Completed

No OUCHA Study of Non-Steroidal or Opioid Analgesia Use for Children With Musculoskeletal Injuries: The No OUCH Trials

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What is being tested

Ibuprofen

+ Acetaminophen placebo

+ Acetaminophen

Drug
Who is being recruted

Agnosia+7

+ Emergencies

+ Nervous System Diseases

From 6 to 17 Years
+18 Eligibility Criteria
See all eligibility criteria
How is the trial designed

Treatment Study

Phase 2
Interventional
Study Start: April 2019
See protocol details

Summary

Principal SponsorUniversity of Alberta
Last updated: January 28, 2026
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner

Study start date: April 20, 2019

Actual date on which the first participant was enrolled.

Rationale: Multiple national and international organizations, including the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), have voiced concern over the emergency departments' (EDs) ability and willingness to provide appropriate analgesia for children's pain. Musculoskeletal (MSK) injury is a very common cause for ED visits for children with pain, with a child's risk of sustaining a fracture ranging from 27-42% by the age of 16 years. MSK injury is known to generate moderate to severe pain in most children and the ED serves as the critical entry point for these injured children. Despite three decades of pain research in this area, recent evidence confirms that ED pain management in children is still suboptimal. A retrospective cohort study of children presenting to the ED with an isolated long-bone fracture showed almost 1/3 received inadequate medication and 59% received no pain medications during the critical first hour of assessment. Previous studies have demonstrated that only 35% of children presenting to a Canadian pediatric ED with fractures or severe sprains received any analgesic. Further, a medical record review of two Canadian EDs showed unacceptably long delays in provision of initial analgesia, with children waiting a mean of 118 minutes to the provision of first analgesia. The AAP's consensus statement on the assessment and management of pain in children recommends acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and opioids as the top three medication choices for the treatment of acute pain in children. These are also the top three most commonly used treatments in the ED for children with MSK injury pain. It stands to reason that clinicians (and certainly patients and their families) would prefer medication that has the best efficacy and safety profile. Although not based on robust evidence, there has recently been a concerted movement to limit opioid use in children. This is due, in part, to recent controversial publications and the Centre for Disease Control (CDC)'s position statement regarding opioid use in adults. Clinicians are increasingly less likely to prescribe oral opioids to younger children, and caregivers are increasingly less willing to accept or administer them. Clinicians are currently seeking effective (and for many, non-opioid) oral analgesic options for their pediatric patients. Researchers have yet to identify the optimal acute pain management strategy for children with a suspected fracture, as very few studies of analgesic combination therapy for this injury exist, and monotherapy has been shown to be inadequate 50% of the time. This team's previous work has demonstrated that a combination of oral morphine with ibuprofen was no more effective and was less safe than oral ibuprofen, alone, for suspected fracture pain. Similarly, oxycodone was no more effective and was less safe than ibuprofen for post-discharge fracture pain. There is some emerging work from non-ED settings to suggest that oral hydromorphone may be an effective alternative to these two opioid medications. The investigators wish to study if acetaminophen or hydromorphone, when added to ibuprofen, offers more clinical pain relief than ibuprofen alone. They also wish to study if the combination of hydromorphone and ibuprofen is more clinically effective than the combination of acetaminophen with ibuprofen. This study, which will consist of two clinical trials, will inform health-care decisions by providing evidence for the effectiveness and safety of commonly prescribed analgesic combination therapies, and compare them to the most commonly used monotherapy, ibuprofen. Methods: This study will be comprised of two Phase 2, six-centre, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled trials that will be run simultaneously. These two 'sister trials will be run simultaneously within this novel preference-informed complementary trial design. Caregiver/child pairs presenting to the ED with acute MSK limb injury will decide in which trial they wish to participate: the Opioid trial or the Non-Opioid trial. Those willing to consider an Opioid will be randomized to receive either single-dose: (a) oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) plus 2 placebos (both oral hydromorphone and acetaminophen), OR (b) oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + oral acetaminophen (15 mg/kg, max 1000mg) plus hydromorphone placebo OR (c) oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg) + oral hydromorphone (0.05 mg/kg, max 5 mg) plus acetaminophen placebo. Those not willing to consider an opioid will be enrolled in the Non-Opioid trial and will be randomized to receive a single dose of (a) oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + oral acetaminophen (15 mg/kg, max 1000mg) OR (b) oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + oral acetaminophen placebo. Those without a preference for either trial will be assigned to the Opioid trial, as this one includes all three options of possible medication combinations. The investigators will measure pain scores, assess safety, and acquire other study measures, at designated study time points.

Official TitleA Study of Non-Steroidal or Opioid Analgesia Use for Children With Musculoskeletal Injuries: The No OUCH Trials
NCT03767933
Principal SponsorUniversity of Alberta
Last updated: January 28, 2026
Sourced from a government-validated database.Claim as a partner

Protocol

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.
Design Details

710 patients to be enrolled

Total number of participants that the clinical trial aims to recruit.

Treatment Study

These studies test new ways to treat a disease, condition, or health issue. The goal is to see if a new drug, therapy, or approach works better or has fewer side effects than existing options.



Eligibility

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria: person's general health condition or prior treatments.
Conditions
Criteria

Any sex

Biological sex of participants that are eligible to enroll.

From 6 to 17 Years

Range of ages for which participants are eligible to join.

Healthy volunteers not allowed

If individuals who are healthy and do not have the condition being studied can participate.

Conditions

Pathology

AgnosiaEmergenciesNervous System DiseasesNeurologic ManifestationsPathologic ProcessesPerceptual DisordersSigns and SymptomsPathological Conditions, Signs and SymptomsNeurobehavioral ManifestationsDisease Attributes

Criteria

3 inclusion criteria required to participate
Presenting to the emergency department with an acute limb injury (<24 hours old) that is neither obviously deformed nor having neuro-vascular compromise (as assessed by the triage nurse)

Child aged 6-17 years

Self-reported pain score > 5 on the 0 to 10 verbal Numerical Rating Scale at triage

15 exclusion criteria prevent from participating
Deemed to require immediate intravenous (IV) or intranasal (IN) pain medications by the clinical team

Previously known hypersensitivity to study medications

Acetaminophen or NSAID use within 3 hours prior to recruitment

Opioid use within 1 hour prior to recruitment

Show More Criteria

Study Plan

Find out more about all the medication administered in this study, their detailed description and what they involve.
Treatment Groups
Study Objectives

5 intervention groups are designated in this study

This study does not include a placebo group 

Treatment Groups

Group I

Active Comparator
Oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + Oral acetaminophen placebo, both administered once during the study at the time of recruitment.

Group II

Experimental
Oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + Oral acetaminophen (15mg/kg, maximum 1000mg), both administered once during the study at the time of recruitment.

Group III

Active Comparator
Oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + Oral acetaminophen placebo + Oral hydromorphone placebo, all administered once during the study at the time of recruitment.

Group IV

Experimental
Oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + Oral acetaminophen (15mg/kg, maximum 1000mg) + Oral hydromorphone placebo, all administered once during the study at the time of recruitment.

Group 5

Experimental
Oral ibuprofen (10mg/kg, max 600mg) + Oral acetaminophen placebo + Oral hydromorphone (0.05mg/kg, maximum 5 mg), all administered once during the study at the time of recruitment.

Study Objectives

Primary Objectives

Secondary Objectives

Study Centers

These are the hospitals, clinics, or research facilities where the trial is being conducted. You can find the location closest to you and its status.

This study has 6 locations

Suspended

Childrens Hospital at London Health Sciences

London, CanadaOpen Childrens Hospital at London Health Sciences in Google Maps
Suspended

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

Ottawa, Canada
Suspended

CHU Sainte-Justine

Montreal, Canada
Suspended

Alberta Children's Hospital

Calgary, Canada
Completed6 Study Centers