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Efficacy of Metamizole Versus Ibuprofen and a Short Educational Intervention Versus Standard Care in Acute Low Back Pain

Efficacy of Metamizole Versus Ibuprofen and a Short Educational Intervention Versus Standard Care in Acute and Subacute Low Back Pain: A Randomized, Factorial Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04111315
Acronym
EMISI
Enrollment
120
Registered
2019-10-01
Start date
2019-12-15
Completion date
2025-12-31
Last updated
2024-02-07

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

Conditions

Low Back Pain

Keywords

Pain medications, Non-opioid pain medications, Educational intervention

Brief summary

The EMISI trial is a randomized, double blind, controlled trial (RCT) using a factorial design in patients with a new low back pain episode. The study aims to assess (A) whether metamizole, a non-opioid drug approved in Switzerland for pain treatment, is non-inferior to ibuprofen in a new episode of acute or subacute LBP and (B) whether a short educational intervention including evidence-based patient information is superior to usual care alone. Despite its increased use, the role of metamizole for the treatment of LBP is unclear and has so far not been systematically studied.

Detailed description

Purpose Low back pain (LBP) is among the top three most common diseases worldwide resulting in a life with pain-related disability. In patients with persistent LBP over 3 months, the risk for chronic pain increases dramatically and effective interventions should aim to prevent pain persistence without overtreatment. Therefore, during an acute LBP episode, the most common recommendations are to use pain medication to alleviate pain and to keep patients physically active. Non-opioid and opioid pain medication is increasingly used to control pain. Despite the frequency of LBP, only few high-quality studies assessed the efficacy of pain medication. Since the 1990s, the use of opioid pain medication for non-cancer pain has soared and resulted in an epidemic of opioid dependence and abuse in the U.S. This, despite the fact that randomized clinical trials found little or no additional efficacy of opioids compared to non-opioid medication in LBP. Moreover, opioids are associated with potentially severe side-effects, including confusion, sedation, respiratory depression and dependence. Therefore, non-opioid pain medications that are safe and effective are urgently needed to control pain. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are considered to be effective for LBP and recommended by guidelines. However, adverse events including kidney injury and gastrointestinal bleeding, limit the use of NSAIDs in many patients. Metamizole is an effective non-opioid analgesic and antipyretic with a favorable gastrointestinal and renal safety profile and therefore, a valuable treatment option in many LBP patients with contraindications for NSAIDs. Metamizole has been increasingly used in many countries such as Germany, France, Spain, and Switzerland. Despite its increased use, the role of metamizole for the treatment of LBP is unclear and has so far not been systematically studied. This surprising lack of efficacy data may be due to an ongoing controversy over the risk of metamizole-associated agranulocytosis, a serious hematological adverse event. Even though the overall risk of agranulocytosis is increased compared to other drugs, it only occurs in a small proportion of susceptible patients and the overall safety profile of metamizole is still favorable compared to other analgesics such as NSAIDs or opioids, which carry their own specific risks. Many patients have reservations against regular intake of pain medication and limit physical activity to keep pain manageable without medication, which is against the guidelines' recommendation. However, education to encourage activity may help to improve pain control and function as well. In a busy primary care practice extended educational sessions that have been shown to be effective are not feasible. A short educational intervention that provides evidence-based information on the nature of LBP and promotes physical activity may also improve outcome. Objectives This study aims to assess (A) whether metamizole is non-inferior to ibuprofen in a new episode of acute or subacute LBP and (B) whether a short educational intervention including evidence-based patient information is superior to usual care alone. Methods The EMISI trial is a randomized, double-blind, controlled trial (RCT) using a factorial design recruiting patients consulting general practitioners (GP) practices and the outpatient Division of the Department of General Internal Medicine at the University Hospital Bern, Switzerland. Patients are randomized into one of four groups (1:1:1:1): metamizole + educational intervention vs. metamizole + standard care vs. ibuprofen + educational intervention vs. ibuprofen + standard care. Patients assigned to the educational information will receive an information leaflet and a phone call by a member of the research team to discuss evidence based information on LBP. All patients will receive usual care provided by their GPs that includes additional pain medications and non-pharmacological measures at the GPs discretion. The primary outcome (A) Comparison of ibuprofen vs. metamizole: change from baseline pain on the numeric rating scale (NRS) to day 14 (non-inferiority). B) Comparison of the short intervention vs. usual care: change from baseline Core Outcome Measures Index (COMI) sum-score to 42 days follow-up (superiority). Statistical analysis Analysis will include an intention-to-treat (ITT) and a per-protocol (PP) analysis for the comparison of the primary between metamizole and ibuprofen outcome (NRS change from baseline to follow-up at 14 days). Both analyses need to meet non-inferiority in order to claim success. The comparison of the primary outcome between the intervention and the usual care group (COMI change from baseline to day 42) will be performed according to intention-to-treat principle. Based on the sample size calculation for both interventions, 120 patients will be included into the study.

Interventions

Novalgin® Oblong tablets 0,5 g 2-2-2

DRUGIbuprofen 600 mg

Ibufen-L® tablets 500 mg 2-2-2

BEHAVIORALPatient education

Leaflet and phone call

Sponsors

Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

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

Masking description

Comparison (A): participants, care provider, and Investigators will be blinded Comparison (B): Investigators will be blinded

Intervention model description

Patients are assigned into one of the four groups metamizole + educational intervention metamizole + standard care ibuprofen + educational intervention ibuprofen + standard care Comparison (A): metamizole vs. ibuprofen for pain (NRS) at day 14 Comparison (B): short educational interventions vs. standard care for Disability (COMI) at day 42

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Informed consent as documented by signature * Age 18 years or older * Seeking care for new onset of non-specific or specific LBP (pain duration of less than 12 weeks LBP prior to the baseline visit) * The GP plans to prescribe a non-opioid pain medication for pain control

Exclusion criteria

* Presence of red flags (serious neurological deficit requiring surgery, infection, vertebral fracture) * Active malignancy and / or history of a (previous) hematologic disorder (anemia (hemoglobin \< 10.0 g/L), neutropenia or agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia), * Known contraindications against the study medications: heart failure (NYHA III-IV), liver failure (liver cirrhosis, ascites), renal insufficiency (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) \< 60 ml/min/1,73 m2) or previous acute kidney injury (AKI stage 2 according to the KDIGO definition), previous gastrointestinal ulcer, inflammatory bowel disease. * Immune deficiency or under immunosuppressant treatment * Current use of opioids * Known intolerance to the study medication (i.e. previous acute allergic reaction to the study medication) * Patients unable or unwilling to follow instructions or do not speak and are unable to read / understand German * Patients unable to provide informed consent themselves * Known or suspected non-compliance, drug or alcohol abuse * Inability to follow study procedures, e.g. due to language problems, psychological disorders, dementia, etc. * Participation in another study within the 30 days preceding the randomization and during the present study or previous enrolment into the current study * Enrolment of the investigator, his/her family members, employees and other dependent persons * Pregnancy: In women in the child bearing age a negative pregnancy test (urine or blood test as available in the primary care practice) before inclusion is required. Women who are not willing to use safe contraception (condom or birth control pill) during the course of the trial, intention to become pregnant during the trial, pregnancy, or breast feeding

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Pain improvementBaseline to 14 days follow-upChange in pain on the numeric rating scale (NRS, range 0 (no pain) -10 (worst possible pain) points)
DisabilityBaseline to 42 days follow-upChange in the Core Outcome Measures Index (COMI) sum-score (range 0-10). COMI sum score (0-10 points) is calculated by averaging the five domain scores (each on a 0-10 scale) for pain, back-related function, symptom-specific well-being, general quality of life and disability. Higher values represent a better or worse outcome.

Countries

Switzerland

Contacts

Primary ContactMaria M. Wertli, MD PhD
Maria.Wertli@insel.ch+41796576420
Backup ContactNathalie Schwab
nathalie.schwab@insel.ch+41775323582

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 14, 2026