Low Dose Ketamine Infusion for Analgesia in the Emergency Department to Reduce Side Effects
NCT ID: NCT05518877
Last Updated: 2025-05-29
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE4
48 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-12-07
2025-04-02
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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In clinical practice, increasing the time/duration of the infusion has resulted in a decrease of reported side effects from patients while still maintaining analgesia. There have been no studies done to prove that there is a further reduction in side effects with a longer LDK infusion. The investigators believe that increasing the infusion time to greater than 15 minutes will reduce the frequency and intensity of expected side effects of ketamine felt by participants and allow for further use of ketamine as a non-opiate analgesic in the ED.
Overall aims of project:
1. Reduce overall side effects of low dose ketamine when given over 30 minutes versus 15 minutes.
2. Maintain adequate pain control, as defined by a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) score of ≤5 cm at 30 minutes for both groups.
Hypothesis: Slow infusion of low dose ketamine (LDK) over 30 minutes will provide adequate pain control (as defined by VAS score of ≤5 cm), and reduce incidence and severity (by at least 20% or 1 point on SERSDA scale) of known side effects when compared to LDK given over 15 minutes in moderate to severe acute pain for patients presenting to the ED.
Study Design
The location of this study will be the Akron City Hospital Emergency Department. The trial will enroll approximately 48 participants over a 24-month enrollment period.
This will be an intent to treat prospective, double blind, double-dummy, randomized trial. The primary outcome will be a comparison of side effects of sub dissociative dose ketamine given by slow IV infusion over 15 minutes vs 30 minutes in treatment of moderate to severe acute pain in ED patients. The secondary outcome will be adequate pain control (VAS ≤5 cm), and need for rescue analgesia between the two groups.
The control group will receive slow IV infusion of ketamine over 15 minutes. The experimental group will receive slow IV infusion of ketamine over 30 minutes.
If the potential participant meets all eligibility criteria, they will be consented by study staff members and then randomized to receive Ketamine 0.25mg/kg in 100cc normal saline (NS) as IV infusion over specified time as well as "placebo" 100cc NS over the other time slot.
Pharmacy staff will blind medication as well as provide medication in a blinded fashion to the nurse who will use infusion pumps to deliver both study medication and placebo simultaneously. Nursing staff will receive training on administration of medication prior to starting the study.
The investigators will measure the side effect profile using the Side Effects Rating Scale for Dissociative Anesthetics (SERSDA) along with the VAS (visual analog scale) scores from 0-100mm.
Vital signs (heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate and oxygen saturation) will also be obtained at 0, 5, 15, 30, 60, and 90 minutes from the start of the ketamine/NS placebo infusion.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Ketamine 15 Minutes
Participants receive 0.25mg/kg Ketamine dose intravenous for pain over 15 minutes.
Ketamine
Administration of Ketamine
Ketamine 30 Minutes
Participants receive 0.25mg/kg Ketamine dose intravenous for pain over 30 minutes.
Ketamine
Administration of Ketamine
Interventions
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Ketamine
Administration of Ketamine
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Primary complaint of acute moderate to severe pain on VAS/ numeric pain scale (a score of ≥5cm which corresponds to 50mm).
* Pain described as abdominal, flank, back, musculoskeletal, or traumatic chest pain
* Must be alert and oriented times three
* Able to provide consent
Exclusion Criteria
* Breastfeeding
* Altered mental status
* Known or reported allergy, hypersensitivity or intolerance to ketamine
* Unstable vital signs (systolic blood pressure \<80 or \>180mmHg, heart rate \<50 or \>150 beats per minute, and respiratory rate \<10 or \>30 breaths per minute)
* History of unstable heart disease, such as arrhythmias, congestive heart failure, or coronary heart disease.
* History of untreated or uncontrolled thyroid disease
* Acute head or eye injury
* Active or current use of alcohol or drugs
* Known intracranial hypertension
* Hepatic or renal insufficiency
* Current active manic phase of bipolar disorder
* Active delusions, hallucinations, or schizophrenia
* Patients who have recent fentanyl use within 60 minutes or other analgesic use (opiates) within 4 hours of study enrollment (signing of consent)
* Patients who have enrolled in the study during a previous ED encounter
* Chronic use of opiates (i.e.: fentanyl patch, SR opiates)
18 Years
110 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Summa Health System
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Michael Pallaci, DO, FACEP
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Summa Health System
Locations
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Summa Health System
Akron, Ohio, United States
Countries
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References
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Motov S, Rockoff B, Cohen V, Pushkar I, Likourezos A, McKay C, Soleyman-Zomalan E, Homel P, Terentiev V, Fromm C. Intravenous Subdissociative-Dose Ketamine Versus Morphine for Analgesia in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2015 Sep;66(3):222-229.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2015.03.004. Epub 2015 Mar 26.
Motov S, Mai M, Pushkar I, Likourezos A, Drapkin J, Yasavolian M, Brady J, Homel P, Fromm C. A prospective randomized, double-dummy trial comparing IV push low dose ketamine to short infusion of low dose ketamine for treatment of pain in the ED. Am J Emerg Med. 2017 Aug;35(8):1095-1100. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2017.03.004. Epub 2017 Mar 3.
Other Identifiers
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22194
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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