Vomiting Clinical Trial
— OndangapiOfficial title:
Efficacy of Ondansetron on Vomiting Due to Acute Gastroenteritis in Pediatric During Winter
Verified date | October 2012 |
Source | Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | France: Ministry of Health |
Study type | Interventional |
Acute gastroenteritis is a common disease especially in children. With bronchiolitis and
influenza, she participated widely in weight of winter epidemics that causes problems every
year our health care system, particularly in the pediatric emergency and inpatient since
they are the second leading cause of hospitalization in children. The main symptoms of viral
acute gastroenteritis are diarrhea and vomiting which exposes children to the risk of
sometimes severe dehydration, the most common cause of hospitalization. There is no specific
treatment for these infections. At most, there is a vaccine against severe rotavirus
diarrhea (Rotarix ® and RotaTeq ®), but does not yet official recommendations to use in
France. The treatment of acute gastroenteritis virus is symptomatic and is generally based
on the use of oral rehydration solutions (ORS) whose administration is limited by the
frequent presence of vomiting. Until now, no treatment has demonstrated its effectiveness on
vomiting due to acute gastroenteritis virus in children. Conventional anti-emetics, widely
prescribed, are ineffective in practice, very few studies in this indication and encumbered
side effects. Several drugs have long been used in children to fight against severe vomiting
associated with the administration of anti-cancer chemotherapy, such as granisetron (Kytril
®) and ondansetron (Zofren ®). The mechanism of action of these molecules is well known.
They act both on the enteric nervous system by blocking serotonin receptors. Several
placebo-controlled trials suggest that ondansetron is effective in reducing the number of
vomiting in children emergency consultant for acute gastroenteritis. However, the method
used in these tests and the number of children enrolled has not yet demonstrated the
efficacy of ondansetron on the number of admissions, the number of emergency and return the
cost / benefit ratio of this treatment. In addition, several studies reported the occurrence
of watery stools more frequently in children treated with the placebo group.
Evidence that ondansetron is well tolerated and effective for reducing the severity of
vomiting during acute gastroenteritis pediatrics winter could support the use of this
treatment in routine pediatric emergencies.
This study is a clinical trial, multicenter, controlled versus placebo whose main objective
is to evaluate the efficacy of ondansetron to decrease the intensity of vomiting in children
with acute gastroenteritis during winter emergencies Upon arrival to the emergency room
after signing. Consent, an ECG is performed in eligible patients. Children meet all the
criteria for inclusion and non-inclusion receive, at random, one of two treatments:
ondansetron (active) or placebo. The study does not alter the usual care of the child to the
emergency room. After passing emergency, patients will be followed in the study for 8 days,
through a phone call home to J3 and J7. The total duration of patient participation in the
study is 8 days, including 4 hours emergencies (usual transit time to emergencies).
Status | Terminated |
Enrollment | 20 |
Est. completion date | October 2014 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2014 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 6 Months to 15 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Age = 6 months and = 15 years - Children who had more than 3 non bilious vomiting and bloodless within 12 hours before emergency department visit - Children whose parents agree to be contacted by phone - Completion of a medical examination (to communicate results to the patient) - Informed consent and written / holder (s) of parental authority (s) present Exclusion Criteria: - Children with a congenital long QT (ECG prior to inclusion required) - Children with and / or current symptomatic cardiovascular - Children with a shock - Children with a concomitant surgical pathology - Notion of head trauma within 3 days before the emergency department visit - Suspicion of intracranial hypertension (intracranial hypertension) - Children who underwent surgery within 14 days before the emergency department visit - Suspected acute can be alone responsible for vomiting, such as: discovery of diabetes, acute adrenal insufficiency, including acute neurological acute meningitis, acute respiratory illness with cough emetogenic acute otitis media, acute pyelonephritis, .. . . - Child tracking to one of the following chronic conditions treated: heart o - pulmonary - digestive (except gastroesophageal reflux) - kidney - hematologic (immunosuppression / SCD) - endocrine / metabolic (diabetes, adrenal insufficiency) - Phenylketonuria - Allergy or intolerance to ondansetron or any of the ingredients of the syrup - Children who received treatment with an anti-emetic (Primperan ®, Motilium ®, vogalene ®) within 24 hours before emergency department visit - Pregnancy or breastfeeding - No affiliation to a social security scheme (beneficiary or assignee) - Family not speaking |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | Vincent Gajdos | Clamart |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris |
France,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Success will be defined by the absence of vomiting between 15 minutes and 4 hours after administration of study treatment. | Success will be defined by the absence of vomiting between 15 minutes and 4 hours after administration of study treatment. | the absence of vomiting between 15 minutes and 4 hours after administration of study treatment. | No |
Secondary | Hospital admissions for acute gastroenteritis, intravenous infusion for rehydration, return emergency department visit, severity and duration of diarrhea and vomiting. Treatment safety will also be assessed. These criteria will be assessed within 7 days | Hospital admissions for acute gastroenteritis, intravenous infusion for rehydration, return emergency department visit, severity and duration of diarrhea and vomiting. Treatment safety will also be assessed. These criteria will be assessed within 7 days after the departure of emergencies. |
These criteria will be assessed within 7 days after the departure of emergencies. | No |
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