Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Division of Prehospital Services, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
BMJ Open. 2020 Nov 12;10(11):e041556. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-041556.
Intranasal (IN) naloxone is widely used to treat opioid overdoses. The advantage of nasal administration compared with injection lies in its suitability for administration by lay people as it is needless. Approved formulations of nasal naloxone with bioavailability of approximately 50% have only undergone trials in healthy volunteers, while off-label nasal sprays with low bioavailability have been studied in patients. Randomised clinical trials are needed to investigate efficacy and safety of approved IN naloxone in patients suffering overdose. This study investigates whether the administration of 1.4 mg naloxone in 0.1 mL per dose is non-inferior to 0.8 mg intramuscular injection in patients treated for opioid overdose.
Sponsor is the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The study has been developed in collaboration with user representatives. The primary endpoint is the restoration of spontaneous respiration≥10 breaths/min based on a sample of 200 opioid overdose cases. Double-dummy design ensures blinding, which will be maintained until the database is locked.
The study was approved by the Norwegian Medicines Agency and Regional Ethics Committees (REC: 2016/2000). It adheres to the Good Clinical Practice guidelines as set out by the International Council for Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Pharmaceuticals for Human Use.Informed consent will be sought through a differentiated model. This allows for deferred consent after inclusion for patients who have regained the ability to consent. Patients who are unable to consent prior to discharge by emergency services are given written information and can withdraw at a later date in line with user recommendations. Metadata will be published in the Norwegian University of Science and Technology Open repository. Deidentified individual participant data will be made available to recipients conditional of data processor agreement being entered.
EudraCT Registry (2016-004072-22) and Clinicaltrials.gov Registry (NCT03518021).
鼻内(IN)纳洛酮被广泛用于治疗阿片类药物过量。与注射相比,鼻腔给药的优势在于它适合非专业人员使用,因为它不需要注射。已批准的鼻腔纳洛酮制剂的生物利用度约为 50%,仅在健康志愿者中进行了试验,而生物利用度低的非标签鼻腔喷雾剂已在患者中进行了研究。需要进行随机临床试验来研究批准的 IN 纳洛酮在过量服用的患者中的疗效和安全性。本研究调查了在接受阿片类药物过量治疗的患者中,每剂量 0.1 毫升给予 1.4 毫克纳洛酮是否不劣于 0.8 毫克肌肉注射。
赞助商是挪威科技大学。该研究是与用户代表合作开发的。主要终点是根据 200 例阿片类药物过量病例的样本,恢复≥10 次/分钟的自主呼吸。双盲设计确保了盲法,该盲法将一直保持到数据库锁定。
该研究已获得挪威药品管理局和地区伦理委员会的批准(REC:2016/2000)。它遵守国际人用药品注册技术协调会规定的良好临床实践指南。将通过差异化模型征求知情同意。对于已经恢复同意能力的患者,可以在纳入后延迟同意。对于无法在紧急服务部门出院前同意的患者,将提供书面信息,并根据用户建议在以后的日期撤回。元数据将在挪威科技大学开放知识库中发布。将根据数据处理者协议的达成情况,向接收方提供经过去识别的个体参与者数据。
EudraCT 注册(2016-004072-22)和 Clinicaltrials.gov 注册(NCT03518021)。