Opioid-free Analgesia for the Management of Acute Post-operative Pain Following Caesarean Section

NCT04539249 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 324

Last updated 2023-07-20

Study results available
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Summary

Background: Multimodal analgesia; a combination of opioid and non-opioid analgesics, for management of acute post-operative pain significantly reduces the incidence of adverse effects associated with liberal post-operative opioid use including sedation, respiratory depression, constipation, ileus, urinary retention, delayed recovery, addiction etc. However, opioid addiction remains a worsening public health problem and have followed administration of opioid analgesics for post-operative pain and subsequent chronic use in many addicts; especially the opioid naive. Caesarean section is a commonly performed surgery and is a common source of first exposure to opioids in women. Trend in post-operative analgesia is moving towards opioid-free (multimodal) analgesia; a combination of non-opioid and adjuvant analgesics. Magnesium sulphate is an adjuvant analgesic. When administered peri-operatively, it has been reported to prolong the duration of spinal anaesthesia, decrease post-operative pain and opioid use without adverse effect.

Aim: To determine the effectiveness and safety of a combination of peri-operative intravenous magnesium sulphate, intravenous paracetamol, and post-operative rectal diclofenac as opioid-free, multimodal analgesia for management of acute post-operative pain after a caesarean section.

Null Hypothesis: Combination of intravenous magnesium sulphate, intravenous paracetamol, and rectal diclofenac as analgesia regimen for acute post-operative pain after a caesarean section is not as effective and safe as a routine opioid-based multimodal analgesia regimen used in the study setting.

Alternate Hypothesis: Combination of intravenous magnesium sulphate, intravenous paracetamol, and rectal diclofenac as analgesia regimen for acute post-operative pain after a caesarean section is as effective and safe as a routine opioid-based multimodal analgesia regimen used in the study setting.

Materials and Methods: A randomized clinical trial, comparing a combination of peri-operative intravenous magnesium sulphate, intravenous paracetamol, and post-operative rectal diclofenac with an opioid-based multimodal regimen as control. Eligible patients will be consecutively selected from among women booked for caesarean section at the Federal Medical Centre, Yenagoa. Control group will receive a combination of post-operative intramuscular pentazocine, intravenous paracetamol and rectal diclofenac. Pain intensity will be determined in both groups and compared. Need for rescue opioid analgesic will be determined in both groups and compared. Incidence of any adverse event in both groups will be determined.

Conditions

  • Acute Post-operative Pain Following Caesarean Section

Interventions

DRUG

Magnesium sulphate

1g of paracetamol as an I.V infusion and 4g of magnesium sulphate as an I.V. bolus preoperatively. Continuous infusion of 1g/hr of magnesium sulphate intraoperatively and for the first 2 hours post-operatively. Further post-operatively, 100 mg of suppository diclofenac 12 hourly, intravenous paracetamol 1g 6 hourly, both over 24 hours. N.B: Intramuscular pentazocine 30 mg (45 mg if patient is \> 70 kg) will be used as rescue analgesia as needed (that is, only on patients' request for further analgesia or following an assessment of moderate to severe pain despite the planned analgesic regimen) at least 4 hourly during the first 24 hours after caesarean section.

DRUG

Pentazocine

Post-operatively, suppository diclofenac 100mg 12 hourly, intramuscular pentazocine 30 mg (45 mg if patient is \> 70 kg) 6 hourly, intravenous paracetamol 1g 6 hourly, all for 24 hours. N.B: Intramuscular pentazocine 30 mg (45 mg if patient is \> 70 kg) will be used as rescue analgesia as needed (that is, only on patients' request for further analgesia or following an assessment of moderate to severe pain despite the planned analgesic regimen) at least 4 hourly during the first 24 hours after caesarean section.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Olakunle Ifeoluwa Makinde

    lead OTHER_GOV

Principal Investigators

  • Olakunle I Makinde, MBChB, MWACS · Federal Medical Centre, Yenagoa

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2020-11-04
Primary Completion
2021-03-30
Completion
2021-03-31

Countries

  • Nigeria

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT04539249 on ClinicalTrials.gov