IPACK Study in Total Knee Arthroplasty Patients

NCT ID: NCT03954379

Last Updated: 2022-04-29

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

PHASE4

Total Enrollment

78 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-10-24

Study Completion Date

2021-03-31

Brief Summary

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This study proposes to compare current multimodal analgesic treatment for TKA with a new multimodal analgesic regimen to demonstrate decreased opioid requirement, time to rehabilitation, and time to reach hospital discharge.

Detailed Description

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Total knee replacement surgery (TKA) causes severe pain and this procedure is the most common reason patients are prescribed strong opioid drugs in hospital. As a result they are slow to begin rehabilitation after surgery, and are late in hospital discharge. Ontario hospitals are constantly challenged to meet growing demands of TKA and in fact increased demand has overcome the health care system resulting in TKA wait time (Ontario actual: 286 days vs. target: 182 days).1 One strategy to accommodate expanding volume and reduce wait time is to reduce hospital length of stay (LOS) through an enhanced recovery program.2 One essential component is further improvement of postoperative pain treatment to expedite rehabilitation and hospital discharge.

Treatment of severe post TKA pain often requires potent opioids but their excessive and prolonged use has negative consequences e.g., increased perioperative adverse events and longer LOS.3 Approximately 8% of opioid naive TKA patients become chronic opioid users at 6 months and the duration of prescription is the strongest predictor of misuse.4 Knowing that the opioid crisis in Canada is steadily growing and prescription opioids play a significant role in dependence and misuse,5 an effective perioperative opioid minimization analgesic program is mandatory for TKA patients.

Current multimodal analgesic treatment for TKA consists of oral non opioid drugs e.g., acetaminophen and non steroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDs) and surgeon performed peri-articular local anesthesia infiltration, however this is only partially effective.6 The regional analgesic effect is often short lived (\< 8 hours). Failure to sustain effective analgesia necessitates continued heavy reliance on opioids.

Several new treatments have been recently described for post TKA pain. They are: IV dexamethasone (steroid),7 dexmedetomidine (alpha 2 agonist)8, ketamine (NMDA antagonist)9 and 2 novel nerve block procedures- adductor canal block10 and iPACK block (infiltration between popliteal artery and posterior capsule of the knee).11 While each individual intervention has demonstrable analgesic benefit, the impact of incorporating all new treatments into the current analgesic regimen remains unknown.

The investigators believe that the new multimodal analgesic regimen proposed in this study will significantly decrease opioid requirement, time to rehabilitation, and time to reach hospital discharge criteria. It may also decrease the duration of opioid prescription for pain relief after hospital discharge. Although investigator's preliminary experience with this new regimen in 10 patients is promising, robust evidence showing its sustained opioid sparing analgesic effect is lacking.

Conditions

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Knee Replacement Arthroplasty

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Investigators
Block room and anesthesia staff performing nerve blocks and administering sedation will be informed to which study group patient is allocated. The patient and independent investigator carrying out follow up assessments will remain blinded to the end of the study. If the patient wishes to know the study group assignment, the patient will be informed at the end of their final 6 week follow up.

Study Groups

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Group C ( Comparator Group )

Standard of care: Adductor Canal Block(ACB), Spinal Anesthesia (SA) and Peri-op Pain management

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Standard of Care (ACB, SA, peri-op pain management)

Intervention Type DRUG

INTERVENTION BEFORE SURGERY

Adductor Canal Block will be done using Adductor canal catheter (tube in the thigh) + injection of freezing medication

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

IV propofol for sedation

INTERVENTION AFTER SURGERY

Injection of salty water through the tube in the thigh x 2

Periarticular Local Anesthetic Infiltration

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

IV Dexamethasone 8mg at the end of surgery as standard of care

Intervention Type DRUG

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

Group S ( Study Group )

iPACK and multi-modal analgesic regimen

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

IPACK and multi-modal analgesic regimen

Intervention Type DRUG

INTERVENTION BEFORE SURGERY

1. Adductor Canal Block will be done using Adductor canal catheter (tube in the thigh) + injection of freezing medication
2. iPACK block ( infiltration between Popliteal Artery and posterior Capsule of the Knee) - injection of freezing medication in the back of the knee

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

1. IV dexmedetomidine
2. IV ketamine Both for sedation

INTERVENTION AFTER SURGERY

1. injection of freezing medication through the tube in the thigh x 2
2. IV dexamethasone 8 mg 1 day after surgery

Periarticular Local Anesthetic Infiltration

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

IV Dexamethasone 8mg at the end of surgery as standard of care

Intervention Type DRUG

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

Interventions

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Standard of Care (ACB, SA, peri-op pain management)

INTERVENTION BEFORE SURGERY

Adductor Canal Block will be done using Adductor canal catheter (tube in the thigh) + injection of freezing medication

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

IV propofol for sedation

INTERVENTION AFTER SURGERY

Injection of salty water through the tube in the thigh x 2

Intervention Type DRUG

IPACK and multi-modal analgesic regimen

INTERVENTION BEFORE SURGERY

1. Adductor Canal Block will be done using Adductor canal catheter (tube in the thigh) + injection of freezing medication
2. iPACK block ( infiltration between Popliteal Artery and posterior Capsule of the Knee) - injection of freezing medication in the back of the knee

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

1. IV dexmedetomidine
2. IV ketamine Both for sedation

INTERVENTION AFTER SURGERY

1. injection of freezing medication through the tube in the thigh x 2
2. IV dexamethasone 8 mg 1 day after surgery

Intervention Type DRUG

Periarticular Local Anesthetic Infiltration

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

IV Dexamethasone 8mg at the end of surgery as standard of care

INTERVENTION DURING SURGERY

Intervention Type DRUG

Other Intervention Names

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ACB Infilteration between popliteal artery and posterior capsule of the knee LAI IV Dexamethasone Infusion

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* English-speaking;
* Age 18 - 85;
* BMI ≤ 38;
* Undergoing unilateral primary total knee arthroplasty surgery.

Exclusion Criteria

* inability to give informed consent
* patient refusal
* pregnancy, patients who are breastfeeding
* contraindication to nerve blocks or multimodal analgesia
* contraindication or hypersensitivity to any of the study drugs (celecoxib, acetaminophen, morphine, ropivacaine, bupivacaine, ketamine, dexmedetomidine, dexamethasone, ketorolac, epinephrine, sulfonamides)
* chronic pain disorders (\> 50 mg oral morphine equivalence per day at time of recruitment)
* medical or recreational use of marijuana and substance abuse (e.g., alcoholism),
* complications after surgery that result in discharge to a location other than home
* severe cardiovascular diseases e.g., heart failure, significant dysrhythmias; uncontrolled low blood pressure e.g., systolic blood pressure ≤ 100 mm Hg while on antihypertensive medication(s)
* respiratory diseases e.g., severe asthma, urticaria, or allergic-type reactions after taking acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) or other NSAIDs; severe acute or chronic respiratory disease and obstructive airway
* severe or active liver disease
* severe inflammatory bowel disease
* severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance \<30 mL/min)
* uncontrolled diabetes (type 1 or 2)
* active bleeding condition (e.g., postoperative or gastro-intestinal bleeding)
* severe psychiatric disorders and intake of monoamine oxidase inhibitors
* neurologic disorders (e.g., operative extremity neuropathy, delirium tremens, uncontrolled convulsive disorders, increased cerebrospinal or intracranial pressure)
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

85 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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University Health Network, Toronto

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Vincent Chan, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University Health Network, Toronto

Locations

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Toronto Western Hopspital

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Site Status

Countries

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Canada

Other Identifiers

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18-5920

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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