Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of Expressed Breast Milk, Swaddling and Facilitated Tucking Methods in Reducing the Pain Caused by Orogastric Tube Insertion in Preterm Infants: A Randomized, Controlled Trial
According to the World Health Organization, preterm birth (from 20 to 37 gestation week) is a significant global health problem, as preterm infants represent an estimated 15 million infants per year worldwide. One of the important problems experienced by the preterm infants, leaving their intrauterine environment earlier than normal, while receiving special treatment and care in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is the painful procedures. Exposure to pain may change preterm infants' brain structure and organization as well as impair brain development through oxygen desaturation, leading to generation of free radicals that can damage fast-growing tissues. For this reason, preterm infants need to be supported and protected more in pain procedures. Orogastric Tube (OGT) is a feeding method that is used to support the nutrition of preterms that cannot be fed orally and causes OGT insertion pain. Although non-pharmacological methods are effective in reducing the pain caused by OGT insertion in preterms, a limited number of studies have been found. There was no study using combined nonpharmacological methods to reduce OGT insertion pain.To evaluate the efficacy of the use of expressed breast milk, swaddling and facilitated tucking methods alone and combination in reducing the pain caused by OGT insertion in preterms. Randomized controlled trial. Three level III neonatal intensive care units in Turkey. Preterm infants born 32-34 weeks of gestation were randomly assigned to six groups: routine care group (n=33), swaddling group (n=30), facilitated tucking (n=32), expressed breast milk (n=31), swaddling+expressed breast milk group (n=30), and facilitated tucking+expressed breast milk group (n=31). OGT insertion included four phases: baseline (the last 1 min of the 30 min without stimuli), OGT insertion, recovery (1 min after OGT insertion), recovery (2 min after OGT insertion). Four phases of OGT insertion procedures were videotaped. Premature infant pain profile (PIPP) score, heart rate, and oxygen saturation were assessed by two independent evaluators who were blinded to the purpose of the study. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance for the multiple repeated measurements, bonferroni, Generalised Estimating Equation logistic regression. 187 preterm infants completed the protocol.
Orogastric tube feeding is a feeding method used to support the feeding of newborns who
cannot be fed orally and OGT insertion causes pain. Ottawa Neonatal Pain Interest Group
(2015) and the studies have shown that OGT insertion causes acute pain in newborns. It was
stated that OGT insertion causes pain in newborns and non-pharmacological methods were
effective in reducing this pain. However, there have been no studies in which
non-pharmacological methods (expressed breast milk, swaddling and facilitated tucking
methods) are alone and in combination with OGT insertion procedural pain for preterm infants.
Therefore, the purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of using expressed breast
milk, swaddling and facilitated tucking methods together and alone in reducing the pain
caused by OGT insertion process in preterm infants. Based on the above literature review and
mechanisms, the investigators hypothesized that: (1) Swaddling, expressed breast milk, and
facilitated tucking alone could be more effective than routine care on preterm infant pain
before, during, and after OGT insertion procedure. (2) Pain occur less frequently before,
during, and after OGT insertion procedure in preterm infants treated with combinations of
swaddling, expressed breast milk, and facilitated tucking than in those receiving routine
care. (3) Combined intervention of swaddling+expressed breast milk, and facilitated
tucking+expressed breast milk could be more effective than any single intervention on preterm
infant pain before, during, and after OGT insertion procedure.
Preterm infants were recruited by convenience sampling from level III neonatal intensive care
units of three hospitals in Turkey/Antalya from November 2017 to 2018. Preterm infants
meeting study criteria (n=219) from 2017 to 2018. Participation was refused by 24 parents who
did not want their infants to be videotaped data collection (12), refused anything extra done
to their infants (n=10), were not interested (n=2) and 8 infants did not need OGT insertion;
thus, 187 infants participated in this study. Preterm infants who did participate did not
differ significantly in terms of sex, GA, postnatal age, and body weight. To calculate study
power, the investigators first determined that the effect size was 0.51, based on the mean
Premature Infant Pain Profile (PIPP) scores, respectively, and the correlation (r=0.385) of
PIPP scores between the six groups. Based on this effect size and a significance level of
0.05, the study power (two tailed) with 187 infants was 0.99. Based on the between- and
within-group variances of PIPP scores during OGT insertion procedures the effect size was
0.33. Thus, a sample size of 187 preterm infants was sufficient. Preterm infants were
randomly allocated before the OGT insertion by a neonatal nurse using a random closed
envelope manner to one of the six groups: routine care group, swaddling, expressed breast
milk, facilitated tucking, swaddling+expressed breast milk, and facilitated tucking+expressed
breast milk group. After obtaining parental written consent, neonatal nurse who apply OGT
insertion randomized the infant and learned the allocation group. The nurses could not be
blinded to the allocation because of the nature of the intervention. However, the outcome
assessment of the videos was blinded. OGT insertion procedure was conducted by the clinical
nurse in NICU within the scope of treatment for preterm infants in the case when clinical
physician was deemed as necessary. The assigned treatment condition was administered by one
researcher. In the routine care group, while a neonatal nurse performed the OGT insertion
procedure, physiological measurements of the highest value of heart rate and the lowest value
of oxygen saturation were recorded by one researcher 1 min before the procedure, during the
process and after the process in 1st and 2nd minutes acquired for each infant in the unit
with an individual monitor. In the swaddling group, swaddling process was applied 10 minutes
before the painful procedure. The swaddled newborns remained in the swaddling during the
procedure and for 5 minutes after the procedure. In the study, breast milk was given slowly
to the upper part of the tongue of each preterm infant from his/her own mother as a single
dose before OGT insertion. In the expressed breast milk group, preterm was ensured to take
all of 2 ml breast milk by reducing the aspiration risk of breastmilk. The breast milk was
given without touching the tip of the injector to the newborn's mouth. The preterm infants
were not allowed to suck the tip of the injector. In the facilitated tucking group,
facilitated tucking was initiated 3 minutes before OGT insertion in order for the newborn to
feel the fetal position and to cope with the painful procedure. The preterm was kept in fetal
position during the procedure and for 5 minutes after the procedure. In the combined
swaddling and expressed breast milk group, swaddling procedure was conducted by the
researcher to the preterm infant 10 minutes before the OGT insertion procedure. 2 ml breast
milk was administered by the researcher to preterm using a sterile injector as a single dose
for 2 minutes before OGT insertion procedure. In the combined facilitated tucking and
expressed breast milk group, facilitated tucking method was applied right after giving 2 ml
breast milk by the researcher to the preterm 3 minutes before OGT insertion procedure. The
Premature Infant Pain Profile (PIPP) scale was used for the pain assessment. Physiological
indicators were continuously monitored and behavioral indicators (facial images) were
videotaped by a real-time colour video recorder. The digital camera was fixed at a certain
angle via the tripod 30 minutes before the procedure. Pain was scored from videotapes of
infants' faces 10 min before, 2 min during, and 5 min after OGT insertion procedures. PIPP
score was measured by two specialist pain doctors who were blinded to the study purpose, and
to the study group allocation. The inter-rater reliability of the Premature Infant Pain
Profile ranged from 0.97-0.99 (0.97 for baseline [phase 1], 0.97 phase 2, 0.98 phase 3, 0.99
phase 4, respectively). All preterm infants, heart rate and oxygen saturation were measured
using an electrocardiographic bedside monitor and continuously recorded by custom computer
software.
Each OGT insertion included four phases: (1) Baseline: 1 min of baseline was collected at the
end of the 30 min without stimuli. (2) OGT insertion: conducting the OGT measurement,
inserting and fixing OGT (3) Recovery: one min after OGT insertion. (4) Recovery: two min
after OGT insertion. Heart rate, oxygen saturation, and PIPP scores were evaluated by four
phases.
For the statistical analysis of the data obtained in the study, SPSS (Statistical Package for
Social Science) for Windows 22.0 and SAS software, version 9.4 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC,
USA) packaged software were used. In the analysis of the measurements such as heart rate and
oxygen saturation taken from the same newborns at different times, both graphical methods and
repeated measures analysis of variance were used. Paired-sample t-test was applied to the
features found to be significant as a result of repeated measures analysis of variance.
Advanced analysis of the Bonferroni post-hoc test was also performed. Concordance between the
two first evaluators for the PIPP measurements were evaluated using the intraclass
correlation coefficient (ICC).
In order to compare the preterm infants with and without pain in six different application
groups, those having PIPP values of ≥6 were defined as 1 "pain" and values less than 6 were
defined as 0 "no pain". In the analysis of the repeated measure data obtained from the
preterm infants in six application groups and at different measurement times, the Generalized
Estimating Equation (GEE) method's multiple logistic regression models were used. When the
observations are related with each other as in the data with repeated measures, GEE models
give more effective and unbiased estimates than ANOVA-based models. Statistical significance
was defined as p<0.05.
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