Assessment of Injectable Medication Platforms
NCT05367531 · Status: UNKNOWN · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 30
Last updated 2023-02-08
Summary
Background:
While medical advances for in-hospital care rapidly evolve, a mainstay of effective pre-hospital care remains the ability to treat medical emergencies such as anaphylaxis, prolonged seizure, overdose, or uncontrolled bleeding, through rapid administration of appropriate medication. Autoinjectors are used globally to deliver medications in a timely manner, often in environments where immediate access to medical facilities is limited. Rapid administration of intramuscular medication delivery is essential where oral or intravenous delivery is either not possible or ineffective. The purpose of the proposed study seeks to determine the efficiency various types of medication injection administration.
Conditions
- Overdose Antidote
- Bleeding
- Allergic Reaction
Interventions
- DEVICE
-
Autoinjector
For each scenario the appropriate medication administration type will have to be selected amongst groups of options: 1) autoinjectors equivalents (ie medication, needle and syringe attached) 2) prefilled syringes where a needle is attached prior to administration; and 3) standard protocol (i.e. drawing medication from the vial and injecting via syringe/22 gauge needle). Medications options will include 1) Naloxone (opioid overdose) 2) Epinephrine (anaphylaxis) 3) Tranexamic acid (bleeding). The order of administration for each scenario and injection type will be randomized to exclude any bias. To minimize risk to participants, active drug products and live/loaded autoinjectors will not be used. The target injection will be placed in an inanimate object (e.g. orange) or phantom simulator (i.e. inanimate object such as a gel or organic material such as jello or fruit to simulate an injection experience).
- DEVICE
-
Standard Injector
For each scenario the appropriate medication administration type will have to be selected amongst groups of options: 1) autoinjectors equivalents (ie medication, needle and syringe attached) 2) prefilled syringes where a needle is attached prior to administration; and 3) standard protocol (i.e. drawing medication from the vial and injecting via syringe/22 gauge needle). Medications options will include 1) Naloxone (opioid overdose) 2) Epinephrine (anaphylaxis) 3) Tranexamic acid (bleeding). The order of administration for each scenario and injection type will be randomized to exclude any bias. To minimize risk to participants, active drug products and live/loaded autoinjectors will not be used. The target injection will be placed in an inanimate object (e.g. orange) or phantom simulator (i.e. inanimate object such as a gel or organic material such as jello or fruit to simulate an injection experience).
- DEVICE
-
Prefilled
For each scenario the appropriate medication administration type will have to be selected amongst groups of options: 1) autoinjectors equivalents (ie medication, needle and syringe attached) 2) prefilled syringes where a needle is attached prior to administration; and 3) standard protocol (i.e. drawing medication from the vial and injecting via syringe/22 gauge needle). Medications options will include 1) Naloxone (opioid overdose) 2) Epinephrine (anaphylaxis) 3) Tranexamic acid (bleeding). The order of administration for each scenario and injection type will be randomized to exclude any bias. To minimize risk to participants, active drug products and live/loaded autoinjectors will not be used. The target injection will be placed in an inanimate object (e.g. orange) or phantom simulator (i.e. inanimate object such as a gel or organic material such as jello or fruit to simulate an injection experience).
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Canadian Forces Health Services Centre Ottawa
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Gaurav Gupta, MD · CAF
Study Design
- Allocation
- NA
- Purpose
- OTHER
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- SINGLE_GROUP
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Max Age
- 85 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- Yes
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2022-04-30
- Primary Completion
- 2024-12-01
- Completion
- 2025-01-01
Countries
- Canada
Study Locations
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