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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06519929
PHASE4

Analgesic Techniques for Rib Fractures

Sponsor: Thomas Jefferson University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study will be a 3-arm, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial comparing three analgesic techniques for rib fractures with a sample size of 24 patients (8 per group). Patients will be randomly assigned to one of the following three groups: 1) ESP block with catheter using ropivacaine (bolus followed by continuous infusion); 2) lidocaine bolus (1 mg/kg) and infusion starting at 1 mg/kg/h; or 3) standard care with multimodal analgesia and opioids. Our specific aims are: 1. To compare the opioid use and pain ratings over the first 72 hours after enrollment. 2. To quantify the changes in vital capacity, oxygen requirement, and freedom from mechanical ventilation that result from the intervention. 3. To explore the impact of ESP blocks and lidocaine infusions on the development of chronic pain and post-discharge opioid use (exploratory). Inclusion Criteria: • Adult patients ≥ 55 years old who have sustained 3 or more unilateral rib fractures and are admitted to the hospital. Exclusion Criteria: * Allergy to amide local anesthetics, lidocaine, or ropivacaine * Pregnancy * Bilateral rib fractures * Coagulopathy (INR \> 1.5; PTT \> 1.5 times ULN, or platelets \< 75,000) * Conduction block on EKG * Total body weight \< 40 kg * Painful distracting injuries: acute thoracic spine fracture, severe traumatic brain injury or spinal cord injury, unstable pelvic fracture, open abdomen * Spine fracture at the level of intended ESP block * Infection near the ESP insertion site or active bacteremia or sepsis * Any patient deemed a poor candidate for ESP block and/or lidocaine infusion will also be excluded

Official title: A Pilot Study Comparing Three Analgesia Approaches for Rib Fractures

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

55 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

24

Start Date

2024-09-23

Completion Date

2025-12-01

Last Updated

2025-09-09

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Conditions

Interventions

PROCEDURE

ESP block with catheter using ropivacaine (bolus followed by continuous infusion)

A total of ropivacaine 75mg will be injected into the plane via the needle, followed by placement of a catheter 3-5 cm into the plane. A continuous infusion of ropivacaine 0.2% will be started at 8 mL/h and may be titrated up to a maximum of 10mL/h. Bolus doses of 5 mL using ropivacaine 0.2% will be permitted for breakthrough pain (pain score ≥ 7/10) and may be administered no more frequently than every 6 hours. Patients will be assessed for LAST twice daily by asking about tinnitus, perioral numbness, or metallic taste. Any patient who responds positively to these symptoms will have infusion stopped for 2 h and then restarted at a rate 2 mL/h lower. If the symptoms occur again, the catheter infusion will be stopped and the catheter removed. After the 72-hour study period the ESP catheter may remain in place if the patient has ongoing analgesia needs or if analgesia is controlled with oral medication the catheter may be removed at request of the treating team.

DRUG

Lidocaine bolus (1 mg/kg) and infusion starting at 1 mg/kg/h

A bolus of 1 mg/kg based on ideal body weight will be given over 10 minutes with a physician present and infusions will be started at 1 mg/kg/h based on IBW. Infusions will run continuously for the first 72 h and can be continued beyond that at the discretion of the treating team if pain persists. Patients will be assessed for LAST twice daily. Any patient with suspected LAST will have lidocaine infusion stopped and a lidocaine plasma level will be sent. If symptoms resolve, the lidocaine infusion can be restarted at a rate 25% lower. If pain is refractory to the lidocaine infusion and multimodal adjuncts, the infusion may be increased to a maximum of 1.5 mg/kg/h (during first 24 h only). The actual duration of the infusion as well as total lidocaine dose given in mg will be recorded. Stopping criteria for lidocaine will include the occurrence of new EKG changes for which an alternative explanation is not more likely as well as LAST symptoms.

Locations (1)

Thomas Jefferson University Hospital

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States