CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
Phase 4Recruiting· 128 target
Drug / intervention
The triamcinolone acetonide plus ropivacaine group +1 moredrug
Likely dose
The triamcinolone acetonide plus ropivacaine group 20mLfrom 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/NCT06779396
NCT06779396Phase 4RecruitingUpdate OverdueUpdated 17mo ago · Completion was 15mo ago
Enrollment Stalled
Update Overdue

Pre-emptive Scalp Infiltration with Triamcinolone Acetonide Plus Ropivacaine for Post-Craniotomy Pain in Children

Beijing Tiantan Hospital·interventional·Posted Jan 16, 2025·Updated Jan 16, 2025

In Brief

A Phase 4 clinical trial evaluating The triamcinolone acetonide plus ropivacaine group and The ropivacaine group for Pain and Postoperative Children. Currently recruiting, targeting 128 participants across 1 site.

Signals

Enrollment appears stalled

Detailed Summary

At present, pediatric postoperative analgesia has not been fully understood and controlled, particularly craniotomy surgery. On the one hand, professional evaluation of postoperative pain for young children is difficult; on the other hand, the particularity of craniotomy adds (such as consciousness obstacle, sleepiness, et al) disturbance to the pain assessment in children. Although opioids administration is regarded as the first-line analgesic for post-craniotomy pain management, it may be associated with delayed awakening, respiratory depression, hypercarbia and it may interfere with the neurologic examination. For the avoidance of side-effects of systemic opioids, local anesthetics administered around the incision have been performed clinically. However, some studies revealed that the analgesic effect of local anesthetics was unsatisfactory due to its short pain relief duration, steroid as adjuvant can enhance postoperative analgesia and prolong postoperative analgesia time. As is reported that postoperative pain of craniotomy is mainly caused by skin incision and reflection of muscles, preventing the liberation of inflammatory mediators around the incision seems to be more effective than simply blocking nerve conduction.However, there has not been reported about local application of triamcinolone acetonide on scalp infiltration. Thus, the investigators suppose that pre-emptive scalp infiltration with steroid (triamcinolone acetonide) plus local anesthetic (ropivacaine) could relieve postoperative pain after craniotomy in children.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesChina
Collaborators--

Timeline

Phase 4RecruitingOverdue
20252026
First PostedJan 16, 2025
Enrollment StartJan 10, 2025
Primary CompletionMar 31, 2025
Study CompletionMay 31, 2025
TodayJul 1, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 3 monthsPosted 1.5 years ago

Interventions

The triamcinolone acetonide plus ropivacaine groupdrug

The solution prepared comprised a mixture of 20mL of 0.2% ropivacaine(40mg) with 4 mg of triamcinolone acetonide. The assigned solution will be injected subcutaneously by surgeons along the incision and throughout the entire thickness of the scalp before skin incision. The volume of local infiltration solution will be decided by surgeons according to the cut length, and the capacity of the solution will be recorded by investigators.

The ropivacaine groupdrug

The local infiltration solution containing 20mg of 1% ropivacaine. The total volume is 20 ml. The assigned solution will be injected subcutaneously by surgeons along the incision and throughout the entire thickness of the scalp before skin incision. The volume of local infiltration solution will be decided by surgeons according to the cut length, and the capacity of the solution will be recorded by investigators.