Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04307550
Other study ID # REB20-0288
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date July 12, 2021
Est. completion date January 30, 2026

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source University of Calgary
Contact Anthony V Seto, MD
Phone 1-403-681-6788
Email avseto@gmail.com
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

BACKGROUND Studies have shown that isopropyl alcohol inhalation is effective for the relief of nausea in the emergency department. A 2016 randomized controlled trial found that nasally inhaled isopropyl alcohol achieved better nausea relief compared to placebo during a 10-minute period. In 2018, another randomized controlled trial showed that nasally inhaled isopropyl alcohol with or without oral ondansetron provided greater relief for nausea than oral ondansetron alone. QUESTION In electronic dance music festival attendees, who present with nausea to the medical team, how does inhaled isopropyl alcohol compare with inhaled sterile saline (placebo) for self-reported nausea 10-minutes post-intervention? METHODS Canadian electronic dance music festival attendees who present with nausea to the medical team, will be recruited until sample size reaches at least 70. Inclusion criteria will be festival attendees aged 18+ with a complaint of nausea. Exclusion criteria will include known allergy to isopropyl alcohol, inability to inhale through the nares, inability to report level of nausea, or already have taken an anti-nauseant. After obtaining consent, participants will be randomized into two study arms. Arm 1 will nasally inhale an isopropyl alcohol pad with 10 deep inhalations (intervention). Arm 2 will nasally inhale a sterile saline pad with 10 deep inhalations (placebo). The pad must be within 2cm from the nares to ensure delivery. According to a study in 2002, isopropyl alcohol pad inhalation, dosed at 3 inhalations every 5 minutes for 3 doses, was not significantly different than standard treatment for relief of nausea. 10 inhalations exceeds the 9-dose total reported in the paper, and a one-time bolus dose of 10 inhalations, for the population and festival context, is more feasible in terms of patient compliance and patient flow. After randomization, participants will rate their nausea on a numeric response scale (0 to 10, where 0 is no nausea and 10 is "worst nausea imaginable"). 10-minutes post-inhalation (isopropyl alcohol or placebo), participants will be asked to rate their nausea again. The primary outcome is self-reported nausea scores 10-minutes post-intervention. The secondary outcome is the presence or absence of any vomiting spells 10-minutes post-intervention, as well as the presence or absence of rescue-medication needed 10-minutes post-intervention.


Description:

POPULATION OF INTEREST Participants will be recruited from electronic dance music (EDM) festivals in Canada. This population was chosen because festival participants often present to event medical staff with a complaint of nausea, in a setting where the availability of medical resources such as oral and intravenous anti-nauseants are more limited than an emergency department. Although the effectiveness of isopropyl alcohol pads as anti-nauseant therapy has been demonstrated in hospital emergency rooms, no prior studies, to the investigators' knowledge, have assessed outcomes in festival populations. This study will be conducted by adapting protocols from prior studies that examined the effects of inhaled isopropyl alcohol on patient-reported nausea and will add to the current state of knowledge by investigating a novel population. EDM events are included in this study, because the investigators have long-standing experience working at these festivals as part of the main medical team, responsible for providing medical care to all festival participants. Odyssey Medical, the organization that oversees all medical staff at these EDM events, has granted the investigators permission to integrate the proposed research study into patient care at these festivals. This organization recruits multi-disciplinary volunteers (physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, pharmacists, lifeguards, paramedics, and first aiders) to manage the medical needs of festival attendees. PARTICIPANT SCREENING Participants will verbally respond to screening questions, with responses recorded electronically by Research Personnel #1 (aka "the assessor") on a secure Google Form (printed copies will be available as back-up). Individuals who satisfy all inclusion/exclusion criteria will continue in the study, while those who do not meet criteria will receive standard medical care as needed (e.g. oral or intravenous anti-nauseant). Consent to participate in the study will be obtained with a signature, after review of a written consent form. For the consent process, the investigators will have a witness from the medical team. For all individuals with a complaint of nausea, the assessor will outline the purpose of the study, clarify risks/benefits, and highlight that participation is voluntary and can be withdrawn, before seeking consent. Given that festival participants may be intoxicated with substances, Research Personnel #1 will determine whether the participant has the mental capacity to continue with the study. Research Personnel #1 will confirm the person's name, sex, and age. If the participant is unable to report their name, sex, and age accurately (using the patient's chart as a comparator or a friend/family member), then this implies that the participant is not oriented enough (e.g., potentially too intoxicated) to continue the study; this participant would not continue with the study. Also, if the participant cannot verbalize a pre-treatment nausea score (e.g., tries to communicate with fingers or body language, asks a friend to translate, etc.), then this implies that they may be too intoxicated to use their own cognitive capacity to determine a specific number and then verbalize it; this participant would not continue with the study. If consent is granted, the following information about the participant will be collected throughout the study: - Numerical identification number (will be assigned based on the order of recruitment, e.g. participant 001, participant 002) - Age - Sex - Self-reported alcohol consumed - Self-reported recreational drugs ingested - Self-reported other suspected contributors of nausea (e.g. migraine, head injury, pregnancy, infection) - Pre-treatment nausea level (0-11) - Absence/presence of emesis prior to treatment - 10-minute post-treatment nausea level (0-11) - Absence/presence of emesis post-treatment - Any side effects or additional symptoms post-treatment No uniquely identifying information such as name, birth date, or Provincial Health Care number will be recorded at any point of the study to preserve anonymity. Age and sex will be recorded alongside screening criteria and will be linked with each individual's data for future subgroup analyses, but this broad information is not expected to interfere with anonymity. PARTICIPANT RANDOMIZATION Included participants will be assigned to one of two study arms through randomization, facilitated by an electronic random number generator operated by Research Personnel #2 (i.e. "the intervention provider"), who will not be present for the baseline screening assessment. INTERVENTION DELIVERY Research Personnel #2 will then deliver the intervention according to the assigned study arm. Participants in Arm 1 will nasally inhale an isopropyl alcohol pad with 10 inhalations (intervention). Participants in Arm 2 will nasally inhale a sterile saline pad of similar appearance with 10 inhalations (placebo). Research Personnel #2 will remove the packaging out of participants' sight, in order to ensure participants are blinded to the identity of the inhaled substance. The isopropyl alcohol pad, or sterile saline pad, will be held within 2cm of participants' nares to ensure delivery during inhalations, as a 2018 study demonstrated success using isopropyl alcohol aromatherapy as an anti-nauseant when inhaled from 1-2cm from the nares. According to a 2002 study, isopropyl alcohol pad inhalation, dosed at 3 inhalations every 5 minutes for 3 doses, was not significantly different than standard anti-nauseant treatment for relief of nausea. 10 inhalations exceeds the 9-dose total reported in the paper, and a one time bolus dose of 10 inhalations, for this population and festival context, is more feasible in terms of patient compliance and patient flow in the main medical area. Two other studies' protocols involved inhaling isopropyl alcohol, as many times as participants desired, within a few minutes. With all protocols taken into consideration, the investigators have determined that 10 inhalations is an appropriate threshold for potential anti-nauseant effect. OUTCOME ASSESSMENT After Research Personnel #2 (aka "the intervention provider") has ensured that the intervention/placebo has been inhaled, they will leave the participant's bedside to prevent them from biasing any subsequent outcome assessment, given their knowledge of the study arm. The intervention provider will not disclose the identity of the inhaled substance to the participant nor to the assessor. 10 minutes post-inhalation, Research Personnel #1 (aka "the assessor"), will return and assess the participant's nausea using the same 11-point numerical scale prior to treatment. Participants will also be asked to report any new symptoms in order to aid the identification of possible adverse outcomes. Presence or absence of vomiting pre- and post-intervention will also be recorded. After the data collection is complete, both the intervention and control arms will be offered further treatment by medical staff if their nausea has not subsided. These "rescue" (additional) therapies may include oral and/or intravenous anti-nauseants. The need for rescue medications will be recorded. DATA ANALYSIS For primary and secondary outcomes, data will be analyzed with a one-tailed repeated-measures t-test to see if there are any differences in self-reported nausea pre-intervention and 10-minutes post-intervention, between the means of the treatment arms. Subgroup analyses will be performed, via repeated-measures t-test to see if there are any differences between the means of the treatment arms, by male sex, female sex, age (18-25, 25-34, 35+), alcohol ingested, any recreational substance ingested, alcohol plus other any recreational substance ingested, and self-reported other suspected contributors of nausea. SAMPLE SIZE Sample size for each group was calculated with the assumption that the outcome data fits a ratio scale (nausea is rated on a continuum, ranging from 0 to 10). A sample size, for adequate study power, was performed with the following parameters: - Study group design: two independent study groups - Primary endpoint: continuous (means) - Anticipated mean for isopropyl alcohol swab group: 3 +/- 3 - Anticipated mean for placebo group: 5 - Alpha: 0.05 - Power: 0.8 Previous work in 2016 found the median nausea score for the isopropyl alcohol pad group was 3 and for the placebo group, 6, in the emergency department. The investigators lowered the placebo group by 1 point, to 5, to be conservative in calculations. A 2018 study found that the standard deviation was up to 30, on scale of 0 to 100, for all treatment groups (when comparing inhaled isopropyl alcohol + oral ondansetron, inhaled isopropyl alcohol + oral placebo, and inhaled placebo + oral ondansetron); therefore, the investigators assume a standard deviation of up to 3, in their scale from 0 to 10. The investigators calculated a minimum sample size of 70 to power the study. Given that the sample size is large enough, the central limit theorem supports the normality assumption; therefore, a parametric test was selected (repeated-measures t-test) for statistical analyses.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 70
Est. completion date January 30, 2026
Est. primary completion date December 31, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Festival attendees aged 18+ - A complaint of nausea of at least 1 on a scale of 0 to 10 (11-point scale, where 0 represents "no nausea" and 10 represents "worst nausea imaginable"). Exclusion Criteria: - Known allergy to isopropyl alcohol (standard practice involves medical team members asking patients what allergies they have; we will not directly ask about isopropyl alcohol in order to keep participants blinded to interventions) - Inability to inhale through the nares (e.g. distorted nasal anatomy, active nosebleed, obstructed nasal passages, rhinitis, anosmia) - Inability to verbally report level of nausea - Prior administration of an oral or intravenous anti-nauseant (e.g. metoclopramide, ondansetron, dimenhydrinate) by festival medical staff since arrival at the festival (would confound treatment effect)

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Isopropyl alcohol
10 inhalations of an isopropyl alcohol pad
Other:
Placebo
10 inhalations of a sterile saline pad

Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Badlands Music Festival Calgary Alberta
Canada Chasing Summer Music Festival Calgary Alberta
Canada Electronic dance music festivals in Calgary Calgary
Canada Family Reunion Music Festival Calgary Alberta
Canada Bomfest Music Festival Edmonton Alberta
Canada Electronic dance music festivals in Edmonton Edmonton
Canada Electronic dance music festivals in Toronto Toronto
Canada Electronic dance music festivals in Vancouver Vancouver
Canada Hard West Music Festival Wimborne Alberta

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Anthony Seto

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

References & Publications (3)

April MD, Oliver JJ, Davis WT, Ong D, Simon EM, Ng PC, Hunter CJ. Aromatherapy Versus Oral Ondansetron for Antiemetic Therapy Among Adult Emergency Department Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2018 Aug;72(2):184-193. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2018.01.016. Epub 2018 Feb 17. Erratum In: Ann Emerg Med. 2019 May;73(5):552. — View Citation

Beadle KL, Helbling AR, Love SL, April MD, Hunter CJ. Isopropyl Alcohol Nasal Inhalation for Nausea in the Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Ann Emerg Med. 2016 Jul;68(1):1-9.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2015.09.031. Epub 2015 Dec 8. — View Citation

Merritt BA, Okyere CP, Jasinski DM. Isopropyl alcohol inhalation: alternative treatment of postoperative nausea and vomiting. Nurs Res. 2002 Mar-Apr;51(2):125-8. doi: 10.1097/00006199-200203000-00009. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Self-reported nausea scores Nausea rated on an 11-point scale (0 = "no nausea", 10 = "worst nausea imaginable") 10-minutes post-intervention
Secondary Presence of vomiting Presence (1) or absence (0) of any vomiting spells 10-minutes post-intervention
Secondary Use of rescue-medication (i.e. oral/intravenous anti-nauseant) Presence (1) or absence (0) of any rescue-medication (i.e. oral/intravenous anti-nauseant), identified by patient's chart 10-minutes post-intervention
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Terminated NCT01649258 - Fosaprepitant Dimeglumine and Granisetron Transdermal System in Preventing Nausea and Vomiting in Patients With Breast Cancer Undergoing Chemotherapy Phase 1
Completed NCT02939287 - Aprepitant- and Olanzapine- Containing Anti-emetic Regimens With High Dose Melphalan Phase 3
Not yet recruiting NCT06464926 - Chronic Nausea and Vomiting in Patients With Normal Gastric Emptying Using the Enterra® Therapy System (NAVIGATE) N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06055192 - Prevalence and Burden of Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnant Women in Switzerland: Survey Purity 2022
Recruiting NCT04091789 - Sublingual Tablets With Cannabinoid Combinations for the Treatment of Dysmenorrhea Phase 2
Completed NCT02462811 - A Double-Blind, Randomized, Active- and Placebo-Controlled, Multiple-Dose Multi-Center Phase 3 Study of the Safety and Efficacy of CL-108 in the Treatment of Moderate to Severe Acute Pain and Opioid-Induced Nausea and Vomiting (OINV) Phase 3
Completed NCT01007500 - Effect of Dexamethasone Combined With Ondansetron on Postoperative Nausea and Vomiting in Patients With Patient-controlled Analgesia After Video-assisted Thoracoscopic Surgery Phase 4
Recruiting NCT00528554 - Laser Acupuncture Against Nausea in Children N/A
Completed NCT00537875 - Evaluation of the Effect of Zingiber Officinalis on Nausea and Vomiting in Patients Receiving Cisplatin Based Regimens N/A
Completed NCT00394966 - A Multicenter, Randomized, Controlled Trial of SCH 619734 for the Treatment of Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting (Study P04351AM2)(COMPLETED) Phase 2
Completed NCT00947128 - To Demonstrate the Relative Bioavailability Study of Ondansetron HCl 24 mg Tablets Under Non-Fasting Conditions Phase 1
Completed NCT00946387 - To Demonstrate the Relative Bioavailability Study of Ondansetron HCl 24 mg Tablets Under Fasting Conditions Phase 1
Recruiting NCT05433636 - Mindful Waiting Room N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04827108 - Psychometric Properties of the Chinese Version of PeNAT
Not yet recruiting NCT04853303 - VR to Improve CINV, Sleep and Pain Among Children With Cancer in HK N/A
Terminated NCT04247100 - A Study of Randomized Sham-control Auricular TENS Unit Stimulation in Pediatric Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders N/A
Recruiting NCT04181346 - Pregabalin for the Prevention of Chemotherapy Induced Nausea and Vomiting Phase 2
Recruiting NCT03679182 - Efficacy and Safety of Olanzapine for the Treatment of Nausea and Vomiting in Palliative Cancer Care Phase 2
Completed NCT02618343 - EMS Use of Isopropyl Alcohol Aromatherapy Versus Ondansetron N/A
Terminated NCT01405924 - Fosaprepitant (MK-0517, EMEND® IV) In Salvage Treatment of Chemotherapy-Induced Vomiting (MK-0517-030) Phase 2