Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Epidurally administered opioid pain medications are important tools for postoperative pain control, but each agent has its own limitations. Methadone's properties suggest that it may provide a long duration of pain control with minimal side effects related to spread to the brain or absorption into the blood stream. In this study, the investigators aim to compare the relative pain relieving effects, markers of side effects, and concentrations in the blood of epidurally administered methadone as compared to another long-acting opioid which is commonly administered epidurally, morphine.


Clinical Trial Description

Acute postoperative pain control remains a major challenge in healthcare, with a need to balance analgesic effectiveness, patient safety, and cost. Excellent analgesia is a universal clinical imperative, but our current approaches are often inadequate. Epidural opioids can be useful tools, but each carries its own strengths and limitations. Bolus morphine is long lasting but exhibits rostral spread in the cerebrospinal fluid, which raises risks of adverse effects, particularly late-onset respiratory depression. Lipophilic opioids such as fentanyl and sufentanil exhibit selective segmental analgesia but are of short duration due to systemic absorption. As such, they require continuous epidural administration via an indwelling epidural catheter and a pump (patient-controlled or continuous infusion), which has implications for nursing, pain management services, and hospital cost. Methadone's physico-chemical properties suggest that epidural methadone administration would be ideal in providing long-duration analgesia with fewer of the adverse effects seen with medications like morphine.

The aim of this study is to compare the effects of two medications given epidurally: morphine and methadone. We will do so using a randomized, double-blinded, crossover design study. During each of two study visits, participants will receive a single epidural bolus of either morphine or methadone. We will examine the ability of the medication to blunt pain from heat or pressure using quantitative sensory testing at both the dermatome of injection (leg) and a distant dermatome (face); in doing so, we will demonstrate relative segmental versus supraspinal or systemic opioid activity. Additionally, we will assess signs and symptoms of supraspinal opioid activity, which may predispose to adverse effects, and blood concentrations of each medication. Each of the aforementioned measurements will be conducted at multiple points over a 24 hour period. Following a washout period, patients will return for a second visit, at which time the protocol will be repeated using the other medication. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03525509
Study type Interventional
Source Washington University School of Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Early Phase 1
Start date June 4, 2018
Completion date August 30, 2019

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04356963 - Adjunct VR Pain Management in Acute Brain Injury N/A
Recruiting NCT06350084 - Effect of Mother's Touch and Nurse's Therapeutic Touch on Pain Level and Crying Time During Heel Blood Collection N/A
Completed NCT04080037 - Assessing Opioid Care Practices Using CPV Patient Simulation Modules N/A
Recruiting NCT05458037 - RCT of Pain Perception With Fast and Slow Tenaculum Application N/A
Completed NCT04571515 - Dose-Response Study of MR-107A-01 in The Treatment of Post-Surgical Dental Pain Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06005480 - Understanding Rebound Pain After Regional Anesthesia Resolution in Healthy Volunteers Phase 1
Active, not recruiting NCT04850079 - EHR Precision Drug Treatment in Neonates
Completed NCT03271151 - Effect of Duloxetine on Opioid Use After Total Knee Arthroplasty Phase 4
Completed NCT03272139 - Interscalene Block Versus Superior Trunk Block Phase 4
Recruiting NCT05383820 - Effect of Paracetamol and Ketorolac on RANK-L Levels in Patients Starting Orthodontic Treatment Phase 4
Completed NCT04851353 - Multiple Sensory Interventions On Infants' Pain and Physiological Distress During Neonatal Screening Procedures N/A
Completed NCT03280017 - Ketamine With Multilevel Paravertebral Block for Post Video-assisted Thoracic Surgery Pain Phase 4
Completed NCT04280796 - Changes in Affective Pain Processing in Human Volunteers N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04523623 - Pain Control Differences Between Oxycodone and Ibuprofen in Children With Isolated Forearm Injuries N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04491630 - COping With PAin Through Hypnosis, Mindfulness and Spirituality N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04062513 - Olfactive Stimulation Interventions With Mothers' Milk on Preterm Pain Response N/A
Withdrawn NCT03137017 - A Comparison of Plasma Concentrations of Hydrocodone and Acetaminophen After Administration of a New and a Marketed Tablet Formulation Under Fasted and Fed Conditions in Healthy Adults Phase 1
Withdrawn NCT03137030 - A Comparison of Plasma Concentrations of Hydrocodone and Acetaminophen After Administration of Different Amounts of Tablets of a New and a Marketed Tablet Formulation in Healthy Adults Phase 1
Completed NCT04659395 - How to Develop a Training Program for Nurses in Ultrasound Guided Femoral Nerve Block N/A
Recruiting NCT03257319 - Inhaled vs IV Opioid Dosing for the Initial Treatment of Severe Acute Pain in the Emergency Department Phase 3