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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12624001055594
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
24/07/2024
Date registered
30/08/2024
Date last updated
15/09/2024
Date data sharing statement initially provided
30/08/2024
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
The Paracetamol and Ibuprofen in Kids Intervention (PIKI) Trial
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Scientific title
Randomised controlled trial of paracetamol versus ibuprofen for fever and pain in children under 2 years of age
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Secondary ID [1]
312573
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UoA 3729441
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Secondary ID [2]
312578
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AMRF 1123009
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
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Trial acronym
PIKI
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Febrile discomfort
334497
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Paediatric fever
334498
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Medication safety
334499
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Medication efficacy
334500
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Condition category
Condition code
Emergency medicine
331115
331115
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0
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Other emergency care
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Anaesthesiology
331116
331116
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0
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Pain management
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Infection
331118
331118
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0
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Other infectious diseases
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Ibuprofen oral suspension + paracetamol placebo.
Dose:
ibuprofen 10mg/kg (if greater than 3 months of age) oral liquid + paracetamol placebo oral liquid
ibuprofen 5mg/kg (if less than 3 months of age) oral liquid + paracetamol placebo oral liquid
Paracetamol placebo composition:
Sucralose NF
Xanthan Gum NF
Glycerin USP
Sorbitol USP
Microcrystalline Cellulose NF
Citric Acid USP
Sodium Citrate USP
Methyl Hydroxybenzoate (Methylparaben) NF
Propyl Hydroxybenzoate (Propylparaben) NF
Natural Orange Emulsion
Purified Water USP
As required for febrile discomfort, evidenced by a temperature of equal to or greater than 38° degrees Celsius and an EVENDOL score of greater than or equal to 4. To be administered by a health professional within the Emergency Department.
This study medicine will be administered once only, UNLESS the patient vomits within 10 minutes of the medicine being administered, in which case a repeat dose will be given.
Adherence to this intervention will be assessed by either research staff administering the study medicine themselves or direct observation of clinical staff administering the study medicine, and review of the patient's ED medication chart,
Allocation to intervention vs control group will be randomised and double-blinded.
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Intervention code [1]
329096
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Treatment: Drugs
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Comparator / control treatment
Paracetamol + ibuprofen placebo.
Dose:
paracetamol 15mg/kg oral liquid + ibuprofen placebo oral liquid
Ibuprofen placebo composition:
Sucralose NF
Xanthan Gum NF
Glycerin USP
Sorbitol USP
Microcrystalline Cellulose NF
Citric Acid USP
Sodium Citrate USP
Methyl Hydroxybenzoate (Methylparaben) NF
Propyl Hydroxybenzoate (Propylparaben) NF
Water Soluble Orange Flavour
Purified Water USP
As required for febrile discomfort, evidenced by a temperature of equal to or greater than 38° degrees Celsius and an EVENDOL score of greater than or equal to 4. To be administered by a health professional within the Emergency Department.
This study medicine will be administered once only, UNLESS the patient vomits within 10 minutes of the medicine being administered, in which case a repeat dose will be given.
Adherence to this intervention will be assessed by either research staff administering the study medicine themselves or direct observation of clinical staff administering the study medicine, and review of the patient's ED medication chart,
Allocation to intervention vs control group will be randomised and double-blinded.
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Control group
Active
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
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Change in severity of febrile discomfort
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Assessment method [1]
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Defined as change of EVENDOL score
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Timepoint [1]
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At 1.5 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [1]
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Change in severity of febrile discomfort (categorical)
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Assessment method [1]
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Proportion of participants with change of discomfort (based on their EVENDOL score)
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Timepoint [1]
437833
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At 1.5 hours and 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [2]
437835
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Change in severity of febrile discomfort (continuous)
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Assessment method [2]
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Change in EVENDOL score
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Timepoint [2]
437835
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At 1.5 hours and 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [3]
437836
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Change of temperature (categorical)
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Assessment method [3]
437836
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Proportion of participants who are afebrile (temperature less than 38.0 degrees Celsius), measured by digital thermometer (either axillary, tympanic, or rectal).
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Timepoint [3]
437836
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At 1.5 hours and 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [4]
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Change of temperature (continuous)
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Assessment method [4]
437841
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Change in temperature (degrees Celsius), measured by digital thermometer (axillary, tympanic, or rectal).
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Timepoint [4]
437841
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At 1.5 hours and 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [5]
437843
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Total fluid intake
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Assessment method [5]
437843
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mL / Kg, as collected from the patients fluid balance chart in the patient's ED medical notes
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Timepoint [5]
437843
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At 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [6]
437844
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Parent/guardian satisfaction
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Assessment method [6]
437844
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100mm visual analogue scale (VAS)
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Timepoint [6]
437844
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At 4 hours after study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [7]
437845
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Alternate antipyretic/analgesic for ongoing discomfort
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Assessment method [7]
437845
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Proportion of participants requiring an alternate antipyretic/analgesic due to ongoing discomfort as determine by the treating clinician (based on EVENDOL score, parent's request for further analgesia, child's temperature).
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Timepoint [7]
437845
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Within 4 hours of the study medicine administration
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Secondary outcome [8]
437846
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Emergency Department (ED) length of stay
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Assessment method [8]
437846
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Hours spent in ED, obtained from electronic hospital records
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Timepoint [8]
437846
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Obtained during retrospective medical record review, 28 days after ED presentation
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Secondary outcome [9]
437849
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Hospital length of stay (if admitted)
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Assessment method [9]
437849
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Days spent in hospital, obtained from electronic medical records
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Timepoint [9]
437849
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Obtained during retrospective medical record review, 28 days after ED presentation
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Secondary outcome [10]
437851
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Adverse events
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Assessment method [10]
437851
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Proportion of participants experience any of the following adverse events (AEs):
• Renal impairment (persistent abnormal renal function if tested)
• Gastrointestinal bleeding (GP/ED presentation)
• Hepatotoxicity (persistent abnormal liver function if tested)
• Empyema (on x-ray)
• Severe soft tissue infection (requiring hospital admission)
• Wheezing (GP/ED presentation)
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Timepoint [10]
437851
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Obtained during retrospective medical record review, 28 days after ED presentation
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Secondary outcome [11]
437852
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Serious adverse events
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Assessment method [11]
437852
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Proportion of participants experience any of the following serious adverse events (SAEs):
• Intensive care unit (ICU) admission
• Death
Obtained from electronic medical records
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Timepoint [11]
437852
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Obtained during retrospective medical record review, 28 days after ED presentation
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
1. Presenting to either Kidz First (Middlemore) ED, Starship Children's Hospital ED, Waitakere Hospital ED, Tauranga Hospital ED, or Christchurch Hospital ED
2. Aged 2 to 23 months old (chronological age)
3. Temperature of equal to or greater than 38.0 degrees Celsius (rectal/axillary/tympanic)
4. Moderate or severe discomfort/pain, defined as an EVENDOL score equal to or greater than 4.
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Minimum age
2
Months
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Maximum age
23
Months
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Sex
Both males and females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
Infants will not be enrolled if ANY of the following apply:
1. Administration of paracetamol less than 4 h or ibuprofen less than 6 h prior to trial screening (usual dosing interval)
2. Already received maximum 24 h dose of paracetamol (75 mg/kg per day) or ibuprofen (age <3 months: 20 mg/kg per day; age 3-23 months: 40 mg/kg per day ) in the preceding 24 h
3. Known paracetamol or ibuprofen hypersensitivity
4. Requiring immediate treatment for possible sepsis
5. Clinically unstable as determined by treating clinician
6. Active gastrointestinal bleeding or ulcers
7. Chronic renal failure
8. Chronic liver failure
9. Chronic cardiac failure
10. Known coagulopathy
11. Gross global developmental delay
12. Malignancy
13. Parent/guardian not available
14. Previous enrolment.
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Treatment
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Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
Treatment group allocation will be concealed using sequentially numbered, opaque trial packs containing the trial medications.
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Randomisation will be performed using a computer-generated sequence with a variable block size per site to maintain allocation concealment, generated by the trial statistician, independent of trial investigators. Allocation concealment will be by a secure database, which contains the randomisation sequence accessible only to the trial statistician and independent data manager.
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Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
The people receiving the treatment/s
The people administering the treatment/s
The people assessing the outcomes
The people analysing the results/data
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Intervention assignment
Parallel
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Other design features
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Safety/efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
The primary outcome variable is the proportion of participants with relief of discomfort at 1.5 h. Prior studies comparing the analgesic efficacy of paracetamol vs. ibuprofen in similar aged cohorts to the proposed trial, but at later timepoints (24 to 72 h), have found effect sizes in the paracetamol group ranging from 38% to 90%. Prior studies comparing the analgesic efficacy of paracetamol vs. ibuprofen at similar timepoints to the proposed trial, but with older aged cohorts (4 to 17 years old), have found effect sizes in the paracetamol group ranging from 23% to 39%. We have used a conservative effect size in the paracetamol group of 50%, and aim to show an absolute difference between the two groups of =10%. Thus, with 90% power and a two-sided alpha of 0.05, we estimate that 516 participants in each group would detect an improvement (increase) in the primary outcome of =10% (or decrease of =10%) in the ibuprofen group anywhere in the published range (23% to 90%) of relief of discomfort for paracetamol. Assuming 5% attrition, a total of 1,086 participants (543 in each arm) will be recruited.
Recent ED census data support the feasibility of our recruitment target of 1,086 participants over 2 winters. In the preceding 12 months, the 6 EDs collectively saw 138,610 paediatric presentations, including 25,669 children aged 2 to 23 months in winter 2023. Twenty percent of paediatric ED visits in children aged 2 to 23 months are associated with fever (Kidz First data) (5,134). Thus, our sample size of 1,086 represents a recruitment target of 1 in 9 febrile children aged 2 to 23 months presenting to the 6 EDs over the 2 winters of proposed recruitment. Our previous ED studies have easily achieved this target.
Analysis will be by intention-to-treat by a biostatistician blinded to allocation. The primary outcome analysis will be a superiority comparison of the proportion of participants with relief of discomfort at 1.5 h, defined as EVENDOL score <4 (mild/no pain), using logistic regression including a stratification variable for site.
A per-protocol analysis of primary and secondary outcomes will be undertaken as a sensitivity analysis.
We plan to conduct subgroup analyses of the primary outcome by age (<6 vs. =6 months), ethnicity (Maori vs. non-Maori), and indication (bacterial illness (provision of antibiotics) vs. not). The indication analysis will be based on final diagnosis, and be exploratory in nature. Of note, stratification and identification of cause of febrile illness is not available at triage when patients usually present with undifferentiated fever.
Although all estimates will be given as 95% CIs, with a nominal two-sided type I error rate of 5%; we will not adjust secondary analyses for multiple analyses; secondary analyses will be considered exploratory.
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Not yet recruiting
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/10/2024
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Actual
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
31/08/2026
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Actual
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
30/09/2026
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
1086
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Accrual to date
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Final
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Recruitment outside Australia
Country [1]
26443
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New Zealand
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State/province [1]
26443
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
317005
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Charities/Societies/Foundations
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Name [1]
317005
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Auckland Medical Research Foundation
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Address [1]
317005
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Country [1]
317005
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New Zealand
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Funding source category [2]
317010
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Hospital
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Name [2]
317010
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Tupu Research Fund
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Address [2]
317010
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Country [2]
317010
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New Zealand
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Primary sponsor type
University
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Name
University of Auckland
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Address
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Country
New Zealand
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
319249
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Government body
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Name [1]
319249
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Te Whatu Ora
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Address [1]
319249
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Country [1]
319249
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New Zealand
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
315763
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Northern B Health and Disability Ethics Committee
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Ethics committee address [1]
315763
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https://ethics.health.govt.nz/about/northern-b-health-and-disability-ethics-committee/
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Ethics committee country [1]
315763
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New Zealand
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
315763
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18/06/2024
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Approval date [1]
315763
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12/08/2024
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Ethics approval number [1]
315763
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2024 FULL 20591
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Summary
Brief summary
Fever is the most common reason for children to come to the ED. Fever is a normal way for a child to fight an infection. All international experts recommend that we do not need to treat the fever with a medicine if the child is happy and settled. However, sometimes having a fever may make children feel unhappy or uncomfortable. When a child is miserable because of a fever, we treat the fever to make them more comfortable. Doctors and nurses around the world agree that the main reason for treating fever is to relieve the discomfort/pain from the fever. At the moment, we use two different types of medicine to treat discomfort/pain from fever; paracetamol (also known as Pamol) and ibuprofen (also known as Brufen). We know that both types of medicine are safe and effective for lowering temperature. But there are no good scientific studies done comparing which of these two very common medicines is better at relieving discomfort/pain in children with fever. The Paracetamol and Ibuprofen in Kids Intervention (PIKI) study is trying to find out if one type of medicine is better than the other for relieving discomfort/pain in young children with fever.
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Trial website
www.pikistudy.org
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Trial related presentations / publications
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Public notes
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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Dr Eunicia Tan
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Address
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Middlemore Hospital Emergency Department, 100 Hospital Road, Otahuhu, Auckland 2025
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Country
135714
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New Zealand
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Phone
135714
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+64 21 487771
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Fax
135714
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Email
135714
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
135715
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Georgia Doyle
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Address
135715
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Middlemore Hospital Emergency Department, 100 Hospital Road, Otahuhu, Auckland 2025
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Country
135715
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New Zealand
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Phone
135715
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+64 21 0407709
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Fax
135715
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Email
135715
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
135716
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Eunicia Tan
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Address
135716
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Middlemore Hospital Emergency Department, 100 Hospital Road, Otahuhu, Auckland 2025
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Country
135716
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New Zealand
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Phone
135716
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+64 21 487771
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Fax
135716
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Email
135716
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[email protected]
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Data sharing statement
Will individual participant data (IPD) for this trial be available (including data dictionaries)?
Yes
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What data in particular will be shared?
The PIKI study uses identifiable individual patient data that are subject to restriction, including ethics, consent, and privacy issues. Anonymised data will be available on request from the corresponding author, where possible within these constraints for use.
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When will data be available (start and end dates)?
From time of publication of main manuscript for 5 years.
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Available to whom?
Researchers.
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Available for what types of analyses?
Available for meta-analysis
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How or where can data be obtained?
Anonymised data will be available on request from the Primary Investigator, Dr Eunicia Tan. She can be contacted at
[email protected]
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What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
Download to PDF