Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT03020875
PHASE4

IV vs Oral Acetaminophen in Spine Fusion Perioperative Care

Sponsor: Hospital for Special Surgery, New York

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The United States is currently experiencing an explosive opioid epidemic. In 2014 alone, 28,647 Americans died from an opioid associated overdose; the annual death toll has increased by over 300% since 2000. The epidemic poses a complex scenario for physicians administering treatment for postoperative pain, as opioids are key analgesic agents in treating moderate to severe pain. In order to reduce the patients risk for long term opioid use and the associated side effects, physicians have begun shifting to multimodal analgesic approaches to treat postoperative pain. These approaches have been found to be similarly efficacious, while also reducing opioid usage and associated side effects, such as: nausea, vomiting, and ileus. This study proposes a multimodal analgesic approach, which the investigators believe will reduce short and long term opioid usage, the associated side effects, and the financial burden. Intravenous acetaminophen is an effective medication for both primary and adjunctive pain management, however its use is limited by a high cost to perceived benefit ratio. Oral acetaminophen is a relatively inexpensive option, although perhaps less effective than the IV option, and also often not feasible to utilize in the immediate post-operative period when patients are unable to safely swallow pills. The hypothesis of this investigation is to understand if adding intravenous acetaminophen to the perioperative care regimen after lumbar spinal surgery will result in improved pain management in the perioperative period while decreasing opioid usage and related complications.

Official title: Single-Center, Randomized Controlled Trial of Intravenous v Oral Acetaminophen Administration in Perioperative Care of 1 and 2 Level XLIFs Supplemented With Bilateral Pedicle Screw Stabilization: a Comparative Effectiveness Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 85 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

166

Start Date

2017-01

Completion Date

2026-03

Last Updated

2025-04-13

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DRUG

Ofirmev

Intravenously administered acetaminophen.

DRUG

Per Os Acetaminophen

Orally administered acetaminophen.

Locations (1)

Hospital for Special Surgery

New York, New York, United States