This clinical trial aims to determine the effects of a 6-day low-dose methylprednisolone course on pain, nausea, and total opioid consumption in patients undergoing foot and ankle surgeries. The secondary objective of the study is to determine and monitor the effects of the course on complications following surgery and patient-reported outcomes
The opioid epidemic continues to create a lasting impact on society, leading researchers to focus on ways to decrease opioid prescription rates and subsequently, opioid consumption. Opioid-naïve patients undergoing minor to major surgeries have been shown statistically to be largely affected.1 This includes significant numbers resulting from forefoot surgery specifically with around 6.2% of the mentioned population being at risk for new persistent opioid use. This has provoked researchers to seek a new route that decreases exposure to opioid use through proposals for multimodal pain regimes. A recent addition to some of these proposed treatments has been a 6-day low-dose oral methylprednisolone taper beginning on the day of surgery. This has been tested with "terrible triad" elbow injuries, distal radius fractures, and total shoulder arthroplasties with promising results showing decreased consumption of the as-needed opioid prescription. Furthermore, the results of these studies show a significant decrease in pain and increased range of motion following surgery. This is likely due to the anti-inflammatory functioning of glucocorticoids, without inhibiting the healing process. Based upon the findings stated above, the proposed research will attempt to apply this new pain regime to foot and ankle surgeries, specifically forefoot, ankle, and Achilles surgeries, to take another step towards bettering perioperative care with opioid-free treatment
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
180
Methylprednisolone is a corticosteroid with anti-inflammatory properties and immune suppression. This study will utilize a 6-day Medrol Dosepak: a tapered low-dose corticosteroid course taken orally once a day. This includes 6 tablets on day 1 (24 mg), 5 tablets on day 2 (20 mg), 4 tablets on day 3 (16 mg), 3 tablets on day 4 (12 mg), 2 tablets on day 5 (8 mg) and 1 tablet on day 6 (4 mg).
This study will utilize a prescription of 20 pills of hydrocodone, 5mg each, to be taken as needed for pain, 1 every 6 hours.
Emory Musculoskeletal Institute, Emory Orthopaedics & Spine Center
Atlanta, Georgia, United States
RECRUITINGEmory Sports Medicine Complex and Emory Orthopaedics and Spine Center
Johns Creek, Georgia, United States
RECRUITINGPost operative Nausea
The subjects will report nausea along the visual analog scale (VAS scale), which they will be educated on before surgery. A VAS for nausea is a straight line with one end labeled "no nausea" and the other end labeled "worst nausea imaginable". The patient marks a point on the line to indicate their nausea level. The distance from the "no nausea" end of the line is used to score the nausea intensity
Time frame: Baseline (Day 0), 7 days post op
Post operative pain
The subject will measure pain along the visual analog scale (VAS scale), which they will be educated on before surgery. A VAS for pain is a straight line with one end labeled "no pain" and the other end labeled "worst pain imaginable". The patient marks a point on the line to indicate their pain level. The distance from the "no pain" end of the line is used to score the pain intensity
Time frame: Baseline, 0.25 months, 1.5 months, 3 months, 6 months
Post operative opioid consumption
Total number of opioids consumed each day will be captured.
Time frame: Baseline (Day 0), 7 days post op
Complications due to the Medrol Dosepak
Complications will be monitored via radiographs and clinical analyses at post-operative appointments for impaired wound-healing and infection
Time frame: 1.5 months, 3 months, 6 months
Patient reported outcomes
Patient-reported outcomes will be measured along the 12-item Short Form Health Survey which measures the impact of their current health on everyday life, the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) which measures physical, mental, and social health and the VAS scale, which measures pain at rest
Time frame: Baseline (pre operative assessment), Post operation (6 months)
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