minutes prior to intrathecal morphine will have less nausea and vomiting than patients receiving ondansetron administered at the time of umbilical cord clamping. As the effect of prophylactic administration of ondansetron in reducing pruritus or Nausea/Vomiting in cesarean section (CS) cases has not been studied and thus, this prospective study may help guide future clinical management of side effects caused by intrathecal morphine administration.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGOndansetron 8mgadministration of an IV solution of 8mg ondansetron (4ml)

Timeline

Start date
2024-08-22
Primary completion
2025-08-01
Completion
2025-12-01
First posted
2024-03-07
Last updated
2025-03-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06297499. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.