Efficacy of Oral Prednisolone on Pain Reduction in Emergency Care of Acute Irreversible Pulpitis

NCT ID: NCT02629042

Last Updated: 2018-12-20

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE3

Total Enrollment

5 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-05-15

Study Completion Date

2018-12-03

Brief Summary

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Irreversible pulpitis is an inflammatory condition of the dental pulp, highly painful, representing one of the main reasons for consulting dental emergency. The recommended emergency care is a partial endodontic treatment under local and/or locoregional anesthesia. The purpose of the emergency partial endodontic treatment is to stop the pain of pulpitis by removing a portion of the pulp. The final endodontic treatment is ideally performed 72 hours after. The literature reports major difficulty in obtaining adequate anesthesia in the mandible to perform partial endodontic treatment, especially for the mandibular molars. This results in a very painful care for the patient. The management of this type of emergency is costly in terms of equipment and time for health facilities. Patient comfort, cost saving and rationalization of the care time justify the search for an alternative to emergency partial endodontic treatment. In current practice, the short course oral corticotherapy is used in the management of oral pain from inflammatory origin. Glucocorticoids, thanks to their anti-inflammatory action, can neutralize the inflammatory mediators and thus pain. The pulp inflammation can be treated with this molecule: the effectiveness of intraosseous local steroid injection for irreversible pulpitis of mandibular molars has already been shown but results in local comorbidities and requires specific device. Oral administration of short-course prednisolone is simple and safe but its effectiveness to manage pain caused by irreversible pulpitis has not yet been demonstrated. Per-os administration of prednisolone has a very high (90%) and rapid (≤ 4 hours) bioavailability. No difference in effectiveness between intravenous and oral administration of this molecule was reported. This oral treatment could limit comorbidities and technical difficulties related to intraosseous injection and could delay the endodontic treatment to 72 hours in optimal conditions of anesthesia for the patient. Despite the difficulties described for the partial endodontic treatment, it is very effective in pain reduction and can reach 100% of success. Therefore a non-inferiority design was chosen to compare the effect of a short-course oral corticotherapy to a partial endodontic treatment for the reduction of pain at the emergency care of the irreversible pulpitis in mandibular molars. The intervention arm will receive an oral dose of prednisolone (1 mg/kg) during the emergency visit followed-up by one morning dose by day during three days and the reference arm will have partial endodontic treatment. Both groups will have planned complete endodontic treatment 72 hours after enrolment.

Detailed Description

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Conditions

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Pulpitis

Keywords

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Anesthesia Corticosteroids Dental Emergency Irreversible Pulpitis Mandibulae Pain Management Partial Endodontic Treatment

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Control

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Partial endodontic treatment under local and/or locoregional anesthesia

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

The reference management consists in local and locoregional anesthesia of the molar and partial endodontic treatment. At the end of the emergency visit, all the patients, whatever their randomization group, will be given two types of antalgics and will be recommended to take them only if they have pain. Seventy-two hours after, all the patients, whatever their randomization will have endodontic treatment under local and locoregional anesthesia.

Experimental

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

prednisolone

Intervention Type DRUG

The evaluated intervention consists in per-os administration of prednisolone (1 mg / kg) during the emergency visit followed-up by one morning dose by day during three days. At the end of the emergency visit, all the patients, whatever their randomization group, will be given two types of antalgics and will be recommended to take them only if they have pain. Seventy-two hours after, all the patients, whatever their randomization will have endodontic treatment under local and locoregional anesthesia.

Interventions

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Partial endodontic treatment under local and/or locoregional anesthesia

The reference management consists in local and locoregional anesthesia of the molar and partial endodontic treatment. At the end of the emergency visit, all the patients, whatever their randomization group, will be given two types of antalgics and will be recommended to take them only if they have pain. Seventy-two hours after, all the patients, whatever their randomization will have endodontic treatment under local and locoregional anesthesia.

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

prednisolone

The evaluated intervention consists in per-os administration of prednisolone (1 mg / kg) during the emergency visit followed-up by one morning dose by day during three days. At the end of the emergency visit, all the patients, whatever their randomization group, will be given two types of antalgics and will be recommended to take them only if they have pain. Seventy-two hours after, all the patients, whatever their randomization will have endodontic treatment under local and locoregional anesthesia.

Intervention Type DRUG

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Clinical signs of irreversible pulpitis on a mandibular molar,
* ASA1 or ASA2 score (American Society of Anesthesiologists)
* Age between 18 and 70 years (of either gender)
* Ability to give written informed consent
* Affiliation to a health insurance scheme
* Agreement to be contacted by phone 24h after the emergency visit
* Availability to come back 72 hours after the emergency visit for endodontic treatment

Exclusion Criteria

* Diagnosis of reversible pulpitis, acute apical periodontitis, periodontal lesion of endodontic origin or dentin syndrome
* Not retainable tooth requiring extraction
* Contraindication of endodontic treatment (endocarditis risk) or local anaesthesia
* Contraindication for the prescription of glucocorticoids, paracetamol or codeine,
* Oral infection, viral disease in evolution (hepatitis, herpes zoster, .. ),
* Machine operators ,
* Psychosis uncontrolled by treatment, or chronic consumption of drugs or alcohol
* Allergy to one or more of the components,
* Diabetes, drug intake with direct interaction with glucocorticoids, paracetamol or codeine,
* Woman of child-bearing age without contraceptive, pregnancy, breastfeeding
* Not able to give informed consent,
* Participating in another interventional study
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

70 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Hospital, Bordeaux

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Elise ARRIVE

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

USMR, CHU de Bordeaux

Locations

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CHU de Bordeaux

Bordeaux, , France

Site Status

Countries

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France

References

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Kerouredan O, Jallon L, Perez P, Germain C, Peli JF, Oriez D, Fricain JC, Arrive E, Devillard R. Efficacy of orally administered prednisolone versus partial endodontic treatment on pain reduction in emergency care of acute irreversible pulpitis of mandibular molars: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials. 2017 Mar 28;18(1):141. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-1883-x.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 28351379 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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CHUBX 2014/09

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id