Respiratory Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Control Trial of Intravenous Lidocaine for the Management of Traumatic Rib Fractures: a Single Trauma Centre Trial
Traumatic rib fractures (RF) are a relatively common occurrence in patients of all ages, with
a 10% incidence in all trauma patients and are associated with significant morbidity and
mortality. Adequate analgesia is paramount for preventing pulmonary complications and can
reduce morbidity and mortality. There is longstanding evidence of lidocaine's effectiveness
and safety in the post-operative patient and the investigators hypothesize that this modality
may prove to be ideal in trauma patients with RF. Therefore, it is imperative that
intravenous lidocaine be investigated to ascertain if there is significant benefit for pain
reduction in patients who have sustained rib fractures.
A single-centre, double-blind, randomized control trial to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of
a 72-96 hour IV lidocaine infusion plus standard analgesics versus placebo infusion plus
standard analgesics will be performed on patients (age 18 or older) diagnosed with two or
more traumatic rib fractures ,from blunt thoracic trauma, requiring hospital admission at
Victoria Hospital.
The primary outcome is mean pain score, as measured on the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) when the
patient is at rest and with movement. Secondary outcomes are protocol adherence, patient
satisfaction as measured on the VAS, incidence of respiratory failure requiring mechanical
ventilation, hospital length of stay, ICU length of stay, mortality, incidence of lidocaine
toxicity, treatment regimens (use of additional non-opioid analgesics) and total morphine
equivalents used (including breakthrough doses).
This trial will serve to quantify the analgesic efficacy of intravenous lidocaine for
patients with traumatic rib fractures. Successful completion of a single centre trial will
inform the development of a multi-centre trial powered to demonstrate a reduction in
respiratory failure in the trauma population.
This trial will use a randomized double blind design. All patients (age 18 or older)
diagnosed with two or more traumatic rib fractures requiring hospital admission at Victoria
Hospital will be identified at the time of admission by trauma team members and / or ICU
research assistants. Patients unable to understand or follow instructions in English or
French, and those unable to complete the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) for pain for any reason,
will be excluded.
Any physician member of the inpatient trauma service team, trauma nurse practitioner, or ICU
research assistants may approach patients and their families to discuss participation in the
trial. Research assistants will be responsible for providing the Letter of Information and
Consent Form to families, and storing them once complete. Consented patients will be
randomized at admission using the online randomization tool, like REDCAP, by pharmacy. Once
randomized, research assistants will contact pharmacy to order "Study Drug", but will remain
blinded to study arm
Consented patients will receive either standard care (acetaminophen, NSAIDs, opioids) plus IV
placebo or standard care plus IV lidocaine using a fixed strategy with variable blocks and a
1:1 allocation ratio. The pharmacy will be the only party unblinded to randomization and will
distribute the "Study Drug" [either IV lidocaine or Lactated Ringer's (a clear colourless
solution that is indistinguishable from Lidocaine)] to study participants. All patients will
be followed throughout their hospital stay by our research assistants to assess pain and
secondary outcomes.
IV lidocaine will be administered as a bolus dose of 2 mg/kg (maximum dose 100 mg) followed
by a 2 mg/kg/hr infusion for 72-96 hrs. Lactated Ringer's will be administered at the same
overall rate to the control group. Patient pain scores will be accessed at the bedside using
the VAS at time 0hrs and every six hours for the duration of study drug infusion.
Daily monitoring of the patient will be performed by the trauma team and bedside nurses.
Clinical care will be conducted as usual with the exception of the provision of study drug,
the recording of pain Q6 hours, and the assessment of patient satisfaction at the end of the
72-96 hour infusion. All other patient data will be collected from the patient's EMR and
bedside chart. In accordance with LHSC hospital Lidocaine policy, all study patients will be
on telemetry to monitor for arrhythmias resulting from lidocaine toxicity. As the use of IV
lidocaine is already common in the LHSC patient population, all nursing staff are trained to
detect signs and symptoms of lidocaine toxicity, and will contact the treatment and research
teams if these develop. The study drug infusions will be stopped if any signs of toxicity are
seen. The treating team will be unblinded to randomization group in any cases of suspected
Lidocaine toxicity.
The primary outcome will be mean pain score calculated from the multiple VAS measures
performed during Lidocaine infusions when the patient is at rest and with movement. Secondary
outcomes are protocol adherence, patient satisfaction as measured on the VAS, incidence of
respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation, hospital length of stay, ICU length of
stay, mortality, incidence of lidocaine toxicity, treatment regimens (use of additional
non-opioid analgesics) and total morphine equivalents used (including breakthrough doses).
Secondary outcomes will be recorded by the ICU research assistants on a daily basis during
each patient's index stay. Research assistants will help administer the satisfaction survey
to patients as soon as possible following completion of the 72-96 hour Lidocaine infusion.
The methodology, pain and satisfaction reporting with VAS is very similar to the
investigator's previous work.
A sample size of 26 patients is required to find a difference between two independent group
means using the following parameters: (1) a 20% reduction in VAS score (20mm), (2) 90% power,
(3) probability of a Type I error = 5%, and s stand deviation of 15% (15mm).
An anticipated attrition rate of 20% will be used to ensure enough patients are included for
adequate power. Therefore a minimum of 32 patients will be enrolled in the study.
Continuous data will be reported as mean +/- standard deviation or median and interquartile
range, depending on the distribution of each data point. Categorical data will be reported as
percentages with corresponding 95% confidence intervals. The mean pain score will be compared
between treatment groups using Student's T-test. Findings with a Type I error rate < 5% will
be considered statistically significant. Analyses of secondary outcomes will be primarily
descriptive. Any significance testing of these outcomes will be strictly
hypotheses-generating.
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