Intranasal Dexmedetomidine for Procedural Pain Management in Elderly Adults in Palliative Care
NCT ID: NCT03151863
Last Updated: 2021-07-28
Study Results
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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TERMINATED
PHASE3
33 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-11-14
2021-06-08
Brief Summary
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There is increasing number of promising studies for the use of intranasal (IN) Dex in pediatric sedation due to its non-invasive nature, its efficiency and its rare secondary effects. However, there is currently no information in the literature on the use of IN Dex in elderly multi-medicated patients in palliative care.
In this end-of-life population, pain is controlled with administration of opioids. Procedures, such as nursing cares, can generate pain and anxiety to the patient. Preventive analgesia, subcutaneous (SC) opioids, is administered before the care. However, most of the time, this additional dose fails to relieve the patient from his pain. In SPdol observational study, 42% daily hygiene and comfort nursing care remained painful despite the administration of a preventive analgesia.
IN Dex seems to be a good candidate for non-invasive analgesia and sedation in patients admitted in palliative care before the nursing procedure.
In this study, the investigators compare the efficiency of IN Dex to the regular extradose of SC opioids for analgesia before daily nursing care on elderly patients in the palliative care unit.
The study design is a cross over, two-sided, superiority, double-blind, placebo-controlled and randomized clinical trial.
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Detailed Description
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In the context of chronic health problems, comfort management pharmacological interventions to achieve analgesia, slight or conscious sedation during nursing care procedures must ideally combine the following properties:
* Rapid recovery and excellent cardiovascular and respiratory security profile;
* Be administrable in the regular place of care of the patient;
* Minimal requirement for medical surveillance in terms of time, equipment and staff;
* Reproducible inset and outset of the analgesic and anxiolytic effect;
* Easy to titrate;
* Convenient, little or non-invasive and administration route as painless as possible.
Dexmedetomidine is allowed in Switzerland for intravenous (IV) medication in the intensive care unit in the adult patient. It is indicated to obtain a level of sedation no deeper than that allowing a response to a verbal stimulus. Its active molecule, Dexmedetomidine (Dex) is a selective and powerful agonist of α2-adrenoreceptors (AR). This drug has come to be of growing interest in anesthesia and sedation field these last years in literature. Its pharmacological actions on the central nervous system consist in sedative, anesthetic, anxiolytic, analgesic action with good cardiovascular, respiratory and neuropsychic tolerance profile. The main possible secondary effect with IV Dex is bradycardia, due to decreased circulating epinephrine and norepinephrine levels observed with this drug.
Intranasal (IN) administration is an easy-to-use and more efficient alternative than placebo or other sedatives (Midazolam, Ketamine, Chloral) for the sedation of sensitive or less collaborative populations as children and young adults.
IN Dex applications described in the literature include analgesia and sedation for the realization of radiologic investigation, surgical procedures leading to pain and anxiety, dental care, endoscopy and electrochemotherapy, in combination with local anesthesia. IN Dex doses from 1 to 2µg/Kg in young adults and up to 4µg/Kg in children,have been shown to be effective for analgesia and sedation, in these contexts.
From a pharmacological point of view, the superiority of the IN way compared to the oral one has been demonstrated in pediatrics. In healthy adults volunteers IN Dex bioavailability is 82% after a short time (2.6 min on average). The plasmatic peak of concentration is reached after 30 min on average (Tmax range 15-60min). The onset of sedation occurs at 45 min, with a peak effect observed at 90 min.
There is increasing number of promising studies for the use of IN Dex for pediatric sedation due to its non-invasive nature, its efficiency and its rare secondary effects. However, there is currently no information in the literature on the use of IN Dex neither in elderly patients nor in palliative situations.
In end-of-life population, pain is controlled with a subcutaneous administration of opioids as preventive analgesia before nursing cares, when necessary. Most of the time, this supplementary dose fails to relieve the patient from his pain. In SPdol observational study, 42% daily hygiene and comfort nursing care remained painful despite the administration of a preventive analgesia. Opioids limitations to prevent procedural pain are probably linked to anxiety and global discomfort induced by nursing care that opioids alone cannot alleviate. IN Dex seems to be a good candidate for procedural pain comfort pharmacological management giving its analgesic, anxiolytic and sedative properties in old people admitted with palliative situations.
In this study the investigators compare the efficiency of IN Dex to the regular additional dose of opioids for analgesia, sedation and anxiolysis for daily nursing care on end-of-life elderly patients.
The population of interest is widely heterogeneous according to its disease and medication. Moreover the pain feeling is specific to each person. Therefore a cross-over design was chosen so the patient is his own control. Each patient participates to 2 nursing care procedures where he receives both SC and IN administration. However, each time only one treatment is active while the other one is a placebo. Ex : SC placebo and IN Dex.
After a period of wash-out (24 to 48h), the patient receives , on the next nursing care procedure, the complementary treatment combination (ex: SC opioids and IN placebo).
To minimize bias, randomization is done by the pharmacy, on the treatment sequence and the study is double-blinded. In case of inefficient analgesia, the patient receives a rescue dose of Dormicum, 0.05mg/Kg.
During each procedure the patient is monitored with validated tools for pain, anxiety, sedation, heart rate and oxygen saturation.
The sedation state of the patient is assessed up to 45 minutes after treatment administration. At 45 minutes, the peak effect of the drugs (opioids as well as Dex) is reached and the nursing care can start and lasts for 15 to 30 minutes. The patient is followed-up during two hours after the end of the care. The total procedure lasts for 3h30 total.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
Type I error: 0.05 and type II error: 0.20. 25% of drop-out are expected. In consequence, 66 patients are required for the study.
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
TRIPLE
Neither medical staff nor patient knows which analgesia is administered before this nursing care.
Study Groups
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Opioids, placebo
One single dose of subcutaneous opioids and intranasal placebo (NaCl0.9%).
Opioids
The usual opioid treatment used for nursing care
Placebo
Normal saline is either given subcutaneously or intranasally
Placebo, Dexmedetomidine
One single dose of subcutaneous placebo (NaCl0.9%) and intranasal Dexmedetomidine 1.25ug/Kg
Dexmedetomidine
Dexmedetomidine is provided intranasally
Placebo
Normal saline is either given subcutaneously or intranasally
Interventions
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Opioids
The usual opioid treatment used for nursing care
Dexmedetomidine
Dexmedetomidine is provided intranasally
Placebo
Normal saline is either given subcutaneously or intranasally
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* ≥65 years old patients;
* Admitted in the palliative medicine unit;
* Undergoing, minimum once per day, a nursing care procedure lasting between 15 and 30 minutes causing discomfort (anxiety, pain or both) and therefore requiring the administration of an extra dose of Morphine, Hydromorphone before the nursing care;
* Taking, on a regularly basis, one of the following opioids: Morphine, Hydromorphone, Buprenorphine, Fentanyl.
Exclusion Criteria
* Fentanyl extra dose medication before nursing cares;
* Weight \> 80Kg;
* Psychomotor agitation;
* Known bronchial aspiration risks : ileus, vomiting, nausea, clinically relevant gastrooesophageal reflux;
* Known respiratory distress risk: recent need to be ventilated in Intensive Care Unit setting (\<7 days), recent change or degradation of the respiratory status (\<2 days) with apneas or tachypnea (\>20/min), or known sleep apnea without non invasive ventilation; contraindication for nasal drug administration (ex. nasal tumour obstruction);
* Known cardiac risk : recent cardiac decompensation (\<7 days) ; known life threatening or severe heart rate disorders ; bradycardia \<60 bpm or known level II or III atrioventricular block without pacemaker ; hypotension with systolic blood pressure less or equal to 100 mmHg; Digoxine treatment;
* Known acute cerebrovascular disease or recent stroke (\<1month);
* Already enrolled in another study or previous enrolment into the current study;
* Participation in another study with investigational drug within the 30 days preceding and during the present study.
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Walid HABRE
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Walid HABRE
Associate Professor, PhD
Principal Investigators
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Walid Habre, MD, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Geneva
Locations
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University Hospitals of Geneva
Geneva, , Switzerland
Countries
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References
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Dieudonne Rahm N, Zaccaria I, Gil Wey B, Pautex S, Habre W, Elia N. Intranasal Dexmedetomidine for Pain Management in Older Patients: A Cross-Over, Randomized, Double-Blinded, Active-Controlled Trial. Drugs Aging. 2023 Jun;40(6):527-538. doi: 10.1007/s40266-023-01027-3. Epub 2023 May 11.
Other Identifiers
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INDEX_NDR
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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