Treatment Trials

8 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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RECRUITING
ENA-001 for Opioid Induced Respiratory Depression
Description

This study is a Phase I clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic (PK) and pharmacodynamic (PD) profiles with single intravenous (IV) and intramuscular (IM) doses of ENA-001.

RECRUITING
Wearable Wireless Respiratory Monitoring System That Detects and Predicts Opioid Induced Respiratory Depression
Description

An observational study will be conducted in approximately 14 participants to evaluate the ability of a wearable, wireless acoustic Respiratory Monitoring System (RMS) to accurately measure a participant's respiratory rate, tidal volume, minute ventilation, and duration of apnea in a noisy environment. Sensor accuracy will be measured with adaptive filtering and active noise cancellation turned on versus turned off.

COMPLETED
Pupillary Unrest in Ambient Light, and Relationship to Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression
Description

Volunteers will receive a weight-based opioid (remifentanil) infusion for 10 minutes. In the first run, serial pupillary measurements (pupillary unrest, pupil diameter) will be taken at baseline, and at 2.5-minute intervals during the infusion and a 25-minute recovery period afterwards. After a washout period, the experiment will be repeated in each subject (second run). The two runs differ only by presence versus absence of verbal interaction.

TERMINATED
Precision Medicine in Anesthesia: Genetic Component in Opioid-induced Respiratory Depression
Description

The concept of precision medicine - taking individual variability into account when planning preventions and interventions - is not new but is quickly gaining attention in this age of powerful methodology of patient characterization and development of tools to analyze large sets of data. Oncology is the most obvious field in which this information has been readily applied. Increasing focus, nationally and internationally, on developing broad databases of patient genetic information and research efforts evaluating those data will, hopefully, lead to the development and application of evidence-based data enhancing the practice of all fields of medicine. It has yet to become obvious how this information can best be applied to the field of anesthesiology. Most genomics work in anesthesia has been focused in the area of pain medicine. There is a known genetic influence on the potency of opioid-induced analgesia, however; a genetic component of opioid-induced respiratory depression has yet to be thoroughly evaluated. Respiratory depression plays a role in clinical care - from procedures requiring sedation with monitored anesthesia care to treating post-opertative pain and chronic pain - but perhaps its largest current role in the public arena is the unfortunate deaths caused by side effects due to drug overdose. Personalized medicine remains on the horizon for the field of anesthesia, but, as genetic testing becomes more affordable and mainstream in clinical practice, the potential applications are broad. Most readily would be its incorporation into development of patient specific pain regimens. Respiratory depression is a potentially lethal side effect of opioid therapy. In light of the opioid epidemic and CDC-scrutiny of opioid use, determining genetic profiles susceptible to respiratory depression could prove useful in further tailoring the treatment of pain both in the perioperative setting and in the chronic pain management setting.

COMPLETED
PRediction of Opioid-induced Respiratory Depression In Patients Monitored by capnoGraphY
Description

PRODIGY is a prospective, multi-center, post-market, international cohort study. The primary objective of this study is to derive a score to identify subjects at risk to have respiratory depression (RD) episodes in patients undergoing opioid therapy in the hospital ward and monitored by capnography. The score will be derived by using subjects within the derivation cohort and internally validated using subjects within the validation cohort. The primary endpoint used to derive the score will be the occurrence of RD episodes derived by Capnostream 20p device memory data combined with clinical data and validated by an independent Clinical Endpoint Committee (CEC) during the study course.

UNKNOWN
Antagonism of Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression by CX1739 With Preservation of Opioid Analgesia
Description

The study is an investigation to assess the capacity of ascending doses of CX1739 to antagonize the respiratory depressive effect of remifentanil. The study will also investigate whether ascending doses of CX1739 reduce the analgesic effect of remifentanil or alter the BIS measure of sedation and will evaluate the safety of CX1739 when used in conjunction with remifentanil.

COMPLETED
Predictors of Opioid-Induced Respiratory Depression (OIRD)
Description

Purpose of the Study: (1) To classify an individual subject's ventilatory response in terms of respiratory depression to a bolus of remifentanil under normoxic and hyperoxic conditions. (2) Measurement of specific respiratory parameters to predict the opioid-induced respiratory depression (OIRD) response.

COMPLETED
Critical Respiratory Events in Children Requiring Naloxone: Naloxone Use as Opioid Safety Measure
Description

Opioids are the mainstay of analgesia in hospitalized children but opioid therapy is associated with life-threatening respiratory depression requiring antagonism with naloxone. Hence, it is hypothesized that naloxone requirement can be used as a quality measure of opioid safety. A retrospective medical chart review of 95 patients, who received naloxone for life threatening events, from June 2006-2012, is planned, to identify significant factors associated with risk for opioid induced respiratory depression and formulation of preventive strategies.