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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COMPLETED
NA
156 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-09-25
2025-07-18
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Postoperative pain strategies for TKA often requires opioid use. To mitigate postoperative pain management following TKA a multimodal approach is often used as a part of enhanced recovery after surgery (ERAS) protocols. This approach on the use of on peripheral nerve blocks (PNB)s, acetaminophen, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and opioids13,18,19. Postoperative opioid and NSAIDS can lead to excessive sedation, vomiting, nausea, hypotension, major bleeding, life-threatening respiratory depression, constipation, renal failure, frequent delayed functional recovery, increase cost of care, and prolong hospital stay. Furthermore, the postoperative prescription of use opioids leads to long-term opioid users in 34.7% to 53.5%. Patients with poorly controlled acute surgical pain are at risk for chronic post-surgical pain, opioid dependence, and long-term opioid use. Thus, there is an urgent and unmet clinical need for a reliable technology to predict and reduce opioid use and costly opioid adverse effects while enhancing surgical pain relief. On an economic point of view, evidence also demonstrates that persistent postoperative pain leads to a loss in work productivity and absenteeism, mounting to an average loss of $13,761 per individual. Therefore, there is a significant need for alternative non-pharmacological, and non-opioid therapies that are effective in treating postoperative pain management in patients undergoing TKA.
Clinical approaches associated with postoperative pain and opioids in TKA. Data compiled from 90 million patients from 38 hospital networks and 18 non-network hospitals demonstrated that reliance on opioids for postoperative pain management is still extremely high (91.5%) following a TKA. Evidence supporting the use of PNBs is lacking and their use may increase the risk of fall. Sharma et al., 2010 reported that femoral nerve blocks conducted in 709 patients lead to postoperative falls (n=13 patients). A study including 250 patients demonstrated that postoperative falls led to an extended hospital stay. Furthermore, nerve injury and major bleeding have also been reported following PNBs. Complementary techniques such as Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS), acupuncture and hypnosis have been proposed but evidence supporting the use of these techniques is still limited and the use of these techniques requires expertise and time. Therefore, current postoperative pain treatments remain unsatisfactory.
A pain relief patch that provides a clinically effective alternative to opioid use for pain management. The scientific premise of our proposal rests upon the published literature and our preliminary data that demonstrates the use of pain relief patches for pain management. Pain and local inflammation following tissue injuries is the result of the release of a number of mediators and ions, decreases in pH (increase in acidity), and changes in local electrical potential. This is in part due to the central nervous system stimulation of nociceptors and the anterior and lateral spinothalamic tracts. The NEUROCUPLE™ device's millions of nanocapacitors capture and release the excess electrical load generated by trauma, thus blocking the transmission of the local pain signals.
An observational study evaluating non-surgical patients' (n=66) using our licensed nanotechnology topical analgesic demonstrated a 71% reduction in Brief Pain Inventory pain severity (Fig. 1), improvements in quality of life, and a 98% reduction in oral pain medication use. Our additional preliminary data in patients undergoing a TKA demonstrated that the use of the patch device plus standard on care was associated with a 36% reduction in pain at rest by postoperative day 3 and more importantly a reduction of 47% in the number of patients requesting an opioid refill beyond their initial prescription within the first 30 days compared to the patients receiving only standard of care. Thus, we believe our clinical data provides a strong scientific premise for utilizing pain relief patches as an alternative to analgesic drugs to provide effective and safe postoperative approach to reduce postoperative analgesia and more importantly to greatly reduce the number of patients requiring long term opioid exposure which has been demonstrated as a risk for postoperative opioid use disorder (OUD) in surgical patients.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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NEUROCUPLE™ Group
This arm of subjects will receive the active NEUROCUPLE™ patch to wear for 2-weeks following their TKA surgery.
NEUROCUPLE™ Patch
nCAP Medical has developed an effective, safe, non-opioid alternative, the NEUROCUPLE™ device, based on an innovative nanotechnology to reduce surgical pain and facilitate functional recovery while reducing opioid prescriptions, opioid-related adverse events and reducing the cost of care in millions of Americans undergoing TKA each year.
Placebo Group
This arm of subjects will receive the placebo (non-active, sham) patch to wear for 2-weeks following their TKA surgery.
Placebo Patch
The placebo patch is identical to the active patch but with no active agents.
Interventions
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NEUROCUPLE™ Patch
nCAP Medical has developed an effective, safe, non-opioid alternative, the NEUROCUPLE™ device, based on an innovative nanotechnology to reduce surgical pain and facilitate functional recovery while reducing opioid prescriptions, opioid-related adverse events and reducing the cost of care in millions of Americans undergoing TKA each year.
Placebo Patch
The placebo patch is identical to the active patch but with no active agents.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Scheduled for elective primary unilateral TKA
* T-score \< 60 on the PROMIS Anxiety measure
Exclusion Criteria
* Pregnant women
* Active alcoholism (defined as daily use of more than 1 liter of wine and /or 3 or more shots of hard liquor) or drug abuse (defined as daily use of illicit drugs)
* Severe chronic pain condition that requires daily preoperative opioid dependence
* T-score ≥ 60 in any of the three PROMIS measures (i.e., sleep, anxiety, and depression)
* Other concomitant surgery being performed in addition to TKA
* Patients undergoing bilateral TKA
* Patients undergoing knee replacement revision
* Patients with limited mobility (in a wheelchair or requiring a walker)
* Patients who are not returning home after surgery
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Pittsburgh
OTHER
nCap Medical
INDUSTRY
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Jacques E. Chelly, MD, PhD, MBA
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Pittsburgh / UPMC
Amy Monroe, MPH, MBA
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University of Pittsburgh / UPMC
Locations
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UPMC Shadyside Hospital
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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STUDY24020075
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id