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Clinical Trial Summary

Opioids are an important component of post-operative pain management among children, but are often prescribed in excess and rarely disposed of appropriately. The lack of prompt and proper opioid disposal after recovery from surgery is contributing to the opioid crisis in Ohio by placing children at risk of accidental ingestion of opioids remaining in the home and allowing for unused opioids to be diverted for non-medical use. The investigators propose to reduce the burden of the opioid crisis in Ohio by testing a strategy to increase proper opioid disposal by families of children undergoing outpatient surgery. The investigators will test the impact of a novel opioid disposal mechanism, the Deterra® drug deactivation system, after pediatric surgical operations. This system deactivates pills, liquids, or patches, allowing for their disposal in the home garbage. The investigators propose to evaluate the effectiveness of providing Deterra® bags to families of children having surgery on their disposal of excess opioids. The investigators will perform a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to test the effectiveness of Deterra® to improve opioid disposal among families of children having outpatient surgery at Nationwide Children's Hospital.


Clinical Trial Description

Opioids are an important component of post-operative pain management among children, but are often prescribed in excess and rarely disposed of appropriately. The lack of prompt and proper opioid disposal after recovery from surgery is contributing to the opioid crisis in Ohio by placing children at risk of accidental ingestion of opioids remaining in the home and allowing for unused opioids to be diverted for non-medical use. The investigators propose to reduce the burden of the opioid crisis in Ohio by testing a strategy to increase proper opioid disposal by families of children undergoing outpatient surgery. The investigators will test the impact of a novel opioid disposal mechanism, the Deterra® drug deactivation system, after pediatric surgical operations. This system deactivates pills, liquids, or patches, allowing for their disposal in the home garbage. The investigators propose to evaluate the effectiveness of Deterra® for opioid disposal among families of Ohio children having surgery. The investigators will perform a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to test the effectiveness of Deterra® to improve proper opioid disposal among families of children having outpatient surgery at Nationwide Children's Hospital.

The goal of this project is to evaluate the impact of providing the Deterra® drug deactivation system on the excess opioid disposal rate among families of children having outpatient otolaryngologic or urologic surgery at NCH. A second objective of this study is to evaluate whether the impact of the Deterra® drug deactivation system varies by parent/guardian health literacy level or signing of an "opioid consent form" acknowledging that they will follow appropriate dosing recommendations, not give opioids if their child appears sleepy, not give Tylenol concurrently with Tylenol-containing opioid medications, dispose of unused opioids safely and responsibly, and contact their child's surgeon's office or the on-call physician with any questions. To accomplish these objectives, the investigators will perform a randomized controlled trial comparing groups of patients who receive either 1) a Deterra® bag along with brief instruction on how and why to use it along with routine postoperative instructions or 2) routine postoperative instructions.

The investigators plan to enroll 202 caregivers of children having outpatient surgery. All families will receive a 1-page pain journal to record the child's opioid and non-opioid adjunct pain medication administration. In addition to the instructions provided by the care team as described above, families randomized to the intervention arm will additionally receive a Deterra® bag and instructions on its use by a research team member.

In order to minimize disruption to the clinical work flow, minimal data will be collected at baseline directly from enrolled families. This will include the contact information required for follow-up, a limited set of research related questions, and a brief assessment of parent/guardian health literacy. Baseline demographic and clinical characteristics of the child, such as their primary payer, residential address, age, and comorbidities at the time of surgery will be extracted from the electronic medical record.

Parents/guardians will be contacted by their preferred method of email survey or phone call at 2 weeks postoperatively, at which time they will be surveyed on their child's postoperative opioid and non-opioid medication use, opioid storage location, quantity of opioid remaining, disposal method, and any barriers to disposal. If the child continues to require opioids, they will be contacted again at 4 weeks postoperatively. If the parent believes that their older child or adolescent can assist in answering the survey questions, they will be encouraged to complete the survey together. The primary outcome of this trial is the proper disposal of unused opioids. Secondary outcomes include the quantities of opioid used and leftover after surgery, opioid storage location, disposal by any method, and barriers to disposal. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03575377
Study type Interventional
Source Nationwide Children's Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 7, 2018
Completion date December 31, 2018

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