Renal Colic Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Double Blind, Multi-arm Randomized Control Trial, for Efficacy of Intramuscular Diclofenac Versus Intravenous Morphine Versus Intravenous Paracetamol, in Renal Colic Emergency Department Pain Management
Abdominal pain is one of the most common presentations to an emergency department (ED).
Among patients presenting with abdominal pain, a common diagnosis in the Middle East is
renal colic (urolithiasis or Kidney stones). As the patients with renal colic writhe around
in agonizing pain, the first priority in an ED from a patient's perspective is fast and safe
analgesia and to be pain free as early as possible. There are variations in physician
preference to choose initial analgesic drug for managing such pain. Commonly used drugs are:
- Opioids such as Morphine or Fentanyl
- Non steroidal drugs such as Diclofenac, Ketorolac or Brufen
- and Paracetamol intravenous injection.
A robust evidence in comparison of diclofenac versus morphine and paracetamol is lacking.
This study is design to obtain data on efficacy of these three drugs within 30 minutes in a
non inferiority trail.
This will be a double blind RCT, where participants will be enrolled consecutively after
meeting eligibility criteria and obtaining a written informed consent. They will be assign
to one of the three study arms by computer generated randomization process. The study
packets will be prepared by a dedicated nurse or pharmacist who will not a part of
investigating team. Each Patients will receive one analgesic drug (active drug) and two
placebos. Drugs will be given as one intramuscular injection and two intravenous solutions.
Pain score will be recorded using NRS at 0, 30, 60, and 90 minutes. Data will be collected
on standard Data collection form. Each participant will receive analgesia from study packet
which contains, one active drug and two placebos to be administer as one intramuscular and
two intravenous solutions. At any given time every patient will receive one analgesia from
either Diclofenac, Paracetamol or Morphine. If patient pain does not respond to initial
treatments, at 30 minutes a rescue analgesia in form of morphine will be administered till
patient is pain free or NRS<=2 or adverse event to morphine.
Based on the results of previous studies (1-3), proportion of patients achieving more than
50% pain reduction, is between 65-75% for diclofenac, morphine and paracetamol when compared
with other drugs. In each group, 437 patients are required to detect a difference of 10% in
primary outcome, in a superiority trial with power (1-beta) of 90% and significance level
(alpha) of 5% in this study. Considering 15% extra, total sample size required in this
superiority trial will be 1507 patients in total.
Data will be collected on a standard data recording form and it will be converted to
electronic excel sheet hiding patient identifiable details. Continuous variables will be
presented as mean with standard deviation (SD). Categorical variables will be calculated as
proportions and presented with 95% Confidence interval (CI). Statistical analyses will be
undertaken using Stata 12.0 (College Station, Texas).
;
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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