Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Trial to Compare Pain Medications in Children Undergoing Strabismus Surgery
Every year over 1,000 children undergo eye muscle surgery provided by physicians at this
institution. For many of these children this is not and will not be the only surgical
procedure for eye muscle correction. All of these children will experience differing degrees
of postoperative pain. The pain associated with strabismus surgery is due to the
manipulation in the conjunctival area and further handling of Tenon's capsule, sclera and
the stretching of the eye muscle . Research has demonstrated that repeated painful
procedures result in increased anxiety and increased pain.
Previous studies have demonstrated that children experiencing preoperative anxiety are more
likely to have increased postoperative pain . This increased preoperative anxiety may also
contribute to sleep difficulties and increased analgesic consumption. Depending on the age
of the child, different methods are used to reduce anxiety such as distraction, child life
services, or anti-anxiolytic agents.
In addition to pain, children undergoing strabismus surgery frequently experience
postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV).This increased incidence of nausea and vomiting is
thought to be related to the use of opiates for pain control. Short acting opiates are used
preferentially at this hospital in the belief that this reduces recovery issues of sedation
and PONV. Preliminary data, however, suggests no difference in recovery outcomes for
fentanyl versus hydromorphone. The purpose of this study is to investigate the optimal
analgesia to create a standardized approach for pain management in pediatric patients
undergoing surgery for strabismus.
Research Design This is a randomized clinical trial with masked assessment, comparing
recovery indices for patients receiving longer acting versus shorter acting opiate analgesia
using hydromorphone or fentanyl as intraoperative analgesics. An otherwise standardized
anesthetic and analgesic regimen will be utilized, as consistent with routine care at the
research institution.
Sample and Setting Patients included will be children age 3 through 10 years scheduled for
strabismus surgery. The procedure may also include scheduled exam under anesthesia (EUA) of
the eyes, but any other surgical procedure in conjunction with strabismus will be excluded
from enrollment. Review of anesthesia records shows that 480 patients met inclusion criteria
for the preceding 12 months. The primary outcome measure is pain as measured by the revised
Faces, Legs, Anxiety, Cry & Consolability scale (rFLACC). Based on previous pilot work, the
investigators expect pain scores to have a mean of five and a standard deviation of two. The
goal is to detect a change of one point in rFLACC scores, which the investigators believe
would be clinically significant. With alpha of 0.05 and power of 0.80, the investigators
would need 64 patients in each arm for a one point decrease in rFLACC scores to be
statistically significant. The investigators expect that ten percent of patients will have
to be dropped because of missing data, so the investigators are proposing to enroll 71
patients in each arm (142 patients total) in order to have data for 64 patients in the
analyses.
Inclusion criteria will be 1) children ages 3 to 10 years old having strabismus surgery for
the first time, a repeated strabismus surgery, or an eye examination for strabismus under
anesthesia; 2) the child has to be evaluated as an American Society of Anesthesiologists
Physical Status (ASAPS) classification Class 1 or 2; 3) the caregiver should be present in
the hospital; and 4) the child and caregiver must be English speaking. Exclusion criteria
will include 1) children evaluated as an ASAPS Class 3 or 4; non-English speaking children
or parents; 3) additional surgery performed at the same time; 4) children with documented
behavioral disabilities; 5) prior participation in the study.
Tools A researcher developed demographic questionnaire will be used to collect information
from a parent that includes patient age, gender, previous surgery, any medication allergies,
and primary caregiver. The Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety and Information Scale (APAIS) will
be used to assess parent feelings of anxiety in the preoperative phase. The APAIS is short
6-item questionnaire with acceptable reliability with Cronbach's alpha greater than or equal
to 70 and correlated highly (0.74) with the widely used State Trait Anxiety Scale. Because
of its length, the APAIS can be quickly administered to parents of children undergoing
surgery in order to assess parental preoperative anxiety . The measure will be completed on
all parent participants after consent is obtained. The tool takes approximately 1-2 minutes
to score.
For evaluating anxiety in children the Modified Anxiety Scale (mYPAS) will be used. The
mYPAS is frequently used to measure anxiety prior to induction and has demonstrated both
inter and intra-rater reliability (using k statistics) ranging from 0.63 - 0.90 and
acceptable reliability (p = 0.01, r = 0.79) The tool can be administered in less than one
minute, is reliable in children ages 2-12 years, and uses five areas (activity,
vocalization, expression, arousal, and interaction) to rate preoperative anxiety.
In the Post Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU) and in Same Day Surgery (SDS), nurses will use the
rFLACC scale to measure pain. The tool has established reliability and validity and is used
throughout the hospital to assess pain in children unable to verbalize pain. The interrater
reliability revealed intra-class correlation coefficients ranging from 0.76-0.90. Criterion
validity (p=0.65-0.87) was supported by correlations between parent and child scores. For
pain assessment at 24 hours post operatively, parents will be asked to rate the intensity of
the subject's pain on a scale of 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain imaginable). The Numeric Pain
Rating Scale developed by McCaffery is a widely used instrument in the clinical setting with
previously established reliability and validity. The instrument is scored as 0 = no pain;
1-3 = mild pain; 4-6 = moderate pain; 7-10 = severe pain.
Procedure IRB approval will be secured prior to recruitment. As is standard care, subjects
will be contacted by telephone in the days prior to the scheduled surgery. During that
contact, subjects will be informed of the offer to participate in this study, and be
provided with a brief description of the protocol. On the day of surgery, a researcher will
visit interested subjects and provide a complete explanation and written consent document.
Consenting subjects will then be evaluated with the Amsterdam Preoperative Anxiety Scale,
and the researcher will complete the YPAS-m scale prior to surgery. At the time consent is
obtained, subjects will also be asked to complete a brief demographic data form.
After surgery, the nurse will evaluate the patient's pain using rFLACC scale on arrival to
the Post Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU) and every fifteen minutes during the patient's stay.
After transferring from PACU to SDS, the nurse will continue to evaluate pain using the same
scale on arrival and before discharge. The nurse will document the patient's level of pain
and need for any additional pain medication. To help ensure study fidelity in regard to pain
assessment, all nurses will be given a refresher class on use of the rFLACC. After
discharge, the patient will receive a telephone call 24 hours after surgery to evaluate
post-operative nausea and vomiting and the level of pain at home.
Patients will receive a standard anesthetic consisting of midazolam premedication when
indicated for anticipated separation anxiety, then sevoflurane inhalation utilizing nitrous
oxide during mask induction, but no nitrous oxide during maintenance anesthesia. Analgesia
and PONV prophylaxis is standardized as acetaminophen 15 mg/kg oral preoperative (maximum
650), followed by ketorolac 0.5 mg/kg IV (maximum 30), ondansetron 0.15 mg/kg IV, and
dexamethasone 0.15 mg/kg IV. Airway maintenance will be with a laryngeal mask, and emergence
conducted in the operating room with the aim of a responsive patient at time of departure
from the operating room.
Patients will be randomized to either hydromorphone or fentanyl once in the operating room
by opening a sealed protocol envelope. The anesthesiologist will fractionate the total dose
opiate administered as the clinical situation warrants to preserve spontaneous breathing.
The anesthesiologist will titrate the same drug as required during the first 15 minutes in
the recovery room to ensure that immediate analgesic goals are met.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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