Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
PHASE4
90 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-02-26
2027-12-20
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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All patients age 5-12 with closed Gartland type II supracondylar humerus fractures requiring fixation (e.g. satisfactory reduction not achieved with closed reduction and casting or medial column comminution) and Gartland type III supracondylar humerus fractures scheduled for surgery will be approached for participation in the study. Demographic data (age, gender, weight, height, ethnicity, primary language spoken at home, insurance type) will be obtained through chart review on each included patient.
The exclusion criteria include open fractures, fractures with concomitant vascular or neurologic deficit, any fracture requiring open reduction, pathologic fractures, those presenting with concomitant injuries, swelling requiring post-operative hospitalization for monitoring, any known history of allergies to acetaminophen, ibuprofen or oxycodone, and patients with developmental delay that would preclude participation in the visual analog Faces Pain Scale-Revised. Informed consent will be obtained from all parents who wish to participate in the study, and assent will be obtained from patients when possible. If parents refuse participation in the study, the reason for refusal will be documented, and their child's care and post-operative protocol will be consistent with our typical protocol, which includes all 3 medications.
All surgeries will be performed at our outpatient surgery center. The treating pediatric anesthesiologists will use a standardized anesthesia protocol. All patients will be under general anesthesia and will not receive any regional anesthetics or local anesthetics. All included patients will undergo closed reduction and percutaneous pinning using 2-3 pins placed either all laterally or medially and laterally by two pediatric orthopaedic surgeons (MS and RT). They will al be placed in posterior long arm splints thereafter and made non-weight bearing in that extremity. The patients will be transferred to our post-anesthesia care unit (PACU), where morphine IV 0.1mg/kg will be utilized as needed for before discharge home. Nursing staff will record the amount of pain medication provided in the PACU as well as the pre-discharge pain scores, as is our typical post-operative protocol.
Prior to discharge, patients will be randomized to receiving acetaminophen for first-line medication (liquid oral medication, 15mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed, max 90mg/kg/day) with as needed ibuprofen for breakthrough pain (liquid oral medication, 10mg/kg/dose every 8 hours as needed, max dose 40mg/kg/day) or acetaminophen for first-line medication (liquid oral medication, 15mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed, max 90mg/kg/day) with as needed oxycodone for breakthrough pain (liquid oral medication, 0.1mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed). Each patient will receive 18 doses (3 days) of acetaminophen and the study medication. Pre-sealed, sequentially numbered randomization envelopes containing each subject's group will be delivered to the hospital pharmacy. Patients will be instructed to first take the labeled acetaminophen medication and to take the study medication (unlabeled) as needed for breakthrough pain as prescribed. Patients will be given both patient information for both study medications in order to keep the patients blinded to which study medication they received. They will be given patient information for both medications but told that they have been given only one of the two medications. Medication labels will be obscured by the pharmacist with a circumferential tape. Throughout the study, the investigators and the parents will be blinded as to which study medication was given to each participant. Parents who contact the physician (a resident physician on-call for the pediatric orthopaedic surgery service who is not involved in the study) post-operatively for alternative pain medication will be provided the study medication not initially provided (i.e. those that were randomized to receive oxycodone primarily will be provided ibuprofen and vice versa), as confirmed by our pharmacy.
Post-operatively, the parents of each participant will be asked to use the Faces Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R)16 to rate the child's level of pain at 24 hours and 48 hours after surgery. A research team member will call each participant's guardian at 24 and 48 hours post-operatively to collect these responses. Parents will further be asked to complete the modified Total Quality Pain Management Instrument (TQPM)17 regarding their level of satisfaction with surgery and post-operative pain control. Parents will be asked to report any side effects (e.g. nausea, vomiting, lethargy, constipation) associated with the medications. A take-home medication log will be utilized by the parents to record the type and amount of mediation given to each participant and to record any associated side effects.
For breakthrough pain experienced during pharmacy hours the patient will have the option to return to our pharmacy to obtain the medication they were not originally prescribed. Though the investigators believe this will be unlikely, if they are unable to get to the pharmacy for the other medication (e.g. oxycodone if they were in the ibuprofen group or ibuprofen if they were in the oxycodone group), parents can go to the ER for IM/IV medication for pain relief and they can get a prescription for oxycodone or ibuprofen from the ER if necessary, once they contact the resident on call. There will always be a resident on call 24/7 to advise patients if they are unable to achieve adequate pain control with medications received. Again, the study group believes this will be an unlikely/rare event. The resident on call will have access to the study medication that the patient received. At this point, the resident on call can reveal what medication they were getting (in case they need a new prescription from the ER) so they do not get oxycodone if they were already prescribed oxycodone (and can get something different) or they have the option to obtain ibuprofen over-the-counter if they wish. Patients who need to get the other medication would be considered a "failure in treatment" and would not be analyzed together from the original group.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Ibuprofen
This group is given acetaminophen (liquid oral medication, 15mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed, max 90mg/kg/day) as the first-line pain medication, and as needed ibuprofen for breakthrough pain (liquid oral medication, 10mg/kg/dose every 8 hours as needed, max dose 40mg/kg/day).
Ibuprofen
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Acetaminophen
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Oxycodone
This group is given acetaminophen (liquid oral medication, 15mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed, max 90mg/kg/day) as the first-line pain medication, and as needed oxycodone for breakthrough pain (liquid oral medication, 0.1mg/kg/dose every 6 hours as needed).
Oxycodone
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Acetaminophen
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Interventions
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Ibuprofen
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Oxycodone
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Acetaminophen
Post-operative pain control protocol of closed reduction percutaneous pinning of supracondylar humerus fracture.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Isolated supracondylar humerus fracture
* Type II and III supracondylar humerus fracture
* Fractures treated with closed reduction percutaneous pinning
Exclusion Criteria
* Fractures with concomitant neurologic deficit
* Pathologic fractures
* Fractures with concomitant injuries (multiple trauma)
* Fractures with swelling requiring post-operative hospitalization for monitoring
* Known history of allergies to acetaminophen, ibuprofen or oxycodone
* Patients with developmental delay that would preclude participation in the visual analog Faces Pain Scale-Revised
* Patients with intellectual disability that would preclude participation in the visual analog Faces Pain Scale-Revised
* History of suspected child abuse
5 Years
12 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of California, Los Angeles
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Mauricio Silva
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigators
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Mauricio Silva, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
UCLA/OIC
Locations
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Orthopaedic Institute for Children
Los Angeles, California, United States
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Parent Consent SCHF Pain
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Child Assent SCHF Pain
Other Identifiers
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IRB# 18-001158
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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