The purpose of this research study is to identify factors and genes (the DNA material that determines the makeup of the human body) that may be associated with how children respond to pain medication. Specifically, the investigators want to study factors that may be associated with pain sensitivity, morphine requirement after surgery and side-effects from morphine and other pain medications. The investigators expect that the information obtained in this research study will help us to develop more effective, safe, and tailored treatment options in the future.
Opioid drugs as a group have withstood the test of time in their ability to relieve pain. Morphine is the most frequently used "gold standard" opioid for managing surgical pain. Like other opioids, morphine has a narrow therapeutic index and a large inter-patient variability in response. Certain genetic and non-genetic factors are believed to be responsible for variations in analgesic responses and side effects with morphine. Genetic factors determining an individual's pain sensitivity and regulating morphine's pharmacokinetics (transporters) and pharmacodynamics (receptors and signal transduction elements) are likely contributors to such variability. Frequent variations in analgesic response are unfortunately clinically significant with inadequate pain relief at one end of the spectrum of responses and major side effects including potentially fatal respiratory depression due to relative overdosing at the other end. Much of the inter-individual variability in response to a dose of morphine following surgical procedures can be explained by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a subset of the genes that encode proteins involved in pain perception, opioid transport and opioid receptor signaling. The genetic variants of mu opioid receptor (OPRM1), Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), the Multi Drug Resistance Transport protein gene ABC B1, have been associated in small adult studies with varying levels of pain sensitivity, analgesic response to opioids and susceptibility to serious side-effects of opioids such as respiratory depression, sedation and vomiting. Effective and safe acute postoperative pain relief in a subset of children is clinically difficult due to frequent clinical variations in perceptions of pain and responses to opioids. To the investigator's knowledge, there is no other study attempting to individualize perioperative analgesia in children. The investigator's long term goal is to identify factors that modify pain sensitivity and responses to morphine in order to develop more effective, safe and tailored therapies. The overall objective of this application is to evaluate the contribution of individual and combined affects of genetic polymorphisms in OPRM1, COMT and ABC B1 genes and their association with postoperative pain relief and adverse effects with morphine. The investigator's central hypothesis is that specific genetic polymorphisms in genes involved in pain perception, opioid transport and opioid receptor signaling pathways contribute significantly to pain sensitivity, morphine consumption, and morphine's side-effects in children. This study will also explore a set of other important SNPs that might influence pain perception and responses to morphine in children. The data will be analyzed looking at pain scores, morphine doses, incidence of side-effects of morphine including respiratory depression, sedation, vomiting and itching.
Children's Hospital of Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
Stanford University Medical Center
Palo Alto, California, United States
Safety Outcomes
Incidence of serious opioid related adverse effects including respiratory depression, excessive sedation, nausea and vomiting in recovery room.
Time frame: Post-anesthetic recovery room, an expected average of 2 hours
Efficacy Outcome Measures - Opioid interventions
Number of opioid interventions required in the recovery room
Time frame: Post-anesthetic recovery room, an expected average of 2 hours
Efficacy Outcome Measures - Opioid requirement
Total opioid requirement will be measured
Time frame: Post-anesthetic recovery room, an expected average of 2 hours
Efficacy Outcome Measures - Pain Scores
Pain scores as measured by the Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) and the Facial expression, Leg movement, Activity, Cry, and Consolability (FLACC) Scale
Time frame: Post-anesthetic recovery room, an expected average of 2 hours
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Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,000
The Children's Hospital, Denver
Denver, Colorado, United States
University of Miami - Miller School of Medicine
Miami, Florida, United States
Children's Memorial Hospital
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Ochsner Medical Center for Children
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
The Johns Hopkins Hospital
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Boston Children's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
C.S. Mott Children's Hospital
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
St. Louis Children's Hospital
St Louis, Missouri, United States
...and 5 more locations