Abscess Clinical Trial
Official title:
High Concentration Continuous Flow Nitrous Oxide Use for Procedural-induced Pain or Anxiety During Pediatric Minor Procedures
Title:
High-concentration continuous flow nitrous oxide use for procedural-induced pain or anxiety
during pediatric minor procedures.
Objective: To assess whether the use of high-concentration continuous flow nitrous oxide in
addition to standard management increases the comfort level in pediatric patients undergoing
minor procedures compared to standard management alone.
Title:
High-concentration continuous flow nitrous oxide use for procedural-induced pain or anxiety
during pediatric minor procedures
Brief Summary:
Background: Over the past 10 years pediatric emergency departments (PED) throughout the
country have adopted the concept of an "ouchless" PED, using both pharmacologic and
non-pharmacologic methods to achieve this goal. There are a number of minor procedures
performed routinely in a PED. Despite our interest in an "ouchless" PED, many of these
procedures are performed without full attention to patient comfort. Some procedures, such as
laceration repair, require local anesthesia, while others, such as intravenous catheter
placement, are usually performed without local anesthesia. All of these minor procedures,
however, are ones in which the risk of parenteral procedural sedation outweighs the benefit.
Due to the awareness of trying to create as pain-free an experience as possible, the use of
high-concentration nitrous oxide (>50%) in the pediatric outpatient setting has grown and is
used in PEDs throughout the country. Nitrous oxide is a colorless, non-narcotic, analgesic
gas. Its efficacy and safety have been well documented in anesthesia, pediatric and dental
literature. Over the last 30 years, nitrous oxide has been incorporated in the outpatient
pediatric setting for procedural analgesia. At Jacobi Medical Center (JMC), nitrous oxide
has been successfully used for children undergoing a variety of minor procedures in the PED.
Several studies have been published on the use of nitrous oxide in decreasing pain and
anxiety in the pediatric emergency setting; however, previous studies using high
concentration nitrous oxide have been either observational, have focused on a narrow age
range, a single procedure type or procedures associated with moderate to severe pain, such
as fracture reduction.
This investigation, unlike previous studies, will include a wider age range of children, as
well as a variety of painful or anxiety provoking minor procedures commonly performed in the
PED. We are choosing to include a variety of pre-defined minor procedures, rather than a
single procedure, in order to assess the feasibility and benefit of nitrous oxide for the
many minor procedures performed routinely on a daily basis in a pediatric emergency
department. It will allow us to quantify our rate of effectiveness in decreasing pain and/or
anxiety with the use of high concentration (>50%) nitrous oxide and to expand the use of
nitrous oxide if shown to be superior to standard management in the reduction of procedural
pain and anxiety.
Objective: To assess whether the use of high-concentration continuous flow nitrous oxide in
addition to standard management increases the comfort level in pediatric patients undergoing
minor procedures compared to standard management alone.
Methods: This will be a prospective randomized controlled trial conducted in the JMC PED.
Children 3-12 years of age presenting to the PED, who require a minor procedure will be
assessed for eligibility. Minor procedures will be defined as any procedure in which the
standard management may involve providing local anesthetic and/or holding the child in order
to successfully accomplish the procedure. These are not procedures in which the patient
would receive parenteral analgesics, anxiolytics or anesthetics, because they are minimally
painful and do not warrant the potential risks associated with parenteral anesthesia.
Examples of minor procedures include simple incision and drainage of an abscess, intravenous
catheter placement, urinary catheter placement, paronychia incision, foreign body removal
and simple laceration repair. A local anesthetic such as injectable lidocaine or a topical
anesthetic such as EMLA is frequently used and their use will be at the discretion of the
provider performing the procedure. The doses of the topical anesthetics used are uniform.
The decision of whether topical anesthesia will be used will be made by the provider before
group randomization of the patient. Exclusion criteria include patients with medical
conditions in which nitrous oxide is contraindicated, who are unable to communicate reliable
levels of pain or who have low-to-no anxiety levels demonstrable by a validated anxiety
scale, scored in the examining room by a research assistant after the procedure is described
by the provider. After obtaining parental consent/child assent, patients will be randomized
using a random number table to group 1 (nitrous oxide plus standard management) or group 2
(standard management alone). Because younger children especially experience significant
anxiety before and during procedures, which can negatively affect the success of the
procedure, we will use block randomization by groups of 6 for two separate age groups in
order to ensure equal representation in both groups. These groups will be divided into
preschool age (3 years to <6 years) and school age (>6 years- 12 years) children. Patients
in the nitrous oxide group will receive nitrous oxide up to 70% concentration using a
nitrous oxide protocol previously developed for use in the PED (attached), along with
standard management (+/- local anesthetic, +/- holding the child) as determined by the
provider prior to randomization. Patients in Group 2 will receive standard management alone
(+/-local anesthetic, +/- holding the child).
Data Collection:
Data collection occurs at three time points: pre- procedure, intra-procedure and
post-procedure. The pre-procedural data collection will include: 1) a pain score using a
standard number scale ranging from 0-10 for children >6 years or 10-point Wong-Baker faces
pain scale for children < 6 years measured at the time of triage by the triage nurse and 2)
demographics including age, gender, procedure type, adjunctive pain medication (including
the use of local anesthesia) and anxiety score using the Yale Anxiety Scale (attached)
performed by a research assistant (medical student or college student who will be trained in
data collection) in the treatment room after the provider has described the procedure to the
patient and parent. Intra-procedural data collection will include: comfort score measured on
the FLACC Pain Scale (attached) and anxiety score measured on the Yale Anxiety Scale. The
FLACC Scale is a 10 point scoring system with 10 indicating the highest level of pain. Both
scoring scales are validated scales of pain and anxiety, respectively. The FLACC score and
the Yale Anxiety score will be documented by a research assistant (medical student or
college student who will be trained in data collection). The post-procedure data collection
will include: mask tolerance, level of holding the child required in order to complete the
procedure, length of procedure, highest nitrous oxide concentration used, patient recovery
time back-to-baseline, adverse events, and independent rating of the success of the
procedure by both the provider performing the procedure and the provider administering the
nitrous oxide. At the end of the visit, a research assistant blinded to the patient's group
assignment will document the parent's satisfaction with the encounter.
Outcomes:
The primary outcome will be the FLACC Pain Scale score measured intra-procedure. Secondary
outcomes will be the YALE Anxiety Score, length of the procedure, parent satisfaction score,
and independent scores by two providers regarding the success of the procedure.
Sample Size:
Based on a pre-study sample of children undergoing minor procedures, the mean FLAAC Pain
Scale score was 7.25/10. We determined that a 25% difference in the mean FLACC scores
between the two groups would be clinically relevant. In various published articles a
clinical significant change in pain score was noted with the use of nitrous oxide between
20% and 40%. At an alpha of .05 and a power of 80%, we estimate a sample size of 42 patients
in each arm (21 patients in each of the two age ranges per arm).
Statistics:
Data will be collected and analyzed using SPSS version 19 with the FLACC Pain Scale being
the primary outcome measure. The mean FLACC score will be compared between the two groups.
Ordinal variables will be analyzed using the Mann-Whitney -U test and categorical values
using the Chi Square test. Associations between the intra-procedure FLACC Pain Scale score
with patient age (preschool and school age), pre-procedural pain and pre-procedural anxiety
scores will be analyzed using Spearman correlation and the Chi Square test. The kappa
statistic will be used to assess agreement between the two providers' rating of the success
of the procedure. Since the randomization is stratified and the sample size calculation is
based on stratified analysis, we will analyze both groups separately to test this
hypothesis. An interim review of the data will be done effectiveness of the treatment. Any
adverse events will be reported by the PI in writing to the CCI/IRB.
Additional Response:
Although lack of blinding may be seen as a potential weakness concerning objectivity of the
main outcome, we are intentionally not blinding the study in order to mimic PED practice.
Our goal is to determine whether nitrous oxide will benefit the child in terms of reducing
pain and/or anxiety during a minor procedure. The method of delivery, however, may be in
itself noxious to some children (face mask). Introducing this aspect to the standard arm may
unduly increase the FLACC Pain Scale score in this group. Additionally, in the sense that we
may be introducing a noxious stimulus without any possibility of benefit seems unethical.
In both arms, the administration of local anesthetic and/or the degree to which a child is
held in order to perform the procedure will be at the discretion of the treating physician.
The practice, however, for a specific minor procedure is similar between all providers. For
example, a child receiving sutures will have a topical anesthetic placed at triage and then
injectable lidocaine administered at the time of the suturing. The doses for topical
anesthetics are uniform and the decision by the provider whether to use topical anesthesia
will be made before group randomization. In order for our data to be clinically meaningful,
we again want to mimic PED practice. The details of all aspects of adjuvant care, such as
local anesthetic use and holding a child, will be documented.
Risks:
The adverse effects of nitrous oxide occur very infrequently. However, in the literature,
the following adverse effects have been described: vomiting, oxygen desaturation, dizziness,
euphoria, abdominal pain and hallucinations.
Benefits:
The subjects may or may not experience a decreased pain and anxiety level, potential for
shorter procedure time due to compliance, and increased parent/child satisfaction. A
positive procedural experience may reduce long-term procedural traumatic distress.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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