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TIME1: A 2 X 2 Factorial Trial to Assess Whether Non-steroidal Anti-inflammatory Analgesics and Small-bore Chest Tubes Are Less Painful Than Opiate Analgesics and Large-bore Chest Tubes in Pleurodesis for Malignant Pleural Effusion.
Fluid caused by cancer cells may accumulate in the lining of the lung. Draining the fluid with a chest tube may relieve pain and shortness of breath. To stop the fluid from coming back again, patients are given a medicine (talc) into the chest drain to seal up the space around the lung. This procedure is known as pleurodesis. This sometimes causes pain and discomfort, and the investigators do not know the best way of preventing this. The investigators hope to find the best way to prevent pain during pleurodesis.
Patients with metastatic cancer often have fluid collecting around the lung as a result of cancer cells spreading to the membranes adjacent to the lung (malignant pleural effusion). The standard way of treating this condition, which may cause unpleasant symptoms such as breathlessness and cough, is to drain the fluid off and then seal the cavity, using a drug (talc) given into the chest drain. Talc causes inflammation in the lining of the lung and chest wall, sticking the two surfaces together and preventing fluid from recurring. This procedure is often very painful; the pain may be partly related to the size of the chest tube used and the type of analgesia taken by the patient during the procedure. Reducing the amount of pain associated with this procedure would be a substantial benefit for patients undergoing this procedure. This trial is looking at which of two different drug regimens is more effective in preventing pleurodesis pain, and whether the size of chest tube influences pain. It will also address whether either of these influences success rate of pleurodesis. We hope to learn whether the size of chest drain or the type of pain medication given (ibuprofen or morphine) influences the amount of pain felt after the pleurodesis procedure. We hope to find the best way of preventing pain during this procedure.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
UC Davis Medical Center
Sacramento, California, United States
Start Date
April 1, 2009
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2014
Completion Date
December 1, 2014
Last Updated
July 20, 2015
4
ACTUAL participants
Large bore chest drain + NSAID based analgesic regimen
OTHER
Small bore chest drain + NSAID based analgesic regimen
OTHER
Large bore chest drain + opiate based analgesic regimen
OTHER
Small bore chest drain + opiate based analgesic regimen
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
University of California, Davis
NCT07186933
NCT06686251
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