Trial Comparing Morphine to Hydromorphone in Elderly Patients With Severe Pain
NCT ID: NCT00305058
Last Updated: 2018-08-20
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2/PHASE3
194 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2005-07-31
2007-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Proper pain management is a tremendous challenge to ED physicians as pain is not only a noxious experience but also a symptom of injury and disease that needs to be understood and appropriately treated. Further complicating pain management is the large interpersonal variability in pain perception and expression reflecting cultural, contextual, and individual differences between people. Reasons for under-treating pain include concern over side effects of opioids, perception of pain complaints as possible drug-seeking behavior, under-staffing, concern that analgesics will mask symptoms, delay early diagnosis, treatment, and contribute to risks of tolerance and dependence in vulnerable patients.
The elderly represent a group of patients who may experience pain differently from the non-elderly patient. This growing population has been significantly underrepresented in pain-related studies. Some studies have shown that the elderly are at risk for "oligoanalgesia" and receive inadequate doses of pain medication.
Morphine has long been considered the gold standard in pain control. Hydromorphone is another powerful opiate that has been used extensively for the management of post-operative pain and morphine-resistant cancer-related pain. A recent Cochrane review on the use of hydromorphone found 32 studies that focused on acute pain. Of these 32 studies, only 9 involved intravenous forms of hydromorphone. Of these 8 studies, 5 involved patient controlled analgesia, and only 1 study compared intravenous (IV) hydromorphone to IV morphine. The Cochrane review concludes that there are gaps in the understanding of the efficacy and potency of hydromorphone. Only 1 study of hydromorphone in the ED could be located and this compared IV hydromorphone versus IV meperidine in patients with ureteral colic. Although this study showed hydromorphone was superior at all time periods and had fewer side effects, the study used fixed doses of hydromorphone (1mg) and meperidine (50mg).
It has been the clinical experience of some ED physicians that hydromorphone may be a better opiate in patients presenting to the ED with acute pain. Hydromorphone is also the opiate that is usually given if morphine does not adequately control a patient's pain in the ED.
Hydromorphone may also have other benefits, such as a faster onset since it is more lipophilic than morphine and crosses the blood-brain barrier faster.
If it is shown that hydromorphone gives better pain relief to patients with comparable or fewer side effects when compared with morphine, then we may be able to provide evidence to suggest that hydromorphone should be the parenteral opiate of choice for adult ED patients presenting with acute pain of moderate to severe intensity.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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Hydromorphone
0.0075 mg/kg IV hydromorphone
Hydromorphone
0.0075 mg/kg intravenous
Morphine
0.05 mg/kg IV morphine
Morphine
0.05 mg/kg Intravenous
Interventions
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Morphine
0.05 mg/kg Intravenous
Hydromorphone
0.0075 mg/kg intravenous
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Pain with onset within 7 days
3. ED attending physician's judgment that patient's pain warrants use of parenteral opioids
4. Normal mental status
Exclusion Criteria
2. Use of other opioids or tramadol within past seven days
3. Prior adverse reaction to morphine or hydromorphone
4. Chronic pain syndrome
5. Alcohol intoxication
6. Systolic Blood Pressure \<90 mm Hg
7. Use of monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors in past 30 days
8. Elderly patients with a capnometry reading of greater than 46
65 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Montefiore Medical Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Andrew Chang, MD
Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Andrew K Chang, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Montefiore Medical Center
Locations
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Montefiore Medical Center
The Bronx, New York, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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MMC 04-08-225E
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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