Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Double-blind Trial Comparing the Effect on Pain of an Oral Sucrose Solution Versus Placebo in Children 1 to 3 Months Old Needing Venipuncture
Background : Previous studies suggest that early recognition and treatment of pain among
children is important for their cognitive development and their future response to pain
throughout their life. Oral sweet solutions have been accepted as effective pain reducing
agents for procedures in the neonatal population. To date, there have been a limited number
of published clinical trials in an emergency setting studying this type of intervention
among infants and these studies have shown conflicting results.
Objective : To compare the efficacy of an oral sucrose solution versus placebo in reducing
pain in children 1 to 3 months of age during venipuncture in the Emergency Department (ED).
Methods : A single-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled clinical trial will
be conducted in an urban tertiary care pediatric university-affiliated hospital ED. The
study population is all infants from 1 to 3 months of age requiring venipuncture as part of
their planned ED management. Study participants will be randomly allocated to receive 2 ml
of a 88% sucrose solution or 2 ml of a placebo solution. The primary outcome measure is the
difference in pain levels during the venipuncture in the study population as assessed by the
Face, Legs, Activity, Cry and Consolability Pain Scale (FLACC). Secondary outcome measures
will evaluate differences of pain levels using the Neonatal Infant Pain Scale (NIPS). Crying
time and changes in heart rate during the procedure will be recorded. Side effects and
adverse events will also be noted. The investigators will also measure the number of
successful venipunctures at the first attempt. Based on previously reported data, using an
alpha value of 0,05, a power of 90% and using a 2-point difference in mean FLACC scores as
clinically significant difference, approximately 41 patients per group will be needed
considering a drop-off value of 25%. Patients' characteristics and outcomes will be compared
using the Pearson Chi-square test for categorical variables and the Student's T test for
continuous variables. A intention to treat analysis will be performed.
INTRODUCTION AND JUSTIFICATION
Acute pain is one of the most common adverse stimuli experienced by children, occurring as a
result of injury, illness, and necessary medical procedures[1]. The American Academy of
Pediatrics (AAP) and the American Pain Society (APS) have jointly issued a statement
promoting the responsibility of paediatricians as leaders and advocates to ensure the humane
and competent treatment of pain and suffering in all infants, children, and adolescents[1].
In Emergency Departments (ED), children undergo many painful procedures, such as bladder
catheterization, capillary blood tests, venipuncture and lumbar puncture. All these
procedures are associated with increased anxiety, avoidance, somatic symptoms, and increased
parental distress[1]. Numerous myths, insufficient knowledge among caregivers, and
inadequate application of knowledge contribute to a lack of effective pain management among
infants[1].
Long-term effects of unmanaged pain in human infants have been shown to include permanent
impairment of elements of cognitive development, such as learning, memory, and behaviour[2],
and increased somatisation in childhood[3]. The plasticity of the developing brain and the
changes that occur in response to painful stimuli[4] also contribute to altered perceptions
of pain later in life[5-6]. Early painful experiences affect children's future responses to
analgesia. Weisman et al[7] found that inadequate analgesia in young children during
procedures diminished the effects of adequate analgesia during subsequent procedures. Many
studies have suggested that the prompt and accurate recognition and treatment of pain in
young infants is important for their immediate comfort and for their best possible lifelong
development[8]. Despite the recent interest in paediatric pain assessment, prevention and
treatment, many children do not receive adequate management to alleviate pain[1, 8-9]. The
ideal pre-procedural analgesic for minor invasive procedures would be a cost-effective,
inexpensive, short-acting agent with few associated risks[10].
The use of sucrose has been well studied for certain procedures in the patients of the
neonatal intensive care unit and in the newborn nursery settings, particularly for venous
blood draws, capillary blood tests and circumcision[11-13]. In these studies[11-13], infants
receiving oral sucrose solutions before procedures cried less and had overall decreased
behavioural pain responses when compared with those receiving placebo. Furthermore, sucrose
has been shown to be a safe intervention with no serious life-threatening adverse events and
only few reported side effects consisting of minimal coughing with administration[14].
Sucrose is inexpensive, short acting, non-sedating, easily administered and non-invasive.
Administration of sucrose does not require additional training and does not expose the
infant to risks greater than those associated with breast or bottle feeding.
Summaries of randomized controlled trials among hospitalized neonates of 32 to 40 weeks of
gestation suggest that a single dose of 0,5 to 2 mL of 12% to 50% sucrose delivered by
non-nutritive sucking via a pacifier for 2 minutes before a painful event is safe[15] and
effective in decreasing physiologic (heart rate, respiratory rate and oxygen
saturation)[16-17]. It is also effective in minimizing behavioural pain indicators (crying,
facial expression and motor activity)[16, 18] and in reducing overall composite pain scale
scores[16]. A Cochrane systematic review concluded that sucrose is safe and effective in
reducing procedural pain from single short procedural events in neonates, but an optimal
dose could not be identified due to inconsistency in effective sucrose dosage among
studies[19]. A review of published studies reported that sucrose or glucose in healthy term
or preterm infants during single episodes of heel lancing, venipuncture or intramuscular
injection is effective[20]. However, uncertainties remain beyond the neonatal period, given
the limited number of published studies [20].
A growing number of studies looking at infants undergoing immunizations suggest that this
analgesic effect may extend past the neonatal period and into infancy[21-26]. Nevertheless,
the upper limit of this effect is unknown in terms of age and appropriate sucrose dosage.
Two studies have examined the effectiveness of sweet solutions as an analgesic in the
paediatric ED. A randomized controlled trial in an emergency setting of sucrose and/or
pacifier for infants receiving venipuncture conducted by Curtis and al[27] among infants of
0 to 6 months demonstrated a trend in reducing pain among the sub-group of infants of 0 to 3
months. However, this study showed no difference in pain scales after 3 months of age. Also,
in a study examining the effect of sucrose during bladder catheterization, the subgroup of
infants 1 to 30 days old who received a sweet solution showed smaller changes in pain
scores, were less likely to cry during catheterization and returned to baseline more
quickly, in comparison with the placebo group[14]. However, among children of 31 to 90 days,
there was no statistically significant difference.[14].
Also, studies have used varieties of concentrations of sucrose (e.g. Rogers had used sucrose
24%[14], Curtis had used sucrose 44%[27] and Lewindon had used sucrose 75%[24]). Systematic
reviews of the current literature have been unable to demonstrate superiority of one
concentration of a sweet solution over another[28], but many studies suggest that higher
concentrations of sweet solutions seem more effective[25, 29-32]. Therefore, the
investigators chose to study the effect of a sweet solution named syrup B.P. (product by
Laboratoire Atlas inc.) which contains 88% of sucrose. This solution is already commonly
used in the population of infants up to 3 months of age and it is safe (e.g. prednisone
syrup or codeine syrup are made using this syrup). A 2 ml dose of 88% sucrose contains the
same amount of carbohydrates as 25 ml of infant milk formulas which contain approximately
7,5g/100 ml[33]. Also, 88% sucrose has the same concentration of sugar as many other
medications which are commonly used in infants, such as oral antibiotics, oral steroid
solutions and other pain medications (e.g. codeine syrup). This syrup is of particular
interest as it is of low cost ($9,58 for a bottle of 2000 ml), universally available, stable
and viable for approximately three months. Therefore, the procedure studied here would be
easy to apply in most clinical settings.
Finally, the painful procedure chosen for our study is venipuncture (indwelling catheter
with or without drawing of blood samples). Venipunctures are frequently performed in the ED
in this age group. In fact, in our study center, the CHU Ste-Justine, approximately 15
patients of 1 to 3 months require venipuncture as a part of their investigation each month.
To date, there are no pain scales which have been validated precisely for the age group
studied in our project. However, the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry and Consolability (FLACC)
scale is recommended by the IMMPACT group (Initiative on Methods, Measurement and Pain
Assessment in Clinical Trials)[34]. FLACC is an easily applicable pain scale in which the
observer scores a patient for 5 categories, from 0 to 2 points, for a total score of maximum
10 points (Table 1). The validity and reliability of this pain scale has been established in
the past for children from 2 months to 7 years[35]. Validity was evaluated by comparing the
FLACC scale with the Objective Pain Scale and demonstrated that both tools showed similar
behaviours (r=0.80; p<0.001)[35]. The interrater reliability between 2 observers was
considered good (r[87]=0.94; p<0.001) with a kappa value greater than 0,50 for each
category[35]. Therefore, this pain scale was chosen as the measure of our primary outcome,
in our population of infants from 1 to 3 months old. Furthermore, the Neonatal Infant Pain
Scale (NIPS)[36] (Table 2) is a well validated pain scale for newborns up to 1 month of
age[37]. This pain scale was chosen as a secondary outcome. The investigators hypothesize
that using one pain scale validated in infants up to 1 month of age and another validated in
infants older than 2 months of age will allow us to assess pain in infants from 1 to 3
months of age best, given current available tools. Furthermore, several other patient
parameters will be used to corroborate findings.
HYPOTHESIS The investigators believe that providing an oral sucrose solution during
venipuncture will decrease pain levels in infants 1 to 3 months of age.
OBJECTIVES Our primary objective is to compare the efficacy an oral 88% sucrose solution to
a placebo solution in reducing pain as assessed by the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry and
Consolability scale in children of 1 to 3 months during venipuncture in the Emergency
Department (ED). Our secondary objectives are to asses changes in pain levels as per the
NIPS scores. The investigators will also measure variations of heart rate and crying time.
Any side effects will also be reported. The investigators will also measure the number of
successful venipunctures at the first attempt.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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