CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
Phase 3Completed· 338 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Methoxyflurane +2 moredrug
Likely dose
Not stated in record
Structured eligibility isn't available for this trial yet — see the full criteria in the Eligibility tab below.

Standardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.

Search/NCT05137184
NCT05137184Phase 3Completed

A Randomized Controlled, Open-label, Non-inferiority, Three Arm Clinical Study to Assess Inhalation of Low-dose Methoxyflurane, Intranasal Fentanyl, and Intravenous Morphine for Acute Pain in the Pre-hospital Setting

Oslo University Hospital·interventional·Posted Nov 30, 2021·Updated Nov 14, 2023

In Brief

A Phase 3 clinical trial evaluating Methoxyflurane, Fentanyl, and 1 other intervention for Acute Pain and Ambulances. Completed, enrolled 338 participants across 1 site.

Detailed Summary

The study rationale is to provide evidence for early, safe and effective pain management in the ambulance service with non-invasive and fast acting analgesics. Low-dose methoxyflurane and intranasal fentanyl are non-invasive medications that are well-suited for use by ambulance personnel under difficult pre-hospital settings. This is a randomized, controlled, open label, three-arm, non-inferiority, phase 3 drug trial performed in the ambulance service. The randomization will be 1:1:1 to the three treatment groups. Patients 18 years or older with acute pain with Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) ≥4 with normal physiology and capable of giving informed consent will be included null hypothesis (H0) (tested in hierarchic order a-b-c): 1. Methoxyflurane regimen is inferior to intranasal fentanyl regimen or 2. Methoxyflurane regimen is inferior to IV morphine regimen or 3. Intranasal fentanyl regimen is inferior to IV morphine regimen for treating moderate to severe pain, measured by reduction in Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) 10 minutes after administration. The study duration for each participant will be from ambulance scene arrival to patient handover in emergency department. Number of participants: Patient enrolment until successful inclusion of 270 per protocol patients. Primary endpoint is change in NRS from before administration (t0) to 10 minutes after start of administration (t10). The study intervention is one of the three IMPs: * Methoxyflurane: 3 ml inhalation, can be repeated once to a total dose of 6 ml. * Fentanyl intranasal spray: 100 µg IntraNasal, (patients \>70 years 50 µg), can be repeated to maximum total dose 500 µg IN. * Morphine hydrochloride intravenous: 0.1 mg/kg IV (patients \>70 years or fragile 0.05 mg/kg IV), can be repeated to a maximum total dose 0.5 mg/kg IV. Rescue analgesia is all analgesics other than the allocated IMP. If rescue medication is administered before the assessment of primary endpoint at 10 minutes, the patient will not be part of the per-protocol analysis. The hypothesis will be tested and the primary endpoint will be evaluated by the 95% confidence limits (95% CI), and a conclusion of non-inferiority will be made if the 95% CI of the estimated treatment difference fully lie within the inferiority margin. Non-inferiority is determined on the basis of a 1-sided equivalence t test on the per protocol population and confirmed, for sensitivity reasons, on the modified intention to treat population.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesNorway

Timeline

Phase 3CompletedFinished
20222023202420252026
First PostedNov 30, 2021
Enrollment StartNov 12, 2021
Primary CompletionApr 22, 2023
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.4 yearsPosted 4.6 years ago

Interventions

Methoxyfluranedrug

Inhalation of Methoxyflurane

Fentanyldrug

Intranasal Fentanyl

Morphine hydrochloridedrug

Intravenous Morphine