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RECRUITING
NCT06358040
NA

Opioid Dispenser for Microdiscectomy/Laminectomy

Sponsor: Hospital for Special Surgery, New York

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The opioid crisis continues to plague the United States. While great strides have been made nationwide to decrease overprescribing, improvements are still needed to appropriately educate patients on the safe and responsible use, storage and disposal of opioids. Pain after surgery is often treated with opioid medications. Opioid medications can have side effects. Some side effects are relatively minor (constipation, nausea, vomiting), while others are more severe (sedation, abnormal breathing, etc.) and can lead to serious illness or death. Opioid pain medications when used the wrong way may also be addictive. Due to theses side effects, sometimes patients feel uncomfortable about taking these medications, and doctors prescribe them very cautiously. However, when used properly and safely, opioid pain medications are excellent pain relievers. Addinex, a technology company, has developed a device to help patients take opioids more safely. In this study the investigators aim to enroll a total of 30 patients who undergo spine surgery. Half will be randomly assigned to receive a standard pill bottle with opioids at discharge and will download a mobile app so that they can record their daily pain scores and the number of opioids they take for two weeks after surgery. The other half will receive the new opioid dispenser filled with opioids and a mobile app that generates a passcode that opens that device only at designated times. For this group of patients, every time the patient wants to take an opioid, they need to go to the app, enter their pain score before the app generates a passcode. The investigators will be tracking all study patients' opioid use and pain scores for the two weeks after surgery, will count how many pills they have left over 14 days after their surgery during a live telehealth session, and ask patients how they liked using the device. Results from this study will help understand if the Addinex device could potentially be useful to patients in the future after surgeries as opposed to typical pill bottles.

Official title: Use of a Novel Device to Dispense Postoperative Opioids in Patients Undergoing Microdiscectomy/Laminectomy: A Pilot Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2026-10

Completion Date

2026-12

Last Updated

2025-12-08

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Opioid-Dispensing Device

Addinex Opioid-Dispensing Device

OTHER

App

Addinex App

OTHER

Standard Opioid Pill Bottle

Standard Opioid Pill Bottle

Locations (1)

Hospital for Special Surgery

New York, New York, United States