A randomized controlled pilot study of intranasal lidocaine in acute management of paediatric migraine and migraine-like headache

Author:

Maki Kate1ORCID,Doan Quynh12ORCID,Sih Kendra1,Stillwell Karly2,Chun Alaina2,Meckler Garth12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

2. BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute , Vancouver, British Columbia , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Objectives This study was aimed to determine the sample size required to conduct an efficacy randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate superiority of intranasal (IN) lidocaine to placebo as an analgesic option for children presenting to the paediatric emergency department (PED) with migraine or posttraumatic headache with migraine features and to evaluate study protocol feasibility. Study Design This study is a double-blind RCT of children aged 7 to 16 years at a single-centre PED. Thirty-two participants were randomized to receive either IN 2% lidocaine or 0.9% sodium chloride. The primary outcome measure was the proportion of subjects with a Verbal Numeric Rating Scale pain score of <4 at 30 and 60 minutes post-IN therapy. Primary outcome data were analyzed using a test of differences between proportions. Secondary objectives included assessing the feasibility of our study protocol by evaluating recruitment rates, adverse drug events, and PED length of stay (LOS). Results Six of 17 participants in the lidocaine group and 2 of 15 in the placebo group were treated successfully. Using these proportions with 95% confidence intervals and 80% power, the sample size required to find a significant difference between proportions would be 67 participants per arm. Our enrolment rate was 55% and there were no serious adverse drug events. The median PED LOS was similar between groups. Conclusion We determined the sample size required to conduct a definitive RCT to evaluate the superiority of IN lidocaine to placebo and found the study protocol is feasible but identified important considerations in PED migraine trial design.

Funder

BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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