Thinking of joining a study?

Register your interest

NCT03526874 | COMPLETED | Chronic Migraine, Headache


Occipital Blocks for Acute Migraine
Sponsor:

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Brief Summary:

Migraine affects 10-28% of children and adolescents and yet 20-30% of patients are ineffectively treated with current oral and nasal options. Peripheral nerve blocks (PNBs), injections of local anesthetics over branches of the occipital and/or trigeminal nerves, have been associated with possible benefit for pediatric headaches in case series, and may be useful for both acute and preventive treatment of migraine for children who fail less invasive treatments. In fact, 80% of pediatric headache specialists reported using peripheral nerve blocks and carry low risk of serious side effects; however, peripheral nerve blocks have never been tested, formally, in a randomized pediatric trial. By applying a novel design that utilizes lidocaine cream as a run-in step, investigators intend to test the efficacy of the most commonly used peripheral nerve block, the greater occipital nerve (GON) block, as an acute treatment for pediatric migraine and determine whether lidocaine cream leads to successful blinding of the injection. The GON block is expected to prove effective in decreasing the pain of migraine, with lidocaine being superior to saline and lidocaine cream maintaining blinding.

Condition or disease

Chronic Migraine, Headache

Episodic Migraine

Intervention/treatment

Lidocaine 4% Topical Application Cream [LMX 4]

Lidocaine Hydrochloride 2 mg/mL Injectable Solution

Normal Saline

Phase

PHASE3

Detailed Description:

There are two substantial hurdles that must be overcome in designing a trial to test the efficacy of PNBs: high placebo response rate and possible unblinding. In order to test the efficacy of this commonly used treatment for children and adolescents with difficult-to-treat headache, we need utilize a trial design which will address the high placebo response rate and the potential lack of blinding. About 194 children, recruited over a 3.5 year period at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, will take part in this study. Participation will last about one month and involve one in-person study visit, and then completion of headache-related surveys, at home, for 28 days. Lidocaine cream lead-in will be used open-label for all subjects followed by double-blind randomized injections of active treatment (lidocaine) versus comparator (saline) in subjects who continue to have significant headache. To accomplish our secondary objectives, we will examine how expectation is affected by perceived treatment, and how expectations, measured in patients, parents, and providers, influence outcomes in pediatric and adolescent acute migraine.

Study Type : INTERVENTIONAL
Estimated Enrollment : 63 participants
Masking : DOUBLE
Primary Purpose : TREATMENT
Official Title : Occipital Nerve Blocks for Acute Treatment of Pediatric Migraine
Actual Study Start Date : 2019-04-03
Estimated Primary Completion Date : 2023-03-10
Estimated Study Completion Date : 2023-03-10

Information not available for Arms and Intervention/treatment

Ages Eligible for Study: 7 Years to 21 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study: ALL
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
  • * Children / Adolescents
    • * Males or females, ages 7 - 21, of any gender, race, or ethnicity
    • * Diagnosis of episodic or chronic migraine with acute headache flare lasting up to 3 months unresponsive to acute medications. Patients who report that acute medications were not used during this headache flare because those medications have been ineffective for several prior headache flares will be included
    • * Informed parental consent and subject assent
    • * Girls, who have reached menarche, must have a negative urine or serum pregnancy test
    • * Weight \> 25kg
    • * Parents
      • * Parents or guardians of children enrolled, who speak either English or Spanish, and provide parental/guardian permission (informed consent) for their own participation
      • * Subject (child) assent
      Exclusion Criteria
      • * Children / Adolescents
        • * Previous nerve block less than 3 months ago or more than 2 previous nerve blocks
        • * Allergy to local anesthetics
        • * Skull defect or break in the skin at the planned site of cream application or GON injection
        • * Any investigational drug use within 30 days prior to enrollment, or 90 days prior to enrollment for medications targeted at Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide
        • * Pregnant or lactating females
        • * Parents/guardians or subjects who, in the opinion of the Investigator, may be non- compliant with study schedules or procedures
        • * Significant adverse event with prior injection or procedure
        • * New abnormalities on physical or neurological examination
        • * Newly reported red flags in headache history which prompt investigation for secondary headache
        • * Non-English and Non-Spanish speaking
        • * Non-English speaking with no Spanish interpreter available
        • * Parents
          • * Parents or guardians of children enrolled, who do not speak either English or Spanish
          • * Parental/guardian permission and/or subject (child) assent has been declined
          • * Parents or guardians, who in the opinion of the investigator, may be non-compliant or unable to complete the questionnaires

Occipital Blocks for Acute Migraine

Location Details

NCT03526874


Please Choose a site



How to Participate

Want to participate in this study, select a site at your convenience, send yourself email to get contact details and prescreening steps.

Locations


Not yet recruiting

United States, Pennsylvania

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, 19104

Loading...