Opioid-use Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Usability Assessment of Intramuscular, Atomized Intranasal, and Nasal Spray Administration of Naloxone by Untrained Community Members
This will be a randomized, open-label, usability assessment of intramuscular, intranasal, and
nasal spray administration of naloxone using two different instruction sets by laypersons.
- Design: Single site, open-label, randomized usability assessment of intramuscular,
intranasal, and nasal spray administration of simulated naloxone. A convenience sample
of participants will consent to volunteer in the study at a public venue. Participants
will provide verbal consent and will be randomly assigned a simulated naloxone kit
containing either intramuscular, intranasal, or nasal spray administration materials
with either standard or study team designed instructions for use. Participants will
enter a use scenario station and be asked to assemble and administer the simulated
naloxone kit to a mannequin (intranasal and nasal spray) or simulated flesh pad
(intramuscular). The participant will be instructed to start and will be timed until the
simulated naloxone has been successfully administered or 7 minutes has elapsed. The
participant will be observed by one trained investigator who will assess for successful
administration of the simulated naloxone and critical errors. The environment will
contain distractors.Once the participant has successfully administered simulated
naloxone or 7 minutes elapses the timer will be stopped. Successful administration of
simulated naloxone will be defined as administration of the agent without any critical
errors occurring (defined below). Data collected will include demographics (defined
below), successful administration of simulated naloxone, time to successful
administration of simulated naloxone, and Likert-item data assessing the ease of use of
the device and instructions.
- Participants: adults (18 years of age and older) at a public venue will be asked to
volunteer. Participants with severe visual or hearing impairment (defined as: legally
deaf, legally blind, unable to read print size provided on instructional handout, or
unable to hear video audio), that have previous naloxone administration training, that
are not English proficient, that are pregnant, or that have previously participated in
the trial will be excluded.
- Kits:
1. Intranasal: simulated naloxone vial, bristoject, administration instructions
(standard or study team designed)
2. Intramuscular: sterile single use needle, sterile single use 3 mL syringe,
simulated naloxone vial, administration instructions (standard or study team
designed)
3. Nasal spray: simulated naloxone spray, administration instructions (standard or
study team designed)
- Objectives:
1. Primary: successful administration of simulated naloxone in the time allowed. A
successful administration will be defined as administration of the simulated
naloxone to the mannequin head of simulated flesh pad within 7 minutes and without
any critical errors (defined below).
2. Secondary: time required to successfully administer the simulated naloxone and
Likert-item assessment of ease of use of both the device and instructions.
- Data and Analysis:
1. The usability trial will be conducted using a convenience sample so no power
analysis will be conducted or minimum sample size defined
2. Demographics: age, gender, handedness, level of education, and presence or absence
of opioid at risk contacts.
3. Data: successful administration, time to administration, and Likert-item assessment
of both the device and instructions. Failure to administer the medication due to a
critical use error will be recorded and the specific error reported for all
participants.
- Critical Errors:
1. Intranasal: failure to remove both yellow caps from bristoject, failure to remove
cap from simulated naloxone, failure to attach atomizer, failure to attach
simulated naloxone, drug leak prior to administration, administration in only one
nostril, and failure to administer within 7 minutes.
2. Intramuscular: failure to attach the needle to the syringe, failure to remove cap
from simulated naloxone, failure to draw up >90% (0.9 mL) of the simulated
naloxone, failure to puncture simulated flesh pad with needle, failure to push
entire volume of fluid in the syringe into the simulated flesh pad, and failure to
administer within 7 minutes.
3. Intranasal: failure to place the tip of the device into one nostril, failure to
depress the device and release the simulated naloxone, failure to administer within
7 minutes.
Background: Opioid abuse and addiction is a growing epidemic both in the United States and
globally. It impacts the health, social welfare, and economic stability of those directly
affected and society as a whole. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse there are
approximately 2.1 million people in the United States with substance use disorders related to
prescription opioid medications and another 467,000 addicted to heroin. Data from the Center
for Disease Control National Vital Statistics System demonstrated that the number of drug
poisonings involving opioid analgesics tripled from 2000 to 2014, and in 2010 opioid pain
relievers were responsible for 82.8% of all unintentional deaths in the United States.1 In an
attempt to combat this epidemic many states have implemented community-based opioid overdose
prevention programs aimed at increasing resources to combat addiction and distributing
naloxone to community members. These programs increase knowledge of overdose prevention and
the factors that increase a person's risk for overdose. Evaluations of these programs have
also demonstrated that nonmedical bystanders are able to administer naloxone effectively
after completing training.2 Naloxone can be administered intravenously, intramuscularly, or
via inhalation. Opioid overdose prevention programs are typically initiated by local and
state governments, which allows for interprogram variability regarding the route of naloxone
administration used by community members. Pre-hospital data has demonstrated that intranasal
naloxone is a safe and effective alternative to intravenous naloxone.3 A usability assessment
comparing a naloxone auto-injector (Evzio®) to the use of a nasal atomizer suggested that the
route of administration did impact the rate of successful naloxone administration by
nonmedical community members.4 Opioid overdose prevention programs typically utilize
intranasal atomizers, nasal inhalers, or intramuscular administration routes. In 2016 the
investigators conducted a usability assessment of naloxone administered by community members
who received training on how to use the naloxone device that was assigned. Our data supported
that intranasal administration with an atomizer or spray resulted in a higher administration
success rate when compared to intramuscular injection. Recently, New York, along with many
other states, passed legislation allowing individuals to purchase naloxone over-the-counter
without a prescription. This legislation has drastically expanded access to naloxone, but has
reduced the opportunity to train community members purchasing the medication. The
investigators plan to conduct a usability assessment of simulated naloxone in community
members in the absence of training to assess the rate of successful administration and time
to successful administration.
Objectives:
Primary: The successful administration of simulated naloxone without training. A successful
administration will be defined as administration of the simulated naloxone to the mannequin
head or simulated flesh pad within 7 minutes and without any critical errors (defined below).
Secondary:
- Total time required to successfully administer the simulated naloxone without training.
- Comparison of successful administration with standard and simplified instructions
- Comparison of total time required for successful administration with standard and
simplified instructions
- Likert-item assessment of the usability of the simulated naloxone product
- Likert-item assessment of usability of the naloxone administration instructions
Design: Single site, open-label, randomized usability assessment of intramuscular,
intranasal, and nasal spray administration of simulated naloxone using standard
(package-insert) or simplified (developed by study team) instructions. A convenience sample
of participants will consent to volunteer in the study at a public venue. Participants will
provide verbal consent and will be randomly assigned a simulated naloxone kit containing
either intramuscular standard, intramuscular simplified, intranasal standard, intranasal
simplified, nasal spray standard, or nasal spray simplified administration materials. The
participant will enter a use scenario station and will be asked to assemble and administer
the simulated naloxone kit to a mannequin (intranasal and nasal spray) or simulated flesh pad
(intramuscular). The participant will be instructed to start and will be timed until the
simulated naloxone has been successfully administered or 7 minutes has elapsed. The
participant will be observed by one trained investigator who will assess for successful
administration of the simulated naloxone and critical errors. The environment will contain
distracters to mimic a community based setting. Once the participant has successfully
administered the simulated naloxone or 7 minutes has elapsed the timer will be stopped.
Successful administration of simulated naloxone will be defined as administration of the
agent without any critical errors occurring (defined below). Data collected will include
demographics (defined below), successful administration of simulated naloxone, product
assessment information, instruction assessment information, and time to successful
administration of simulated naloxone.
Eligibility: healthy adults (18 years of age and older) at a public venue will be asked to
participate in the study. Participants with severe visual or hearing impairment (defined as:
legally deaf, legally blind, unable to read print size provided on instructional handout, or
unable to hear instructions from a research staff member), that have previous naloxone
administration training, that are not English proficient, that are pregnant, or that have
previously participated in the trial will be excluded.
Statistical Methods: All data will be analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics software.
Demographics data will be analyzed using descriptive statistics for continuous measures and
percentages for categorical measures. The successful administration of naloxone will be
compared between groups using the Chi-square test and a significant difference will be
defined as a p-value of less than 0.05 for the result. The time to administration between
groups will be assessed using a one-way ANOVA and a significant difference will be defined as
a p-value of less than 0.05 for the result. The Likert-item data will be reported as
percentage of response level and analyzed using a one-way ANOVA with a significant difference
defined as a p-value of less than 0.05 for comparison between administration methods and
instruction methods.
Data Analysis/Interpretation: As stated above data will be collected to assess both the
successful administration of and time to administration of naloxone. The rate of successful
administration will be reported as a percentage for each of the three groups and analyzed
using the Chi-square test. Successful administration is defined as administration of the
simulated naloxone within 7 minutes without committing any critical errors. Critical errors
are as follows:
- Intranasal (atomizer): failure to remove both yellow caps from bristoject, failure to
remove cap from simulated naloxone, failure to attach atomizer, failure to attach
simulated naloxone, drug leak prior to administration, administration in only one
nostril, and failure to administer within 7 minutes.
- Intramuscular: failure to attach the needle to the syringe, failure to remove cap from
simulated naloxone, failure to draw up >90% (0.9 mL) of the simulated naloxone, failure
to puncture simulated flesh pad with needle, failure to push entire volume of fluid in
the syringe into the simulated flesh pad, and failure to administer within 7 minutes.
- Intranasal (spray): failure to place the tip of the device into one nostril, failure to
depress the device and release the simulated naloxone, failure to administer within 7
minutes.
Time to successful administration will be reported using descriptive statistics (mean time to
administration) and analyzed using a one-way ANOVA. Times for participants who commit a
critical error or who do no administer the simulated naloxone within 7 minutes will not be
included in the analysis. The Likert-item data will be reported as a median with an
inter-quartile range and analyzed using a one-way ANOVA.
A route of administration will be considered to be more user-friendly if it demonstrates a
statistically significantly higher rate of successful administration compared to another
route of administration. Additionally, a route or instruction type will be considered user
preferred if the Likert-item data demonstrates a significantly better score on usability.
Study Procedures: No study procedures will be performed on study participants.
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