Opioid Use Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does the Use of Cryoneurolysis Improve Prehabilitation Prior to Surgery Leading to Improved Postoperative Pain Management and Reduced Economic Patient Burden in Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty Patients
This is a prospective, randomized control trial to evaluate the impacts of preoperative cryoneurolysis treatment on opioid consumption with prehabilitation and resulting postoperative functional improvement in patients undergoing elective primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA).
Patients eligible for the study will be undergoing elective primary TKA at Brigham and
Women's Hospital in Boston, MA. Study participants which meet the inclusion criteria listed
above will be introduced to the study by a member of the research team in clinic when they
schedule their date for surgery. If patients do not schedule an exact date for surgery at the
time of their clinic visit, a member of the research team will still discuss the study with
the patient so they can be called to schedule iovera° treatment once they schedule their
surgical date. Patients who are interested in the study will be asked for permission to be
contacted by a member of the study staff by telephone. These patients who give permission to
be contacted about the study further will be called on the telephone 4-8 weeks in advance of
their surgical date to assess them for their eligibility. If patients agree to participate in
the study, they will be randomized to receive or not receive preoperative iovera° treatment.
If the patient is eligible and agrees to participate in the study, the patient will come into
clinic where informed consent will be obtained in-person at that time by a physician
investigator and the patient will then receive cryoneurolysis iovera° treatment by a trained
member of the study staff. Dr. Antonia Chen, Mei Xu (Dr. Chen's Physician Assistant), Dr.
Wolfgang Fitz, Dr. Jeffrey Lange, Dr. Thomas Thornhill, Dr. Richard Iorio, Dr.Vivek Shah,
Pierre-Emmanuel Schwab, and Brielle Antonelli will undergo an in-depth and personalized
training session with a representative from Myoscience Inc. who will meet with these members
in clinic in-person and review the device, the treatment procedure, and bring supplies so
these specific members of the study staff can practice administering cryoneurolysis treatment
before beginning the study on patients. Demographic information will be collected including
the patient name, medical record number, date of birth, age, height and weight, gender,
primary language, marital status, living situation, body mass index (BMI), preoperative
narcotic consumption, and existing comorbidities. Randomization of patients for treatment
will occur via randomized computer assignments. Patients will be randomly assigned to either
the iovera° treatment group or the standard of care (SOC) group with a randomization ratio of
1:1. Patients will come in one month prior to surgery to receive prehabilitation treatment
with physical therapy and undergo physical tests including quadriceps strength, timed up and
go test (TUG), single leg stance, balance, and timed horizontal leg hold (quadriceps
endurance test). Patients will also fill-out patient reported outcome measures (PROMs), such
as KOOS, PROMIS 10, visual analog scale (VAS), the Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS), and
EQ-5D. The first functional test and completion of PROMs will occur before iovera° treatment
takes place at the first visit when subjects come into the clinic to receive iovera°
treatment. The second functional test and completion of PROMs will occur on subject's day of
surgery before the procedure, and the third set of functional test and completion of PROMs
will be postoperatively at the subject's follow-up visit in clinic between 2-6 weeks.
The iovera° device is FDA approved (510(k) [#K142866]) for treatment of peripheral nerves for
pain and for treatment of the pain and symptoms of knee osteoarthritis for up to 90 days
(K161835). This device will be used according to its FDA labeling in patients with pain -
hence why they are having a knee replacement, which would be pain due to osteoarthritis.
Cryoneurolysis treatment using the iovera° device targeting the anterior femoral cutaneous
nerve (AFCN) and the infrapatellar branch of the saphenous nerve (ISN) will occur
approximately 4 weeks before surgery by a trained member of the study staff (as mentioned
above). Treatment will occur in the clinic setting using suggested anatomical markings to
target appropriate the AFCN and infrapatellar branch of the saphenous nerve (ISN) of the
operative knee. Patients are not sedated and will be asked to identify the painful locations
with one finger which will be marked. The study staff member administering treatment will
push on these locations to confirm that the marked areas are where the patient experiences
pain and responds regarding their sensation and cessation of the pain signaling. This will
confirm the correct location for the investigators which will also be confirmed with the
aforementioned anatomical locations of the appropriate nerve branches.
The iovera° device contains three 27- gauge needles, all 6.9mm in length which will indent
the subjects' skin and be inserted under the subcutaneous fat about 7 mm. Other tissues which
may be impacted in addition to the subcutaneous fat are the dermis and epidermis. Muscle is
rarely involved. Given that the needles are only 6.9mm in length, there is minimal
possibility of reaching and affecting fascia, muscle, or vascular structures in the area
which will be treated. All of these tissues impacted, subcutaneous fat are the dermis and
epidermis, recover or are unaffected by the cooling based on the safety profile of safety
profile of cryoanalgesia. Some patients who may have variations in anatomy, particularly in
thickness of subcutaneous fat, will undergo the same procedure, but the investigator will
push the handpiece down to displace the subcutaneous fat. Furthermore, surgeons in this
practice exercise a patient BMI cut off of 40 kg/m2, which will minimize the amount of
subcutaneous fat. Lidocaine will be used for superficial anesthetic at the treatment site
before the needled puncture the patient's skin and no additional nerve block will be used at
this time. Each subject will undergo a total of 9 treatments, or cooling cycles, using the
iovera° device since each nerve branch has 2-3 sites per branch due to the anatomy of these
nerve branches determined using determined anatomical markings. Treatment will be performed
unilaterally and will be guided by visualization and palpation of anatomical landmarks. With
there being 3 nerve branches with about 3 treatment sites per branch, the total number of
treatments per subject is 9 with each treatment lasting about 1 minute, totaling 9-10 minutes
of active treatment. The amount of time estimated for the entire treatment is 20 minutes.
Investigators will know that they are hitting the targeted nerve since the subject is not
sedated and can report a parasthesia response in real-time when the nerve is frozen.
Surgical data including date of surgery, laterality, anesthesia type, pericapsular
injections, tourniquet (yes/no), morphine equivalents used in hospital, and discharge
location will be collected for each participant. All other standard of care FDA approved
medications and nerve blocks will be used in the operating room and postoperatively as needed
depending upon the need of each individual patient as determined by the surgeon. These
medications and nerve blocks commonly include bupivacaine, ropivacaine, toradol, clonidine,
epinephrine, meloxicam, tylenol, oxycodone, vicodin, percocet, tramadol, toradol, dilaudid,
morphine, lyrica, celebrex, and gabapentin.
All participants will receive a standard 7 days of opioid medication with 40 pills after
surgery. Subjects will be instructed to take their prescribed pain medication (Oxycodone
5-10mg or dilaudid 1-2mg) every 4-6 hours as need. Surveys distributed through RedCap will be
sent to each patient daily via email to track and monitor opioid consumption and physical
therapy sessions daily, once a day preoperatively with 7 short questions for approximately 4
weeks (from their iovera° treatment until their scheduled date of surgery), and once a day
postoperatively with 10 short questions for 6 weeks for a total of 70 surveys per patient for
the entire study. Each survey should take no longer than a few minutes to complete. Follow-up
visits will take place at 2-6 weeks after surgery for every participant, with one more survey
follow-up at 12 weeks. At each follow-up visit, participants will undergo the same
preoperative physical tests and fill-out each PROM. The postoperative data that will be
collected will consist of physical therapy utilized, narcotic consumption (morphine
equivalents), if patients used opioid medication 60 days prior to surgery or not, time to
return to activities of daily living, time off of assistive walking devices, and 90-day
complications (readmission, reoperation, emergency room visits) which will determine
estimated financial costs of both treatment groups. The investigators will follow patients
postoperatively to evaluate their pain scores to determine if there are differences in pain
scores between the SOC group and the iovera° group and to specifically see if there is
increased pain in the iovera° group.
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