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Pain Control in Pediatric Posterior Spine Fusion Patients: The Effect of Gabapentin

Pain Control in Pediatric Posterior Spine Fusion Patients: The Effect of Gabapentin on Post-operative Opioid Use and Patient Satisfaction

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01977937
Enrollment
55
Registered
2013-11-07
Start date
2013-11-30
Completion date
2018-04-30
Last updated
2019-06-12

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

Conditions

Pain, Postoperative

Keywords

gabapentin, Analgesic Drugs, Analgesics, Nonopioid

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the patient experience when using gabapentin with other pain control medications after posterior spinal fusion surgery for scoliosis in adolescents. These results will be compared to patients who underwent the same procedure during the study period and received the same standardized pain control regimen excluding gabapentin. Effects on pain level, opioid use, and satisfaction will be measured. Opioid side effects including nausea, sedation and urinary retention (inability to empty one's bladder) will also be recorded.The null hypotheses are as follows: 1. There is no significant difference in pain control when adding gabapentin to a multimodal pain management protocol in pediatric post-operative posterior spinal fusion patients. 2. There is no significant difference in the amount of opioid medication required for pain control in pediatric post-operative posterior spinal fusion patients.

Detailed description

Patients aged 10-19 years with idiopathic scoliosis, and classified as American Society of Anesthesiology (ASA) class I to III who intended to undergo posterior spinal fusion for deformity correction were enrolled. Prior to surgery, subjects were randomized into either the experimental or control group by the OHSU research pharmacy using an online randomization tool, which utilized block randomization upon patient enrollment to result in equal sized groups at study completion. Patients, caretakers and providers remained blinded to the group assignments. Patients filled out the Scoliosis Research Society, SRS-22 standardized form at a pre-operative clinic appointment. Following hospital admission, patients recorded initial pain level with the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) prior to receiving standardized pre-operative medications. The VAS scale used in this study was a 10 cm line with anchors of no pain at the left and worst pain imaginable at the right; each point was measured to the nearest millimeter. In the post-operative period, nursing staff assessed patient pain using the VAS at 4-hour intervals from 06:00 until 22:00 for the duration of hospitalization for a minimum of 4 daily scores recorded per patient. After the third post-operative day, but before discharge, the parent or guardian of each subject was asked to complete an IRB-approved survey to measure parent demographics and parental satisfaction with the patient's hospitalization and pain control. Each patient received standardized medications according to our multimodal pain protocol. Following hospital admission, patients in both groups received one 12.5 mg/kg dose of intravenous (IV) acetaminophen. Patients in the experimental group received one 15 mg/kg dose of liquid gabapentin while the control group received a placebo, formulated to match the volume, color, taste, and smell of the experimental medication. The gabapentin or placebo was prepared by the OHSU research pharmacists so that providers and investigators remained blinded to treatment assignment. Several intraoperative anesthetic medications were given to subjects in both groups including: IV ketamine at 5mcg/kg/min for 120 minutes and IV Ketorolac 0.5mg/kg up to 15mg. Intra-operative IV propofol and IV hydromorphone were titrated to desired effect.In the post-operative period, gabapentin was administered to the experimental group at 10mg/kg PO q8h, beginning at Phase II and continued through postoperative day four. The control group received equivalent volume doses of placebo at the same intervals. Post-operative medication was administered according to the following protocol for both groups: ketorolac continued at 0.5mg/kg up to 15mg IV q6h for 12 total doses. Once ketorolac doses were complete, the patient may have received Ibuprofen 10mg/kg up to 600mg PO as needed. Hydromorphone was given through patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) at a basal dose of 0.002mg/kg/hr for 24 hours and demand dose of 0.004mg/kg with an 8-minute lockout. Once basal PCA was discontinued, administration of oxycodone 0.1-0.2mg/kg PO up to 15mg PO q4h as needed supplemented the PCA demand dose. If the patient tolerated PO oxycodone without emesis, the PCA hydromorphone was discontinued after 24 hours, but a rescue dose of hydromorphone 0.002mg IV q4 was available if needed. Other as needed medications included diazepam 0.15mg/kg up to 5mg PO q6h for muscle spasms, ondansetron 0.1mg/kg up to 4mg IV q12h for nausea, and IV acetaminophen 12.5mg/kg up to 1000mg q6h. Acetaminophen 12.5mg/kg up to 650mg PO q6h hours was administered after the IV was removed. All patients received one Senokot-S tablet and Miralax 0.8 g/kg up to 17g daily for bowel regimen. For the entire hospitalization, nursing staff monitored vital signs and assessed sedation using the standardized Pasero Opioid-induced Sedation Scale (POSS) protocols at 4-hour intervals.16 Any POSS score of 3 or greater resulted in more frequent monitoring of respiratory status and sedation level, decreased opioid dosing, and administration of naloxone as needed. All patients were routinely monitored for known adverse gabapentin drug reactions including: peripheral edema, nausea/emesis, viral disease, ataxia, dizziness, nystagmus, somnolence, hostile behavior, fatigue and fever, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, drug hypersensitivity reactions, drug induced coma/seizure, and suicidal thoughts. Any perceived adverse reaction would have resulted in the gabapentin or placebo being stopped at the clinicians' discretion

Interventions

DRUGGabapentin 250mg/5mL NDC:59762-5025-01

Sponsors

Oregon Health and Science University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
10 Years to 19 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Patients of age 10-19 with an American Society of Anesthesiologists patient classification of I to III undergoing surgery to correct idiopathic or neurogenic scoliosis.

Exclusion criteria

* Patients who require a surgical approach or technique differing from posterior spinal fusion and/or have allergies to any of the standardized or experimental study medications: acetaminophen, gabapentin, hydromorphone, ketorolac or oxycodone.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Difference in Pain Control When Adding Gabapentin to a Multimodal Pain Management Protocol in Pediatric Post-operative Posterior Spinal Fusion Patients.five daysPatients will rate their pain using the Visual Analog Pain Scale (VAS). The VAS is a 10 cm line with anchors of no pain and worst pain imaginable. Patients rate their pain by marking on the 10 cm line where they feel their pain is at the time. The mark is then measured according to where it is along the 10 cm line and reported (range is 0.0 at the no pain end on the left up to 10.0 at the worst pain imaginable on the right). Lower pain scores on the VAS scale are considered a better outcome. The numbers seen in the outcome measure data table below represent an average of the total postoperative VAS scores recorded for each patient from each arm for the duration of their hospital stay.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Opiate Usage in the Gabapentin Group Versus Control.Five DaysTotal the amount of Hydromorphone and Oxycodone used in milligrams per kilogram in each patient post-operatively, convert this amount to morphine equivalents, and determine if there is a significant difference between the Gabapentin versus Placebo group.

Countries

United States

Participant flow

Participants by arm

ArmCount
Gabapentin
Gabapentin 15 milligrams per kilogram will be given orally one time pre-operatively. Gabapentin will be continued at a dose of 10 milligrams per kilogram every eight hours orally starting as soon as the patient is admitted to his or her floor bed in the hospital. Gabapentin
24
Simple Syrup
Simple syrup compounded by the Oregon Health and Science University research pharmacy will be administered in the same volume as if the patient were receiving the Gabapentin both pre-operatively and every eight hours after the patient is admitted to his or her floor bed in the hospital. Simple Syrup
26
Total50

Withdrawals & dropouts

PeriodReasonFG000FG001
Overall StudyAdverse Event10
Overall StudyPhysician Decision01
Overall StudyWithdrawal by Subject21

Baseline characteristics

CharacteristicTotalGabapentinSimple Syrup
Age, Continuous14.5 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2
14.8 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2
14.2 years
STANDARD_DEVIATION 2.1
Race and Ethnicity Not Collected0 Participants
Region of Enrollment
United States
50 participants24 participants26 participants
Sex: Female, Male
Female
38 Participants19 Participants19 Participants
Sex: Female, Male
Male
12 Participants5 Participants7 Participants

Adverse events

Event typeEG000
affected / at risk
EG001
affected / at risk
deaths
Total, all-cause mortality
0 / 240 / 26
other
Total, other adverse events
1 / 240 / 26
serious
Total, serious adverse events
0 / 240 / 26

Outcome results

Primary

Difference in Pain Control When Adding Gabapentin to a Multimodal Pain Management Protocol in Pediatric Post-operative Posterior Spinal Fusion Patients.

Patients will rate their pain using the Visual Analog Pain Scale (VAS). The VAS is a 10 cm line with anchors of no pain and worst pain imaginable. Patients rate their pain by marking on the 10 cm line where they feel their pain is at the time. The mark is then measured according to where it is along the 10 cm line and reported (range is 0.0 at the no pain end on the left up to 10.0 at the worst pain imaginable on the right). Lower pain scores on the VAS scale are considered a better outcome. The numbers seen in the outcome measure data table below represent an average of the total postoperative VAS scores recorded for each patient from each arm for the duration of their hospital stay.

Time frame: five days

ArmMeasureValue (MEAN)Dispersion
GabapentinDifference in Pain Control When Adding Gabapentin to a Multimodal Pain Management Protocol in Pediatric Post-operative Posterior Spinal Fusion Patients.2.46 pain score on a scaleStandard Deviation 1.74
Simple SyrupDifference in Pain Control When Adding Gabapentin to a Multimodal Pain Management Protocol in Pediatric Post-operative Posterior Spinal Fusion Patients.3.46 pain score on a scaleStandard Deviation 1.96
Comparison: D'Agostino \& Pearson normality test was used to assess for normal distribution. Experimental \& control groups were assessed for significant differences in age, hospital days, \& spinal levels fused using unpaired two-tailed Student's t-test. Differences in weight \& BMI were assessed using unpaired Mann-Whitney rank sum test. Differences in average VAS scores on the operative day, each post-operative day, and average total daily opioid were compared using an unpaired two-tailed Student's t-test.p-value: 0.07t-test, 2 sided
Secondary

Opiate Usage in the Gabapentin Group Versus Control.

Total the amount of Hydromorphone and Oxycodone used in milligrams per kilogram in each patient post-operatively, convert this amount to morphine equivalents, and determine if there is a significant difference between the Gabapentin versus Placebo group.

Time frame: Five Days

ArmMeasureValue (MEAN)Dispersion
GabapentinOpiate Usage in the Gabapentin Group Versus Control.3.58 morphine equivalents mg per kgStandard Deviation 1.82
Simple SyrupOpiate Usage in the Gabapentin Group Versus Control.5.33 morphine equivalents mg per kgStandard Deviation 3.2
Comparison: Differences in the average total daily opioid were compared between groups using an unpaired two-tailed Student's t-testp-value: 0.02t-test, 2 sided

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