Effectiveness of Ketamine in Malignant Neuropathic Pain Relief (KETA-1)
Pain, Intractable
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pain, Intractable focused on measuring Pain Management, Ketamine, Palliative care
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Age 18-70 years. In-patient. Cancer pain judged to have a neuropathic component. Clinically normal renal and hepatic function. Able to cooperate and understand information. Worst pain at rest or on movement 5 or more (NRS 0-10). Pain currently treated with continuous subcutaneous morphine infusion. The daily morphine dose is 48mg or more per 24 hours and a 30% increase in the daily dose has not provided sufficient pain relief.
Not treated with ketamine during the last 48 hours prior to inclusion.
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Exclusion Criteria:
Reduced renal or hepatic function. Suspicion of morphine toxicity (sedation, hallucination, myoclonus, increasing pain).
Increased intracranial pressure (suspicion of cerebral metastases) or cerebral metastases.
Unable to cooperate/ understand information. Worst pain at rest or on movement less than 5 on NRS. Current treatment with other opioids than morphine. The patient is undergoing radiotherapy in the pain area, or has received radiotherapy in the pain area within the last four weeks.
Changes in the use of analgesics (paracetamol, NSAIDS), adjuvant drugs (antidepressants, antiepileptic, corticosteroids, muscle relaxants) or their dosages less than 2 days prior to inclusion or during the study period.
Pregnant and lactating women. Any situation in which an increase in blood pressure would constitute a hazard. Acute intermittent porphyria. Psychiatric illness, epilepsy, alcoholism, glaucoma. Hypersensitivity to any of the drugs ingredients. Current treatment with ketamine.
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Sites / Locations
- Haukeland University Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Placebo Comparator
Ketamine
Placebo
Ketamine 1 mg per kg per 24 hours as subcutaneous infusion via syringe driver for 48 hours.
Sodium chloride 0.9% administered as a subcutaneous infusion via syringe driver for 48 hours.