First Trimester Pregnancy Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Double Blinded, Placebo-controlled Randomized Control Trial Comparing Intravenous Moderate Sedation and Oral/Sublingual Analgesia/Anxiolysis for First Trimester Surgical Abortions
In the United States, the majority of first-trimester surgical abortions are performed in outpatient clinics that utilize a wide variety of oral and intravenous regimens for pain control. The specific aim of this study is to evaluate the equivalency of intravenous moderate sedation (fentanyl 100 mcg and midazolam 2 mg) versus oral analgesia/anxiolysis (lorazepam 2 mg sublingual, hydrocodone/acetaminophen 5/500 mg, and ibuprofen 800 mg) for first-trimester surgical abortions. The investigators hypothesize that oral moderate sedation and intravenous moderate sedation will be equivalent in controlling pain as measured by a difference of +/- 10 on a 100-point (range 0-100) visual analog pain scale.
Approximately 50% of pregnancies in the United States are unintended and about 50% of these
end in an induced abortion. In 2000, approximately 1.31 million abortions were performed in
the United States, approximately 88% of which were less than 12 weeks gestational age. There
has been a movement toward performing elective abortions in the ambulatory care setting;
however this can provide a dilemma in terms of the procedural anesthesia. In fact, general
anesthesia for induced abortions has been associated with an increased incidence of
complications and death.5
The paracervical block (PCB) alone has been shown to reduce pain from cervical dilation and
tenaculum placement. Slower injection and greater volume have been associated with greater
pain control, possibly related to an effect on tissue distension as well as to nerve
blockade.6,7,8 However, women's perception of pain continues to be significant with PCB
alone.
A majority of high-volume first trimester providers (abortion clinics) offer intravenous
moderate sedation. However, many individual practitioners are limited in their ability to
provide outpatient moderate sedation, and research has shown mixed results about its
efficacy. There continues to be a dilemma in terms of what constitutes optimal anesthesia
for first trimester abortions to maximize pain control and minimize side effects and
duration of hospital/clinic stay for the patients. A randomized, double blind, placebo
controlled trial of intravenous fentanyl (50-100 mcg) with local anesthesia versus placebo
and local anesthesia alone in 368 participants found that fentanyl, when compared with
placebo, reduced the pain of first trimester abortion by 1.0 point on an 11-point verbal
numerical scale. The investigators concluded that this pain reduction was of questionable
clinical significance and less than what study participants desired (2.0 points). Another
randomized, double blind, placebo controlled study in 100 participants compared local
anesthesia alone to local anesthesia with intravenous fentanyl (25mcg) and midazolam (2mg)
for first trimester suction curettage. There was no statistically significant difference in
pain scores between the groups. However, patients who received intravenous sedation reported
increased satisfaction with their abortion procedure.11
There is some evidence of good pain control with oral and sublingual analgesia. Preliminary
data from a study performed at the UCSF Mt. Zion Women's Options Clinic between 11/04 and
12/05 (Meckstroth H10873-25519) of 120 women undergoing first trimester abortions who
received sublingual lorazepam, ibuprofen, and cervical block revealed that 84.5% of patients
reported their pain as acceptable during the procedure with 4.8% considering their pain
level unacceptable and 10.7% unsure.
Considering barriers to abortion access, developing an adequate medication regimen that does
not require the monitoring and expense of moderate sedation could be very helpful in
encouraging more providers to offer abortion. . Given that many patients pay directly for
abortions, increasing the cost of services can be prohibitive for many women. Oral
medications may also be more appealing to patients seeking sedation but who are fearful of
needles. We hope to demonstrate that pain will be adequately controlled with sublingual
lorazepam and oral ibuprofen- ideal medications for the clinic setting.
Currently, the standard of care in the SFGH Women's Option Center is moderate sedation with
IV fentanyl and midazolam. We will conduct a randomized control trial to evaluate moderate
sedation vs. sublingual lorazepam, oral ibuprofen, and hydrocodone/acetaminophen to assess
pain control and satisfaction in patients undergoing first trimester abortions. Both groups
will receive local cervical block analgesia.
The proposed study is a randomized, double-blind, controlled trial to be conducted at the
San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH) Women's Options Center evaluating the equivalency of
intravenous moderate sedation (fentanyl 100 mcg plus midazolam 2 mg) vs oral
analgesia/anxiolysis (lorazepam 2 mg sublingual, hydrocodone/acetominophen 5/500 mg, and
ibuprofen 800 mg) for first trimester surgical abortions.
The study participants will be derived from the SFGH Women's Options Center. On average, the
SFGH Women's Options Center performs about 2200 abortions per year, of which 50% are in the
first trimester, and intravenous moderate sedation is currently the standard pain control
regimen, utilized in nearly 100% of procedures. In the SFGH's sister clinic at Mt. Zion and
at Planned Parenthood Golden Gate and its affiliates, various regimes of oral
analgesia/anxiolysis are utilized instead. Both are considered standard of care for early
abortion both locally and nationally.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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