Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Analgesic Efficacy of Perioperative Δ9-THC (Namisol®) in Patients Undergoing Major Abdominal Surgery: A Randomized, Double Blinded, Placebo-controlled, Parallel Design
Adequate treatment of postsurgical pain leads to better mobilization, shorter hospital stay, lower costs and higher patient satisfaction. In its treatment, frequent use is made of opioids. However, opioids have many side-effects. A possible add-on can be sought in THC, which has been shown to have possible analgesic and/or pain modulating effects in preclinical research. The purpose of this study is to investigate the analgesic and pain modulating effects of perioperative Namisol, a tablet containing THC, in patients that will undergo major abdominal surgery.
Rationale: Early postsurgical pain is a consequence of tissue trauma during surgery, which
can lead to hyperalgesia or allodynia. Adequate management of postsurgical pain leads to
earlier mobilization, shortened hospital stay, reduced costs, and increased patient
satisfaction. Treatment usually involves the use of opioids, which have many side effects.
Besides the problem of acute surgical pain, surgery may lead to the development of
persistent postsurgical pain.
Based on preclinical research, it is hypothesized that Δ9-THC may improve outcomes of early
postsurgical pain due to pain modulatory effects and may lower the incidence of persistent
postsurgical pain through modulation of central pain processing, e.g. reduction of central
sensitization. From clinical studies, evidence for the value of Δ9-THC in this context is,
to date, scarce. Indeed, research in a patient group with a major nociceptive load - i.e.
major abdominal surgery - and an extended perioperative treatment schedule has not been
performed so far. Both a major nociceptive load and an extended perioperative treatment
schedule are necessary for adequate assessment of the analgesic efficacy of Δ9-THC in this
context. Thus, the question regarding the perioperative analgesic efficacy of Δ9-THC in
major abdominal surgery remains unresolved.
Objectives: The primary aim of this study is to investigate the analgesic effect of
perioperatively administered Namisol® to reduce postsurgical pain on the day of major
abdominal surgery and in the first five days after major abdominal surgery. A secondary aim
is to investigate the effect of perioperatively administered Namisol® on the incidence of
persistent postsurgical pain in the first 12 postoperative weeks.
Study design: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study design
with an perioperative add-on treatment of Namisol or placebo and a follow-up period of 24
weeks.
Study population: Forty patients will be recruited from the outpatient clinic of the
department of surgery of the Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center. Patients will have
persistent or intermittent abdominal pain, due to underlying intra-abdominal pathology
including diverticulitis, Crohn's disease, chronic pancreatitis, ulcerative colitis,
endometriosis, or abdominal adhesions. Other intra-abdominal pathology may be included if
causing pain and if judged appropriate by the investigator. Patients will be planned to
undergo elective, open abdominal surgery with planned use of an epidural catheter for
perioperative analgesia. The surgical procedure will have an estimated duration of at least
two hours, excluding the time to induce anesthesia.
Intervention: Namisol®, a tablet with standardized Δ9-THC content, or identical matching
placebos will be administered orally to evaluate the analgesic properties of Namisol®
administered as add-on perioperative treatment. The study medication is given from the day
before surgery (day -1: 5 mg in the afternoon and in the evening) up to the fifth day after
surgery (day 0 to +5: 5 mg four times daily).
Primary and secondary study parameters: The primary study outcome is postsurgical pain
intensity during the first five postoperative days, reflected by the primary endpoint: the
area under the curve of the VAS scores in the first five days (AUC5days) after surgery. The
secondary outcome is the incidence of persistent postsurgical pain 12 weeks after surgery.
Other study parameters: In addition to the primary and secondary outcomes, several other
outcome parameters will be collected. These include measures of postsurgical pain intensity
at 24 weeks after surgery, measures of analgesic efficacy (postoperative consumption of
other analgesics), central nervous system processing and sensitization in the first 5 days
and after 6 and 12 weeks after surgery (QST, Von Frey testing, and brush stroke testing),
postoperative sedation level (Ramsay Scale), and immune system response during 72 hours
after surgery and after 6 weeks (ILs, MMPs) are investigated. In addition, questionnaires
are filled out to examine parameters related to side effects and postoperative recovery (VAS
Bond&Lader, VAS Bowdle, HADS, SF-36, PCS, PASS, QoR-40, AppLe, and TSQM). Two variants in
genetic CYP2C9 polymorphisms will be genotyped and three variants in genetic CYP2C19
polymorphisms will be genotyped.
Nature and extent of the burdens, risks, and benefits: Participation means three or four
visits to the outpatient clinic in addition to usual care, including the screening visit.
Various measurements, including blood samples (seven additional samples over the entire
study period), will be conducted during each visit. The participating patients may
experience better pain relief in the postoperative period and may benefit from a reduced
incidence of persistent postsurgical pain, but are subject to more intense diagnostics and
observation.
;
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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