Pain Clinical Trial
— iCAPOfficial title:
The Influence of Breastfeeding on Pain-specific Event-related Potentials and Bio-behavioural Indicators of Procedural Pain in Newborns: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | November 2019 |
Source | IWK Health Centre |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Background: Even the healthiest infants undergo painful procedures as part of universal
medical care. Untreated early pain is associated with heightened pain response during later
procedures in infancy and alteration in response to pain in childhood. Oral sucrose is
currently considered the standard of care for acute pain relief in infants. Compelling
evidence from 57 randomized controlled trials suggests that oral sucrose reduces
bio-behavioral pain response. However, recent data examining the influence of oral sucrose on
pain-specific brain activity measured using electroencephalogram (EEG) questions the efficacy
of this intervention for reducing pain in the infant brain. Evidence supports the
effectiveness of breastfeeding as a pain relieving intervention, however, no studies to date
have examined the effect of breastfeeding on pain-specific activity in the newborn brain.
Aims: The primary aim of this study is to examine the influence of breastfeeding in
comparison to oral sucrose on pain-specific activity in the newborn brain during a heel
lance. The secondary aim will be to determine if there is convergence among outcome measures
in either of the intervention conditions.
Methods: Utilizing a single blind, randomized controlled trial design, 126 healthy term
infants will be recruited within the first two days of life. Infants will be randomized to
have a medically indicated heel lance completed in one of two possible conditions: 1)
breastfeeding (n = 63) or 2) sucrose in an infant cot (n = 63). Infants will not be eligible
for study participation if they show signs of lower limb tissue damage, have had previous
surgery or intraventricular hemorrhage, are born to opioid using mothers or with significant
genetic disorders, are unable to breastfeed, or have contraindications to sucrose
administration. Pain-specific brain activity will be recorded on EEG for the duration of the
blood collection. Infant facial response will be video recorded, and heart rate and oxygen
saturation will be measured for calculation of Premature Infant Pain Profile-Revised (PIPP-R)
Score, a reliable and valid bio-behavioral measure of pain in infants' 26-44 weeks
gestational age. For infants randomized to the breastfeeding condition, data collection will
begin with recording of a one-minute baseline (BL1). Following this, a non-painful control
stimulus will be applied to the infant's foot to capture a baseline response on EEG to a
non-painful event. The infant will then be transferred to the mother and active breastfeeding
will be facilitated. A second baseline (BL2) will be recorded prior to heel lance. Pain
response will be recorded from the initiation of the heel lance until procedure completion.
In the sucrose condition, all monitoring will take place while the infant is in a cot
(considered standard of care). Procedures will be consistent with those outlined above with
the exception of administration of 24% oral sucrose two minutes prior to the heel lance.
Analysis and inference will be calculated based on the intention-to-treat principle. Data
from the EEG recording will be grouped into basic waveforms using principal component
analysis. Two one-way analysis of variances will be used to assess the effect of stimulation
type (non-painful control, painful heel lance) and treatment (24% oral sucrose,
breastfeeding) on the principal components. To assess for the effect of treatment on PIPP-R
score, group means will be compared using unpaired Student's t-tests.
Hypotheses: Infants in the breastfeeding condition will demonstrate both lower pain-specific
brain response and lower bio-behavioral pain scores than infants in the sucrose condition.
Significance: This will be the first study to examine the effect of breastfeeding on
pain-specific brain response in infants. In light of the negative consequences of unmanaged
pain in infants, it is imperative that effective pain relieving interventions are utilized.
Given recent evidence questioning the analgesic properties of sucrose, findings will have
important implications for informing optimal pain management practices in infants.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 39 |
Est. completion date | January 29, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | January 29, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A to 72 Hours |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Healthy, full term, normally breastfeeding infants, whose mother is willing to breastfeed during the painful procedure and consents to study participation. Normally breastfeeding infants will be defined as those infants who had fed directly at the breast a minimum of two times in the 24-hours prior to blood collection and whose mother and/or staff nurse reported active sucking and swallowing during those feeds. Infants who have undergone repeated heel lancing for blood glucose and/or bilirubin monitoring (e.g., small or large for gestational age infants, infants born to diabetic mothers, or with hyperbilirubinemia) will be considered eligible, however, diagnosis and the number of prior painful procedures will be recorded and retained for statistical analysis. Exclusion Criteria: - Infants will not be eligible for study participation if they are a twin birth (including all classifications of monozygotic and dizygotic twins) due to the potential for non-independence of outcomes between twin pairs, show signs of infection, significant lower limb tissue damage, have had previous surgery or intra-ventricular hemorrhage, are born to opioid using mothers or with significant genetic disorders, are unable to breastfeed or have contraindications to sucrose administration, or whose parents are unable to provide written informed consent. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Britney Benoit | Halifax | Nova Scotia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Britney Benoit | Dalhousie University, IWK Health Centre |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Pain-specific event related potential | The primary outcome measure will be pain-specific brain activity measured using a dense array neonatal electroencephalogram (EEG) recording that is time-locked to a medically required heel lance. Infant EEG activity will be recorded from a HydroCel Geodesic Sensor Net positioned according to the modified international 10/20 electrode placement system on a 128 Channel Geodesic EEG SystemTM 400 MR series (Electrical Geodesics Incorporated, Eugene, Oregon, USA). Pain-specific event related potentials will specifically be examined and isolated at electrode sites Cz, as previous research has reported pain-specific activity at this site in both infants and adults. | Isolated within the one-minute window post-procedure. | |
Secondary | Premature Infant Pain Profile-Revised | The PIPP-R, which has been revised from the original PIPP developed 14 years ago, is a 7-indicator composite pain measure consisting of 3 behavioural (facial actions: brow bulge, eye squeeze, and naso-labial furrow), 2 physiological (heart rate, oxygen saturation) and 2 contextual (gestational age, behavioural state) indicators of acute pain. A numerical score ranging from 0 - 3 is assigned to each indicator for a maximum score of 18 reflecting the worst possible pain in infants born at greater than 36 weeks' gestational age. A score of 6 or less is considered to indicate minimal or no pain, a score of 6 to 12 indicates mild or moderate pain, and a score of 12 or greater indicates moderate to severe pain. | Baseline, 30, 60, 90, 120 seconds post-procedure. | |
Secondary | Recovery | Time to recovery will be considered the amount of time in seconds that elapses until the infant's heart rate returns to baseline average values. The point at which the infant's heart rate reaches baseline levels and is sustained for no less than five to seven beats following the heel lance will indicate recovery. | In the 30 minute window post-procedure. | |
Secondary | Maternal acceptability | Mothers will be asked to complete an open-ended questionnaire with 3-5 questions (depending on assigned condition) following completion of the study procedures. This questionnaire will focus on assessing maternal acceptability of the use of the assigned breastfeeding or sweet taste intervention as well as the use of neurophysiological imaging technology to measure newborn pain responding in the neonatal period. | Immediately post-procedure. |
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