This is a prospective, open-label, observational trial to assess basic efficacy and safety in the Emergency Department treatment environment.
Emergency Department patients at Einstein Medical Center Philadelphia, with migraine type headache (International Headache Classification), who continue to have severe (6/10 or greater) pain one hour after receiving adequate first-line treatment with a dopamine antagonist (prochlorperazine or metoclopramide) and an NSAID (ketorolac or ibuprofen) will be approached for possible inclusion. Patients who meet all inclusion/exclusion criteria will be given informed consent, including consent for procedural sedation. Patients who decline to participate will continue to have their headache treated by the ED team as per usual practice.
After enrollment, patients will be set up for procedural sedation per standard Emergency Department protocol. This includes a well-running peripheral IV; continuous monitoring with telemetry, pulse oximetry, capnography and automated blood pressure checks; continuous bedside monitoring by both an Emergency Department nurse and an Emergency Department attending or senior resident (with immediate attending availability); and airway management tools including suction, oxygen, and Bag valve mask ventilation at bedside, with advanced airway management tools (intubation equipment, etc) immediately available. After time-out, propofol administration will begin. The study drug will be administered only by those properly trained to do so and will be administered in compliance with healthcare licensure requirements. Propofol will be administered as a 0.5mg/kg (at a concentration of 10mg/mL, rounded to the nearest 0.5mL) initial bolus, followed by repeat 0.25mg/kg boluses (same rounding) every three to five minutes as needed to maintain Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS) target -2 ("light sedation - awakens to voice \<10 seconds") to RASS target of -3 ("moderate sedation - movement or eye opening without eye contact") for 15 minutes. No more than 1.5mg/kg of propofol will be administered over this time period. After the sedation session is complete, patients will be allowed to wake up and will be monitored in the ED for at least another hour prior to discharge.
If a patient experiences any adverse safety event that in the determination of the treating provider make it unsafe to continue giving propofol, the protocol will be terminated immediately.
Numeric pain score (0-10) will be obtained prior to medication administration, at 30 minutes and at 60 minutes after the final dose of medication. Patients will also be questioned about associated migraine symptoms (nausea/vomiting/photophobia/phonophobia) and their resolution. Patients will receive follow-up phone calls at 24 hours to assess pain score, need for additional medications and whether they would opt for the same treatment again in the event of another severe headache. Patient charts will subsequently be reviewed to determine if they had any further ED visits within 72 hours after propofol administration.