Clinical trial

Perioperative Multimodal Analgesia Including Intravenous Lidocaine Infusion for Pain Management Following Idiopathic Scoliosis Correction Surgery in Children

Name
H18-03103
Description
Surgical correction of scoliosis in children is a long procedure, with an equivalently long recovery time, that is commonly performed at BC Children's Hospital. Treating pain immediately after the procedure is a priority for children during recovery. Morphine is one medication that can be used to manage post-operative pain, but unfortunately, its use is accompanied by a number of side effects which can affect recovery. These include nausea, vomiting, pruritus, sedation, dysphoria, respiratory depression, constipation, ileus, and urinary retention. In order to control pain and reduce morphine consumption, intravenous lidocaine is being investigated. This therapy has been beneficial in adult populations undergoing abdominal surgery and has been associated with decreased post-operative pain, decrease use of opioids including morphine, and ileus. These all contribute to shorter lengths of stay in the hospital and better recovery in the adult population. Intravenous lidocaine is used by some anesthesiologists at BC Children's Hospital to manage post-operative pain in children receiving surgical correction for scoliosis, but this is not a standard of practice. We now propose to conduct a double-blind randomized controlled trial to determine if intravenous lidocaine, infused from start of anesthesia up to 48 hours post-operatively, will reduce morphine use and improve post-operative pain in the pediatric population.
Trial arms
Trial start
2019-12-18
Estimated PCD
2024-05-10
Trial end
2024-05-10
Status
Completed
Phase
Early phase I
Treatment
Lidocaine
Intervention group (A) will receive P-IVLT in addition to the standard multimodal analgesia. P-IVLT will consist of 1 mg/kg bolus at start of anesthesia (T0), followed by 2 mg·kg-1·hr-1 infusion for 8 hours (T1), then continued at 1 mg·kg-1·hr-1 infusion thereafter and postoperatively until T0 + 48 hours (T2).
Arms:
Intravenous lidocaine
Saline Solution
Control group (B) will receive a placebo (0.9% sodium chloride also known as normal saline), made to mimic the intervention protocol described above, in addition to the standard multimodal analgesia.
Arms:
Intravenous saline control
Size
48
Primary endpoint
Total morphine utilization
48 hours post-operatively
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: * ASA I-III * Diagnosed with Idiopathic scoliosis * Undergoing single-stage posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion Exclusion Criteria: * Thorascopic tethering procedure * Two-stage procedure * Abnormal developmental profile * Congenital/neuromuscular scoliosis * Requiring PICU admission * Known allergy to lidocaine * Known cardiac, renal or liver disease or dysfunction * Pre-existing pain complaints, i.e. on regular analgesic medications * Current psychiatric diagnosis, e.g. anxiety, depression, eating disorder, defined according to DSM criteria. * Requiring non-standard post-op pain management * Any history of seizures * Unplanned staged procedure * Weight \< 5th centile or \> 85th centile for age * Porphyria
Protocol
{'studyType': 'INTERVENTIONAL', 'phases': ['PHASE3'], 'designInfo': {'allocation': 'RANDOMIZED', 'interventionModel': 'PARALLEL', 'interventionModelDescription': 'This will be a placebo-controlled, double-blind randomized control trial (RCT) comparing 48-hour postoperative morphine utilization amongst adolescents undergoing posterior spinal instrumentation and fusion who have been randomly assigned to one of two groups:\n\n1. Intervention group will receive perioperative IV lidocaine therapy (1% preservative free lidocaine 10 mg/ml in 0.9% NaCl) in addition to the standard multi-modal analgesia.\n2. Control group will receive a placebo (0.9% sodium chloride also known as normal saline), made to mimic the intervention.', 'primaryPurpose': 'SUPPORTIVE_CARE', 'maskingInfo': {'masking': 'QUADRUPLE', 'maskingDescription': "Following receipt of informed consent, participants will be randomized by the Pharmacy Research Support Pharmacist. Pharmacy research staff will prepare an appropriate randomization schedule (patients randomized to P-IVLT or control) and deploy blinded study drug to the operating room, anesthesia care unit, and post-surgical ward as required. Unless emergency unblinding is required, the following people will remain blinded to group allocation until the full cohort has been recruited and data collection has been completed:\n\n1. All anesthesia, APS, nursing, clinical pharmacists and surgical staff involved in the patient's clinical care\n2. The patient and their family\n3. Research staff involved in recruitment and data collection", 'whoMasked': ['PARTICIPANT', 'CARE_PROVIDER', 'INVESTIGATOR', 'OUTCOMES_ASSESSOR']}}, 'enrollmentInfo': {'count': 48, 'type': 'ACTUAL'}}
Updated at
2024-05-14

1 organization

2 products

2 indications

Product
Lidocaine
Indication
Scoliosis