Sickle Cell Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparing Acute Pain Management Protocols for Patients With Sickle Cell Disease
Verified date | June 2017 |
Source | Duke University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The goal of this pilot study is to improve emergency department (ED) pain management for adults with sickle cell disease. Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most common genetic disorder in the United States, and occurs primarily among African Americans. Management of painful episodes associated with SCD, referred to as vaso-occlusive crises (VOC), is the most common reason for SCD patients to visit the ED. Currently, there is no standard approach to managing VOC pain in the ED that is widely accepted and used, and pain management for vaso-occlusive crisis in persons with SCD is very different between providers and not based on research. Many times, patients who come to the ED with sickle cell pain feel that they do not receive adequate pain control. If EDs could provide efficient, effective, safe, patient-centered analgesic management, it may be possible to improve pain management for adults with SCD experiencing a VOC. Guidelines for treating vaso-occlusive crises caused by sickle cell disease will soon be published by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health. These guidelines recommend patient-specific pain treatment protocols or a standardized pain management protocol for SCD when a patient does not already have a pain treatment protocol designed for them. The purpose of this pilot study is to compare these two ways to treat vaso-occlusive pain in the ED for adults with sickle cell disease, and to determine if a large randomized controlled trial is feasible and required.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 106 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | May 31, 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 21 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Adult SCD patients with genotypes SS, SC, SB+, or SB- Exclusion Criteria: - Patients with sickle cell trait - Allergic to both morphine sulfate and hydromorphone, - Patients who have an explicit care plan that states they cannot be admitted to the hospital for pain control, - Non-English speaking, - Patients admitted for a medical complication, - Record of >24 ED visits in the prior 12 months, - Children |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Cincinnati Medical Center | Cincinnati | Ohio |
United States | Mount Sinai Hospital | New York | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Duke University | Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), University of Cincinnati |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Difference in Pain Score as Measured by a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) | Each ED study visit was the unit of analysis for the statistical methods addressing the primary outcome. The primary outcome was change in pain score from arrival to discharge. Pain severity was assessed at arrival and discharge from ED using a 100 mm visual analogue scale (VAS). The VAS range is 0 to 100 with 0 indicating "no pain" and 100 indicating "pain as bad as it could be" or "worst imaginable pain".Discharge was defined by which one of the following occurred first: (a) decision to admit to hospital; (b) patient physically leaves the ED to home; or (c) after six hours of observation in the ED. Thus, the difference in pain scores were calculated as the arrival minus discharge VAS scores, with higher positive pain difference or change scores indicating greater pain reduction. | Arrival in ED to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Change in Pain Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) Scores Over Time | Pain severity was assessed at arrival and every 30 minutes until discharge from the ED using a 100 mm visual analogue scale (VAS). The VAS range is 0 to 100 with 0 indicating "no pain" and 100 indicating "pain as bad as it could be" or "worst imaginable pain". Discharge was defined by which one of the following occurred first: (a) decision to admit to hospital; (b) patient physically leaves the ED to home; or (c) after six hours of observation in the ED. A hierarchical random coefficients regression model for repeated measurements (type of mixed hierarchical mixed-effect model) was conducted on the pain scores collected at six time points (arrival, post-placement 30-min, 60-min, 90-min,120-min, discharge) to evaluate the trajectory of change in pain. Discharge occurred at 120 minutes or later during each visit, with the exception of one discharge at 54 minutes. |
Every 30 minutes from arrival in ED to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of Nausea During Emergency Department Visits | Nausea at any point from placement until discharge, based on nausea data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. Thus, a nausea variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that nausea was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in Emergency Department (ED) treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of Vomiting During Emergency Department Visits | Vomiting at any point from placement until discharge, based on vomiting data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. Thus, a vomiting variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that vomiting was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of a Decrease in Systolic Blood Pressure Greater Than or Equal to 20% of Baseline During Emergency Department Visit | Decrease in systolic blood pressure at any point from placement until discharge, based on blood pressure data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. A systolic variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that a >= 20% decrease of baseline systolic blood pressure was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of a Decrease in Diastolic Blood Pressure Greater Than or Equal to 20% of Baseline During Emergency Department Visit | Decrease in diastolic blood pressure at any point from placement until discharge, based on blood pressure data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. A diastolic variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that a > 20% decrease of baseline diastolic blood pressure was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of Oxygen Desaturation (< 95%) (YES) During Emergency Department Visit | Saturation of peripheral capillary oxygen < 95% (SPO2 < 95%) at any point from placement until discharge, based on SPO2 data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. Thus, a SPO2 variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that SPO2 < 95% was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of Respiratory Distress (YES) During Emergency Department Visit | Respiratory distress at any point from placement until discharge, based on data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. Thus, a respiratory distress variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that respiratory distress was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of Sedation During Emergency Department Visit | Severe-to moderate sedation at any point from placement until discharge, based on sedation data collected every 30 minutes during that time period. Thus, a sedation variable was derived in which 0=no and 1=yes that moderate-severe sedation was reported by the patient at least once during the placement to discharge time interval. Sedations scoring was as follows: None was defined as "awake and alert", Mild sedation was defined as "responds to voice", Moderate sedation was defined as "responds to touch, with or without voice" and Severe sedation was defined as "somnolent, difficult to arouse". | From placement in ED treatment room to discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of the Need for Supplemental Oxygen During Emergency Department Visit | Need for supplemental oxygen during the Emergency Department stay; this was determined at discharge. | Following the initiation of opioid therapy until discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of the Administration of Naloxone During Emergency Department Visit | Naloxone administered during the Emergency Department stay; this was determined at discharge. | Following the initiation of opioid therapy until discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours | |
Secondary | Incidence of the Need for Assistive Ventilation | Intubation or other assistive ventilation techniques - including bag, valve, or mask was performed during the ED stay; this was determined at discharge. | Following the initiation of opioid therapy until discharge from the ED, up to 6 hours |
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