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Intravenous Methadone in Perioperative Acute and Chronic Management in Chinese Adult Cardiac Surgical Patients

Primary Purpose

Pain, Postoperative, Pain, Acute, Pain, Chronic

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phase
Phase 3
Locations
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Methadone
Morphine
Sponsored by
Chinese University of Hong Kong
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Postoperative focused on measuring cardiac surgery

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria: Aged 18 or older Elective primary isolated coronary artery bypass grafting, aortic valve repair/replacement, mitral valve repair/replacement or combined coronary artery bypass/valve procedure via sternotomy Expected extubation within 12 hours of surgery Exclusion Criteria: emergency surgery aortic surgery redo surgery preoperative renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy or creatinine clearance <30ml/min (calculated by Cockcroft-Gault Formula liver dysfunction (liver enzymes twice upper limit normal) LVEF < 40% at baseline mechanical circulatory support in perioperative period history of chronic pain or who regularly used pain medications (except paracetamol and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) history of psychiatric illnesses or illicit drug use intraoperative use of remifentanil unable to provide informed consent

Sites / Locations

    Arms of the Study

    Arm 1

    Arm 2

    Arm Type

    Experimental

    Active Comparator

    Arm Label

    Methadone group

    Morphine group

    Arm Description

    Upon induction of anaesthesia, intravenous methadone 0.2mg/kg (maximum dose 20mg) in blind labelling will be administered by infusion over 30 minutes. No further morphine will be given throughout the operation, but administration of Intraoperative fentanyl will be left to the discretion of the attending anaesthesiologists

    Upon induction of anaesthesia, intravenous morphine that is of equipotent dose as 0.2mg/kg methadone or 20mg methadone if maximum dose of interventional drug is reached) in blind labelling will be administered by infusion over 30 minutes. No further morphine will be given throughout the operation, but administration of Intraoperative fentanyl will be left to the discretion of the attending anaesthesiologists

    Outcomes

    Primary Outcome Measures

    Proportion of patients that can be recruited
    defined as the number of patients that fit the recruitment criteria divided by the total number of elective cardiac surgical patients over a period of time
    Proportion of patients excluded based on inclusion and exclusion criteria
    Number of patients excluded divided by the total number of elective cardiac surgical patients over a period of time
    Cardiac arrhythmia from side effects of methadone
    New-onset cardiac arrhythmia or prolonged QTc attributed to methadone
    Cardiac arrhythmia from side effects of methadone
    New-onset cardiac arrhythmia or prolonged QTc attributed to methadone

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    Ventilator time
    The time at which the patient is successfully weaned to spontaneous breathing according to ICU ASV protocol
    Total morphine consumption
    Morphine consumption within 24 hours after operation
    Intraoperative fentanyl consumption
    Fentanyl consumption intraoperatively
    Pain score at rest
    Measured using numerical rating scale. It ranges from 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Pain score on exertion
    Measured using numerical rating scale
    Time to first morphine rescue
    This is the time the patient feels the need to use morphine from patient-controlled analgesia machine
    Nausea and vomiting
    Number of episodes of postoperative nausea and vomiting
    Length of hospital stay
    Number of hours the patient has to stay in hospital
    Length of ICU stay
    Number of hours the patient has to stay in ICU
    BPI at 3 months
    Measured using Brief Pain Inventory which consists of pain measurement that affects daily living from scale 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    BPI at 6 months
    Measured using Brief Pain Inventory which consists of pain measurement that affects daily living from scale 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    NPQ at 3 months
    Measured using Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire that has scale 0-100. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    NPQ at 6 months
    Measured using Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire that has scale 0-100. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    PCS at 3 months
    Measured using Pain Catastrophizing Scale. It consists of 13 items with each item scaled 0-4. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    PCS at 6 months
    Measured using Pain Catastrophizing Scale. It consists of 13 items with each item scaled 0-4. The higher the score, the worse the pain

    Full Information

    First Posted
    May 26, 2023
    Last Updated
    September 13, 2023
    Sponsor
    Chinese University of Hong Kong
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    1. Study Identification

    Unique Protocol Identification Number
    NCT05913284
    Brief Title
    Intravenous Methadone in Perioperative Acute and Chronic Management in Chinese Adult Cardiac Surgical Patients
    Official Title
    Intravenous Methadone in Perioperative Acute and Chronic Management in Chinese Adult Cardiac Surgical Patients: a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
    Study Type
    Interventional

    2. Study Status

    Record Verification Date
    September 2023
    Overall Recruitment Status
    Not yet recruiting
    Study Start Date
    December 1, 2023 (Anticipated)
    Primary Completion Date
    February 1, 2025 (Anticipated)
    Study Completion Date
    April 1, 2025 (Anticipated)

    3. Sponsor/Collaborators

    Responsible Party, by Official Title
    Principal Investigator
    Name of the Sponsor
    Chinese University of Hong Kong

    4. Oversight

    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
    Yes
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
    No
    Product Manufactured in and Exported from the U.S.
    Yes
    Data Monitoring Committee
    Yes

    5. Study Description

    Brief Summary
    Despite modern day improvements in pain treatment and availability of different analgesic modalities, suboptimal postoperative pain control remains an issue in cardiac surgical patients. Poorly controlled acute postoperative pain is associated with adverse physiological outcomes that impair the recovery of cardiac surgical patients. It is associated with decreased patient satisfaction, delayed postoperative ambulation, and the development of chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). Intravenous opioids such as fentanyl and morphine have been the mainstay of perioperative analgesia for cardiac surgery, either by intermittent boluses by healthcare staff or through a patient-controlled device (PCA). The primary problem with this mechanism of delivery is that significant fluctuations in serum opioid concentrations can occur, resulting in effects which range from inadequate analgesia to overdose and respiratory depression. In contrast to intermittent administration of short-acting opioids such as morphine and fentanyl, a single dose administration of methadone can be considered.
    Detailed Description
    Despite modern day improvements in pain treatment and availability of different analgesic modalities, suboptimal postoperative pain control remains an issue in cardiac surgical patients. Acute postoperative pain is common among cardiac surgical patients, particularly within the first 2 days after surgery, with reported at least moderate intensity. There could be many facets for postoperative pain after adult cardiac surgery. Pain can be caused by surgical incisions and dissections, sternal fracture or incomplete bone healing, multiple drainage cannulas and chest tubes and sternal wound infections. Poorly controlled acute postoperative pain is associated with adverse physiological outcomes that impair the recovery of cardiac surgical patients. It is associated with decreased patient satisfaction, delayed postoperative ambulation, and the development of chronic postsurgical pain (CPSP). The association between sternotomy pain and pulmonary complications has been observed, and the sympathetic activation secondary to pain can induce myocardial ischemia and arrhythmias. Pain control has also been pointed out as one of the major concerns to cardiac surgical patients in intensive care unit. Therefore, optimal acute pain control not only can improve clinical outcomes, but also improves patient satisfaction after cardiac surgery. Postoperative pain that persists beyond the normal time for tissue healing is increasingly recognized as an important complication after various types of surgery. According to the International Association for Study of Pain, CPSP is defined as the persistence of pain at surgical site or referred area, at least 3 months following the surgical procedure. CPSP is common after cardiac surgery. The reported incidence was 28% to 56% up to 2 years postoperatively. Several mechanisms have been involved in the development of chronic pain after sternotomy. These include dissection, nerve entrapment by sternal wires, sternal retraction, ribs fractures, and intercostal neuralgia as a consequence of nerve damage during dissection of the internal mammary artery during coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). In addition, poorly controlled pain has been a general risk factor for the development of CPSP. All can stimulate the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines which sensitize the afferent nociceptive fibres to cause chronic pain. CPSP has the potential to impact daily functioning and quality of life of patients, as well as increasing the healthcare costs. CARDpain study reported that among those with CPSP, over 50% had significant pain-related interferences with activities of daily living (family and home responsibilities, recreation and employment) at 3, 6 and 12 months following cardiac surgery. Therefore, apart from optimal acute pain control, it is equally important to prevent and manage CPSP, to ensure better satisfaction and quality of lives for our patients. Intravenous opioids such as fentanyl and morphine have been the mainstay of perioperative analgesia for cardiac surgery, either by intermittent boluses by healthcare staff or through a patient-controlled device (PCA). The primary problem with this mechanism of delivery is that significant fluctuations in serum opioid concentrations can occur, resulting in effects which range from inadequate analgesia to overdose and respiratory depression. These peaks and troughs of analgesia that occur with intermittent opioids administration may explain the suboptimal pain control during the initial postoperative period. In contrast to intermittent administration of short-acting opioids such as morphine and fentanyl, a single dose administration of methadone can be considered. Methadone was conventionally used in cancer and chronic pain management. It can be administered via oral, intravenous, and other parenteral routes. Despite being an often-used alternative to morphine, it remains relatively invisible in perioperative settings. Methadone is a unique opioid that may provide several important potential benefits for surgical patients in the perioperative period. It is a potent mu receptor agonist with a rapid onset and longest half-life (24-36 hours) of the clinically used opioids. According to a pharmacokinetic study, central nervous system effect site methadone concentration rapidly equilibrates with plasma concentrations, evidenced by a short lag time between plasma concentrations and effects (t1/2ke0 4min). This is comparable to the rapid onset and effect compartment equilibration of fentanyl and sulfentanil (5-6min), and in contrast the slow onset time of morphine, where t1/2ke0 has been reported to exceed 4 hours. In addition, as reviewed in an editorial, when methadone is administered at a dose of 20mg or higher, the duration of analgesia approximates the half-life of 24-36 hours. Therefore, a single intravenous dose 20mg administered to an adult at induction of anaesthesia should provide a rapid onset and significant pain relief up to 1-2 days postoperatively, which is the period reported to have the highest pain score after cardiac surgery. Methadone is also a N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist. It has been reported to possess anti-hyperanalgesic and anti-allodynic properties, that is important in preventing pain sensitization and the development of CPSP, which is of high risk in cardiac surgical patients. There have been few randomized controlled trials comparing between intravenous methadone and other opioids for perioperative pain control in cardiac surgery requiring sternotomy, and none in the Asian populations. In addition, the effect of methadone on chronic postsurgical pain in cardiac surgical patients has not been widely reported in literature. Therefore, the primary aim of this pilot randomized controlled trial is a feasibility study to evaluate the protocol and the effect of methadone on acute and chronic pain control after open cardiac surgery, compared with conventional approach of opioid-based analgesia using morphine and fentanyl. In addition, the effects of methadone on opioids consumption, opioid-related side effects, patient satisfaction, postoperative extubation times, and length of stay in hospital and ICU will be determined. The investigators hypothesized that intravenous methadone is associated with a reduction in opioids requirement intraoperatively and in the first 24 hours after surgery, and improvement in acute pain score at 12h after extubation. The secondary hypothesis is that patients administered with methadone would experience less CPSP compared with standard treatment group. The investigators hypothesized that intravenous methadone is feasible and applicable in cardiac anaesthesia, and is associated with opioid-sparing intraoperatively and within 24h after surgery, as well as better acute and chronic pain control when compared to conventional opioid-based approach with morphine and fentanyl in adult cardiac surgical patients. The aims of the study are as follows: To determine the feasibility of using intravenous methadone in adult cardiac surgical patients To evaluate the effect of methadone in acute and chronic pain management in adult cardiac surgical patients requiring sternotomy

    6. Conditions and Keywords

    Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
    Pain, Postoperative, Pain, Acute, Pain, Chronic, Anesthesia
    Keywords
    cardiac surgery

    7. Study Design

    Primary Purpose
    Treatment
    Study Phase
    Phase 3
    Interventional Study Model
    Parallel Assignment
    Model Description
    The patients are randomized to receive either methadone 0.2mg/kg (maximum dose of 20mg) or equipotent dose of morphine, added to a syringe containing saline made up to 50ml in total. Randomization will be carried out by an independent investigator, on the day before operation, from pre-prepared envelops each containing the group assignment of either methadone or morphine group. The group assignment will be done by sequence generation with computer models.
    Masking
    ParticipantCare Provider
    Masking Description
    The study syringes containing the drug solution will be of identical appearance and with blind labelling so that the primary care team and the patient will be blinded to the treatments. An independent assessor blinded to the study will be responsible for the data analysis
    Allocation
    Randomized
    Enrollment
    86 (Anticipated)

    8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

    Arm Title
    Methadone group
    Arm Type
    Experimental
    Arm Description
    Upon induction of anaesthesia, intravenous methadone 0.2mg/kg (maximum dose 20mg) in blind labelling will be administered by infusion over 30 minutes. No further morphine will be given throughout the operation, but administration of Intraoperative fentanyl will be left to the discretion of the attending anaesthesiologists
    Arm Title
    Morphine group
    Arm Type
    Active Comparator
    Arm Description
    Upon induction of anaesthesia, intravenous morphine that is of equipotent dose as 0.2mg/kg methadone or 20mg methadone if maximum dose of interventional drug is reached) in blind labelling will be administered by infusion over 30 minutes. No further morphine will be given throughout the operation, but administration of Intraoperative fentanyl will be left to the discretion of the attending anaesthesiologists
    Intervention Type
    Drug
    Intervention Name(s)
    Methadone
    Intervention Description
    The drug will be prepared by study investigator and then handover to the anaesthesiologist which is blinded to the study. The syringe will be labelled as study drug and given on induction of anaesthesia as intravenous infusion over 30 minutes
    Intervention Type
    Drug
    Intervention Name(s)
    Morphine
    Intervention Description
    The drug will be prepared by study investigator and then handover to the anaesthesiologist which is blinded to the study. The syringe will be labelled as study drug and given on induction of anaesthesia as intravenous infusion over 30 minutes
    Primary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Proportion of patients that can be recruited
    Description
    defined as the number of patients that fit the recruitment criteria divided by the total number of elective cardiac surgical patients over a period of time
    Time Frame
    At recruitment
    Title
    Proportion of patients excluded based on inclusion and exclusion criteria
    Description
    Number of patients excluded divided by the total number of elective cardiac surgical patients over a period of time
    Time Frame
    At recruitment
    Title
    Cardiac arrhythmia from side effects of methadone
    Description
    New-onset cardiac arrhythmia or prolonged QTc attributed to methadone
    Time Frame
    intraoperatively
    Title
    Cardiac arrhythmia from side effects of methadone
    Description
    New-onset cardiac arrhythmia or prolonged QTc attributed to methadone
    Time Frame
    Within 72 hours postoperatively
    Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
    Title
    Ventilator time
    Description
    The time at which the patient is successfully weaned to spontaneous breathing according to ICU ASV protocol
    Time Frame
    Within 24 postoperatively in ICU
    Title
    Total morphine consumption
    Description
    Morphine consumption within 24 hours after operation
    Time Frame
    intraop and postop within 24 hours
    Title
    Intraoperative fentanyl consumption
    Description
    Fentanyl consumption intraoperatively
    Time Frame
    intraoperative
    Title
    Pain score at rest
    Description
    Measured using numerical rating scale. It ranges from 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    Within 72 hours postop
    Title
    Pain score on exertion
    Description
    Measured using numerical rating scale
    Time Frame
    within 72 hours postop
    Title
    Time to first morphine rescue
    Description
    This is the time the patient feels the need to use morphine from patient-controlled analgesia machine
    Time Frame
    Postoperatively up to 24 hours
    Title
    Nausea and vomiting
    Description
    Number of episodes of postoperative nausea and vomiting
    Time Frame
    Postoperative within 72 hours
    Title
    Length of hospital stay
    Description
    Number of hours the patient has to stay in hospital
    Time Frame
    upon discharge from hospital (assessed up to day 10)
    Title
    Length of ICU stay
    Description
    Number of hours the patient has to stay in ICU
    Time Frame
    Upon discharge from ICU (assessed up to day 2)
    Title
    BPI at 3 months
    Description
    Measured using Brief Pain Inventory which consists of pain measurement that affects daily living from scale 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 3 months postop
    Title
    BPI at 6 months
    Description
    Measured using Brief Pain Inventory which consists of pain measurement that affects daily living from scale 0-10. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 6 months postop
    Title
    NPQ at 3 months
    Description
    Measured using Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire that has scale 0-100. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 3 months postop
    Title
    NPQ at 6 months
    Description
    Measured using Neuropathic Pain Questionnaire that has scale 0-100. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 6 months postop
    Title
    PCS at 3 months
    Description
    Measured using Pain Catastrophizing Scale. It consists of 13 items with each item scaled 0-4. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 3 months postop
    Title
    PCS at 6 months
    Description
    Measured using Pain Catastrophizing Scale. It consists of 13 items with each item scaled 0-4. The higher the score, the worse the pain
    Time Frame
    At 6 months postop

    10. Eligibility

    Sex
    All
    Minimum Age & Unit of Time
    18 Years
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers
    No
    Eligibility Criteria
    Inclusion Criteria: Aged 18 or older Elective primary isolated coronary artery bypass grafting, aortic valve repair/replacement, mitral valve repair/replacement or combined coronary artery bypass/valve procedure via sternotomy Expected extubation within 12 hours of surgery Exclusion Criteria: emergency surgery aortic surgery redo surgery preoperative renal failure requiring renal replacement therapy or creatinine clearance <30ml/min (calculated by Cockcroft-Gault Formula liver dysfunction (liver enzymes twice upper limit normal) LVEF < 40% at baseline mechanical circulatory support in perioperative period history of chronic pain or who regularly used pain medications (except paracetamol and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) history of psychiatric illnesses or illicit drug use intraoperative use of remifentanil unable to provide informed consent
    Central Contact Person:
    First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
    Man Kin WONG, MBChB
    Phone
    55699559
    Ext
    852
    Email
    mkw118@gmail.com
    Overall Study Officials:
    First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
    Man Kin WONG, MBChB
    Organizational Affiliation
    Chinese Unversity of Hong Kong
    Official's Role
    Principal Investigator

    12. IPD Sharing Statement

    Learn more about this trial

    Intravenous Methadone in Perioperative Acute and Chronic Management in Chinese Adult Cardiac Surgical Patients

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