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Preemptive Analgesia With OxyContin Versus Placebo Before Surgery for Long Bone Fractures

Preemptive Analgesia With OxyContin Versus Placebo Before Surgery for Long Bone Fractures

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00254631
Enrollment
65
Registered
2005-11-16
Start date
2007-04-30
Completion date
2008-12-31
Last updated
2015-02-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Fractures

Keywords

long bone fracture, open fractures, closed fractures, trauma

Brief summary

We would like to check whether pre-operative administration of an oral controlled-release opioid formulation (Oxycodone hydrochloride (OxyContin)) could result in a clear effect of preemptive analgesia.

Detailed description

Preemptive analgesia is based on the concept of treating pain before inflicting the painful stimulus. One suggested mechanism is that transmission of pain signals is altered when the patient is treated before infliction of noxious stimulation. That prevents changes from happening in the nervous system, making transformation from acute to chronic pain (central sensitization) less likely, and thus reducing post operative pain. Clinically, good post operative pain control has been shown to be an effective method for hastening patient convalescence and discharge. It makes part of a general approach aiming to accelerate surgical recovery through earlier enteric feeding and ambulation OxyContin tablets deliver Oxycodone at a controlled release manner, over 12 hours. After oral administration oral bioavailability is 60-87%. A biphasic absorption pattern is observed, describing the initial (0.6 hours) and prolonged (6.9 hours) release of Oxycodone from the OxyContin tablets. Clinical analgesia is observed within 1 hour of administration. We believe that this mode of oral drug release is more appropriate for the perioperative pain treatment of patients undergoing short to medium term operations: with timely administration, the first absorbed part of the drug reaches the plasma before infliction of the noxious stimuli, possibly counteracting primary sensitization, and the second part absorbed, acts on post operative ongoing pain, possibly counteracting more advanced stages of neuronal plasticity. Study Hypothesis: Our hypothesis is that post operative pain will be lowered by pre-operative administration of OxyContin. When comparing the two groups we will look for differences in observed parameters, especially VAS numbers, time to first analgesic request, post operative analgesic requirements, time to first oral intake and length of hospitalization, to confirm or deny our hypothesis.

Interventions

Sponsors

Rambam Health Care Campus
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

1. Patient consent. 2. Age 18 years to 60 years. 3. Isolated limb bone fracture/s.

Exclusion criteria

1. Patient refusal. 2. Age 61 years and older. 3. Known allergy to study medication. 4. Multiple bone fractures in different limbs. 5. Multiple trauma. 6. Oncological patients. 7. Respiratory depression / respiratory insufficiency / hypercarbia. 8. Acute bronchial asthma. 9. CNS depression / hallucinations. 10. Alzheimer / dementia. 11. Known convulsive disorder. 12. Prostate hypertrophy. 13. Paralytic ileus. 14. Renal dysfunction (plasma creatinine \> 1.5). 15. Liver dysfunction. 16. Adrenocortical insufficiency. 17. Hypothyroidism. 18. Pancreatitis. 19. Pregnancy and lactating. 20. Drug abuse, current or in the past. 21. Alcohol abuse on admission to operating room.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
post operative pain scores during first 24 hours (Visual analog scale)24 hours after surgery

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Time to first analgesic requestat PACU
Total other pain medications at first 24 hours post operativefirst 24 hours after surgery
Time to first oral intakefirst 24 hours after surgery
Length of hospitalizationafter surgery

Countries

Israel

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026