Background
A long-acting prodrug of nalbuphine, nalbuphine sebacate, has been developed for meeting the unmet medical need of long-acting analgesics. Naldebain® (nalbuphine sebacate) has been developed as a new premedication for postoperative pain management. The primary objective of this study is to determine the efficacy and safety of a single dose of intramuscular Naldebain® in patients scheduled to undergo elective laparotomy.
Methods/design
A total of 110 patients will be recruited and randomized into two treatment groups. Group 1 receives a single dose of Naldebain® intramuscularly 24 ± 12 h prior to surgery. Group 2 receives intravenous patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with fentanyl through 48 h postsurgery. Both groups will have follow-up observations until the final visit (day of discharge, day 6–30). The primary efficacy endpoint is to assess time-specific pain intensity calculated as the area under the curve (AUC) of a visual analog scale at individual time points and by using total AUC. Safety endpoints—including incidence of treatment, emergent adverse events, and percentage of abnormality from baseline to final visit—in vital signs, laboratory tests, and injection site evaluations will also be analyzed. Statistical analyses will be performed on the data to compare the two groups.
Discussion
Post-laparotomy pain can have a harmful effect on patient recovery; therefore, a slow-release formulation that can cover at least 7 days of analgesic effect is required. This study will demonstrate whether a single use of Naldebain® is not less efficacious than PCA with fentanyl for pain management as a non-inferior trial.
Trial registration
NCT03296488.