Gastroenteritis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ondansetron Vs Metoclopramide in the Treatment of Vomiting in Gastroenteritis Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Is intravenous metoclopramid as effective as intravenous ondansetron in the treatment of persistent vomiting in patients with acute gastroenteritis.
In this study, we will compare the efficacy of a single intravenous dose of ondansetron
versus intravenous metoclopramide in the treatment of persistent vomiting in simple
gastroenteritis in a larger RCT.
PEC Al Saad is the main Pediatric Emergency Center in the state of Qatar with approximately
200,000 visits annually. It has a capacity of 42 observation beds providing most of the
inpatient facilities except for intensive care monitoring. Patients admitted to the PEC are
managed there for 48 hours or longer if needed, they are then transferred to Hamad General
Hospital for further investigation and completion of their treatment. Hamad General Hospital
is the main tertiary care hospital in Qatar with a capacity of around 100 pediatric beds.
All acute gastroenteritis patient between 1-14 years presenting to PEC Al Saad with
diarrhea, persistent vomiting , fail oral rehydration and admitted to the observation unit
for intravenous hydration will be eligible for the study.
Patients were excluded from the study if they had one or more of the following: Previous
abdominal surgery,Suspicion of surgical abdominal,Bile stained vomitus,History of hepatic
illness,Metabolic diseases, including diabetes mellitus and in-born error of
metabolism,Children with shock or impending shock,Sever dehydration,Previous
hypersensitivity or abnormal reaction to metoclopramide or ondansetron,Parenteral antiemetic
treatment in the previous 24hrs or Seizure disorder
One group will receive a single IV dose of Ondansetron after enrollment and the second group
will receive a single IV dose of Metoclopramide On arrival to the PEC, patients with simple
gastroenteritis will be assessed by the pediatric specialist on-call, patients with
persistent vomiting who fail ORS therapy will be admitted for observation and management as
usual. The pediatric specialist in the observation room will take history, perform full
physical examination and evaluate the degree of dehydration . Patients will be assessed for
eligibility to the study based on the aforementioned inclusion criteria.
Guardians of eligible patients will be approached regarding the study, explaining the
purpose and the treatment modalities, patients will be included after obtaining a verbal and
written consent. Complete blood count, serum electrolytes, renal function, HCO3 level will
be requested for all study patients upon recruitment.
The observation physician will complete the data collection sheet that will include the
patient's demographics, physical examination, degree of dehydrations , number, amount and
time of every vomiting and diarrhea episode and lab work results.
Intravenous Ondansetron and intravenous metoclopramide treatment will be prepared by a
pharmacist, who will put each treatment in a sealed coded envelope A and B depending on the
content (Ondansetron or Metoclopramide). The code of intervention package will be deposited
with the pharmacist. The medical team in addition to the patients will be blinded to the
content of the envelopes. There will be no detectable difference in the color or smell of
the different solutions, the amount of medication will be determined by the weight of the
patient (Ondansetron 0.15mg/kg maximum dose 4mg, Metoclopramide 0.3 mg/kg maximum dose
10mg), medication will be added in the buret and mixed with normal saline to make up 50cc of
medication and normal saline for intravenous administration.
Patients will receive a single intravenous dose of the study medication after enrollment
over 10 minutes and intravenous fluids will be started at the rate required based on the
percentage of dehydration. Patients will be kept NPO for one hour after the completion of
the antiemetic infusion and last episode of vomiting, oral fluids will be started thereafter
and increased gradually until fully tolerated and the patient is ready for discharge. If
vomiting recur NPO period will be extended for another half an hour from the last vomit and
oral fluids will be tried gradually until the patient is fit for discharge. Vomiting and
diarrhea episodes will be recorded by time and amount throughout admission.
Duration of IV fluid therapy needed, observed study medication side effects all will be
recorded until the patient is ready for discharge if extra-pyramidal side effect are seen or
suspected diphen hydramine 1 mg/kg (maximum dose 50mg/dose) will be given over 5 minutes and
the patient will be observed until free of symptoms. Addition interventions such as
antibiotics, antipyretics will be recorded as additional therapies.
The treating physician will discharge patients based on clinical grounds such as tolerating
oral fluids, improve hydration status, absent of significant fluid loss through stool and
free of major medication side effects. Patients found to be fit for discharge, will have
date and time of discharge documented. In addition parents will be asked to give a number
,that represent their perception of their child's nausea symptoms and oral intake
improvement on discharge, 0-100, 0 indicates no improvement and 100 back to base line.
Discharge Patients will be sent home on oral fluid therapy and BRAT diet. All patients will
be followed up for 72 hours post discharge by a phone call daily.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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