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Repeat Dose Steroid to Prevent Pain Relapse After Total Knee Arthroplasty in Patients With High Pain Response

Repeat Dose Steroid to Prevent Pain Relapse After Total Knee Arthroplasty in Patients With High Pain Response - A Randomized Double-blind Placebo-controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05563155
Enrollment
110
Registered
2022-10-03
Start date
2021-11-01
Completion date
2024-03-22
Last updated
2024-06-28

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

Conditions

Post Operative Pain, Acute

Keywords

Dexamethason, repeat, glucocorticoids, TKA surgery, steroids, High Pain Responders, postoperative pain, repeat dosing, FAST-TRACK

Brief summary

The aim of the study is to compare the effect of a repeat moderate dose of glucocorticoids postoperatively after preoperative high dose upon postoperative pain after Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) in an High Pain Respondes (HPR) population to a standard single high dose systemic preoperative administration in an HPR population. As a standard procedure, all patients referred to the outpatient clinic due to suspected degenerative knee disease will be asked to fulfill the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS). If TKA is decided, patients with a PCS score above 20 will be treated with intravenously administered Dexamethasone 1 mg/kg as a rounded-up-dose to closest 10 mg according to our guideline for FAST-TRACK TKA. The repeat-dosing group (RDG) will receive a dose of 24 mg dexamethasone tablets at 9-11 pm on the first postoperative day. The control-group (CG) will receive placebo tablets at 9-11 pm on the first postoperative day.

Detailed description

Total hip and knee arthroplasty (THA/TKA) are frequently performed procedures and are expected to increase in numbers along with the growing elderly population the next decade. Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA) is suitable for FAST-TRACK surgery, and is often performed as outpatient surgery with no hospital overnight stay. Challenges in FAST-TRACK surgery include postoperative pain, nausea and vomiting (PONV), complications due to rescue-analgesics and surgical complications. Pain is a well-known clinical problem, with up to 75% of TKA patients experiencing moderate to severe pain the first day after surgery, and 30-40% still experiencing moderate to severe pain 2 weeks after surgery, potentially delaying ambulation and recovery within the first weeks. The role of severe acute postoperative pain upon the development of chronic pain is debatable, but important. Data from our recently finished study in High Pain Responders (HPR), defined as patients with a score above 20 on the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), receiving preoperative high dose dexamethasone (Nielsen et al.: IN PREPARATION, clinicaltrials.gov ID NCT03763734, EudraCT 2018-002635-23, VEK H-18034778) found a persistent moderate to severe pain in 40 % of patients, at time 48 hours after surgery, corresponding to the time when the physiological effect of our dexamethasone intervention declines. Moderate to severe pain (Visual analogue scale (VAS \>30)) 24 hours postoperatively during a 5-meter walk test was associated with relapse pain at 48 hours. Other studies have made attempts of investigating the effect of a repeated dose of steroids after TKA and Total Hip Arthroplasty (THA), but all have done so with a postoperative injection of low dose steroids. No previous studies have, to our knowledge, investigated the effects of repeat dosing after a preoperative high dose of steroid, and none focused on patients selected by their postoperative pain response. In spite of many studies and systematic reviews on the subject, the optimal timing and dose for steroid-intervention in TKA in different patient groups is still inadequately understood The study conduct with a repeat moderate dose of steroids given as an oral tablet at 9-11 pm on the day after TKA surgery in patients receiving preoperative high dose steroids, who have a high postoperative pain response, in a FAST-TRACK perioperative setting. Oral administration of the repeat dose will allow for possible early discharge in future clinical settings. The hypothesis is that a repeat moderate dose of glucocorticoid will reduce the postoperative pain on postoperative day 2 and cumulated pain day 2-3 after TKA surgery, when compared to single high dose preoperatively.

Interventions

Dexamethasone 24 mg on day 1 after surgery.

DRUGPlacebo

Placebo tablet given on day 1 after surgery.

Sponsors

Hvidovre University Hospital
CollaboratorOTHER
Vejle Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

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

Masking description

Blinding The patient, all personnel attending in treatment and care of the patient, the investigators and the sponsor will all be blinded to the study-drug allocation, until all data processing is finished. The randomization-sequence will be stored in a sealed envelope at the Pharmacy at Lillebaelt Hospital who carried out the packaging-process. The randomization personnel have no contact to the patient.

Intervention model description

A double-blind randomization will be carried out, 5:5 block-randomization, half of which will be allocated to the CG and the other half to RDG. Group 1: Postoperative placebo tablet on day 1 after surgery. Group 2: Postoperative dexamethasone 24 mg tablet on day 1 after surgery.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Age ≥ 40 years. * Primary unilateral TKA. * Ability to participate in the study (understand written and spoken Danish language, self-reported pain and satisfaction). * Signed written informed consent form. * PCS \>20. * Moderate to severe postoperative pain (VAS \>30) in a 5-meter walk test 22-26 hours after end of surgery.

Exclusion criteria

* Ongoing treatment of systemic glucocorticoids or other immunosuppressant treatment apart from inhaled steroids. * Insulin-dependent diabetes. * Pregnancy or breastfeeding.\* * Allergies concerning the study-drug. * Mental disability that could impair a patient's decision-making capability of giving informed consent and not enabling valid data collection. * Patients with known diagnoses of schizophrenia, ongoing psychosis, bipolar disease and/or a history of ongoing anti-psychotic treatment. * Patients with modulated pain-reception (experience) based on other diseases or injuries, e.g. spinal cord or brain injury, severe polyneuropathies or neurologic disorders. * Peripheral nerve block per- or postoperatively. * Pregnancy: No women with suspected or proven pregnancy are eligible for inclusion. The following will be considered as safe contraception: intrauterine device or hormonal contraception. For women aged between 40-50 years, a urine HCG test for pregnancy will be performed.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Postoperative pain after 48 hours / day 2 morning, according to VAS-scaleDay 2 morningThe amount of patients with moderate postoperative pain in a 5 meter walk test day 2 morgning(48 hours) postoperatively after total knee-arthroplasty. Pain is monitored by the Visual Analog Scale(VAS) 0-100 mm, where 0 is no pain and 100 mm is the worst pain. Moderate pain is considered a VAS \>30 mm.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Cumulated pain score, according to VAS-scale (0-100mm), at rest, upon ambulation in a 5-meter walk test and at night according to VAS-scale(0-100mm)From day 2-7Pain is monitored by the Visual Analog Scale(VAS) 0-100 mm, where 0 is no pain and 100 mm is the worst pain. Moderate pain is considered a VAS \>30 mm
Quality of sleep, lethargy, dizziness, and nausea postoperative registration, according to the VAS-scale(0-100mm)From day 2-7ain is monitored by the Visual Analog Scale(VAS) 0-100 mm, where 0 is no pain and 100 mm is the worst pain. Moderate pain is considered a VAS \>30 mm
Cumulative use of rescue analgesics per day.From day 2-7
Cumulated pain upon ambulation, according to VAS-scale (0-100mm), in a 5-meter walk testFrom day 2-3Pain is monitored by the Visual Analog Scale(VAS) 0-100 mm, where 0 is no pain and 100 mm is the worst pain. Moderate pain is considered a VAS \>30 mm
Number of re-admissions within 30 days, and reasons why (follow-up by EPJ on postoperative day 30)Day 30
Morbidity and mortality (30-day follow-up by EPJ or telephone).Day 30Number of participant with morbidity and mortality in the first 30 days. Follow-up by EPJ or telephone.
Why still in hospital, an audit into the reasons the patient has not yet been discharged from the wardDay 7An investigation into reason of why our patients remain in the hospital in the days after total Knee Arthroplasty in our Fast-Track center. This is investigated through a questionnaire previously used in a similar investigation in our center. The questionnaire is filled in by our project nurse. the questionnaire is a checkmark schedule with predetermined reasons to stay in hospital like low bloodpressure, sedation, dizzyness, lack of physiotherapy and medical and surgical complications. The outcome assesment will be descriptive.
Patient satisfaction with analgesic regimen in a ordinal scale from 0 to 10Day 7

Countries

Denmark

Outcome results

None listed

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