Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02076321
Other study ID # 1207111
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 4
First received
Last updated
Start date January 2014
Est. completion date November 2016

Study information

Verified date January 2019
Source University of Missouri-Columbia
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), such as ibuprofen, are excellent medications for providing pain control in children with fractures or those who have surgery to correct bony deformity requiring the bone to be cut (osteotomy) and realigned. There is some data to suggest that these types of medications can adversely affect bone healing in adult patients with broken bones or those having spine fusion surgery. There is little data with regard to how these medications effect bone healing in children. With this project, the investigators' goal is to determine if NSAIDs delay or otherwise adversely effect bone healing and to demonstrate that these medications adequately control pain in children with broken bones or those who have had an osteotomy.


Description:

Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are effective in controlling both post-operative pain and pain associated with orthopaedic injuries, particularly in the pediatric population. Additionally, use of NSAIDs for pain control in this setting avoids the use of narcotic pain medications, the adverse effects of which are well known.

Recent research has suggested a possible association between use of NSAIDs and impaired fracture healing in the skeletally mature, or adult, population. Several adult mammal studies have demonstrated inhibition of bony repair with administration of NSAIDs. Yet, other adult animal studies have failed to find the same effect. Clinical data in the adult population is similarly conflicted, with some studies showing an inhibition of bone healing after posterior spinal fusion, while a larger study found no correlation. The data investigating the effects of NSAID use in adults after fracture or osteotomy is even less clear with some studies demonstrating higher rates of non-union with NSAID administration and others finding no significant effect on bone healing.

The research investigating these outcomes in the skeletally immature population is limited; one study compared administration of ketorolac versus normal saline for 7, 14 and 21 days in a juvenile rat model with a stabilized tibia fracture. They found no significant difference in strength, stiffness or histological characteristics of fracture callus between the two groups. Clinical retrospective studies of the pediatric population with regard to use of NSAIDs after posterior spinal fusion have failed to reproduce findings of inhibitory effects on bone healing. Similarly, two retrospective studies found no cases of delayed union or non-union in pediatric patients who received perioperative ketorolac around the time of operative fixation of fractures, or osteotomy. Given these results, the way in which and the degree to which NSAIDs perturb the inflammatory mileu during the acute phase of healing is potentially distinct from the effects on bone healing in the skeletally mature.

There have been no clinical prospective, randomized studies to evaluate the effect, if any, that NSAIDs have on bone healing in the skeletally immature patient population. The investigators hypothesize that NSAID administration in the acute phase of bone healing, whether it be a fracture or osteotomy, will not result in delayed union or non-union as compared to patients who take acetaminophen for pain control during this same time period.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 102
Est. completion date November 2016
Est. primary completion date November 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A to 16 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- • Male aged 16 years or less or female aged 14 years or less

- Open physis on radiographs

- Fracture undergoing closed treatment or operative treatment or patient undergoing elective osteotomy

Exclusion Criteria:

- • Regular use of NSAIDs

- Allergy to NSAIDs

- Inability to take breakthrough medications due side effects or allergy

- Systemic illness

- Renal impairment

- Liver disease

- Polytrauma

- Uncontrolled diabetes

- Regular use of corticosteroids

- History of any skeletal dysplasia

- History of neuromuscular disorder

- History of bleeding disorder

- History of liver disorder

- Pathologic fracture

- Closed physes

- Male greater than 16 years old

- Female greater than 14 years old

- Pregnant or possibly pregnant females based on report and last menstrual period

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Drug:
Acetaminophen
acetaminophen for pain control with dose and frequency of 10-15mg/kg/dose, Maximum dose 1000mg. Maximum amount per day: 75mg/kg (not to exceed 4g/day).
Ibuprofen
ibuprofen for pain control with dose and frequency 4-10mg/kg/dose. Maximum of 40mg/kg/day, not to exceed 3,200mg/day. Maximum one-time dose of 800mg.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Missouri Health System Columbia Missouri

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Missouri-Columbia

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Compare the Time to Union of Fractures and Osteotomies in Skeletally Immature Patients Administered NSAIDs for Pain Control, Versus Those Administered Acetaminophen for Pain Control. The subject will be enrolled/assessed up to 6 months post-injury/osteotomy.
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT00137085 - Ketamine Versus Fentanyl as an Adjunct to Propofol-Assisted Emergency Department Procedural Sedation N/A
Completed NCT00235404 - Randomized Controlled Trial of Health Care to Elderly Patients. N/A
Completed NCT00152321 - Strategies Targeting Osteoporosis to Prevent Recurrent Fractures N/A
Completed NCT01127711 - Cohort of Swedish Men N/A
Completed NCT00060970 - Evaluating Muscle Function After Ankle Surgery N/A
Completed NCT02576730 - Functional Outcome Assessment After (Calcaneal) Trauma Surgey N/A
Completed NCT02074969 - Intramedullary Devices for the Treatment of Unstable Pertrochanteric Fractures N/A
Completed NCT00767780 - The Effect of a New Biomechanical Device N/A
Withdrawn NCT00355420 - Evaluation of the Change in Length of the Leg in Children After Treatment of Femur Fractures. Phase 2
Completed NCT00129142 - Toremifene Citrate for Prevention of Bone Fractures in Men With Prostate Cancer on Androgen Deprivation Therapy Phase 3
Terminated NCT03367169 - Surgery of the Pilon Fractures N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01452243 - Prevention of Falls and Fractures in Old People by Administration of Calcium and Vitamin D. Randomized Clinical Trial Phase 3
Completed NCT00545350 - Exercise Intervention to Prevent Fall-related Fractures and Other Injuries : The Ossébo Study N/A
Terminated NCT00387686 - A Phase 2/3 Multicenter, Controlled Trial Of rhBMP-2/CPM In Tibial Fractures Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT02292316 - Falls With Fracture : Role of Cognitive Disorders and Comparison With Bone Fragility N/A
Completed NCT01136616 - CT Analysis of Structural Buttresses in the Traumatised Nose Phase 2
Completed NCT02090972 - The Impact of Opioids in Fractures - a Case Control Study N/A
Recruiting NCT02237040 - A New Treatment Protocol for Paediatric Mandibular Condylar Fractures N/A
Completed NCT00872105 - Conservative Treatment Versus Operative Plate Fixation for Acute, Displaced Fractures of the Distal Clavicle N/A
Completed NCT00652548 - Use of Ultrasound to Evaluate Clavicle Fractures in Pediatric Patients N/A