Home
Scholarly Works
Comparison of Ketorolac at 3 Doses in Children...
Preprint

Comparison of Ketorolac at 3 Doses in Children With Acute Pain: Protocol for A Randomized Controlled Trial (Preprint)

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Intravenous ketorolac is a potent nonopioid analgesic commonly used to treat vigorous pain in children and adults. Despite its widespread use in pediatric emergency settings, ketorolac dosing in children remains “off-label,” with limited high-quality evidence to guide practice. Pharmacokinetic differences between children and adults suggest that lower ceiling doses adopted from adult practice may lead to suboptimal analgesia in pediatric populations. Inconsistent ketorolac dosing practices across centers reflect substantial clinical uncertainty. Amid efforts to reduce opioid use and provide effective nonopioid alternatives, rigorous pediatric trials evaluating ketorolac dosing are urgently needed.

OBJECTIVE

The primary objective is to determine whether 2 lower-dose intravenous ketorolac strategies (0.25 mg/kg-30 mg or 0.5 mg/kg-10 mg) are noninferior to the standard dosing regimen (0.5 mg/kg-30 mg) in reducing mean pain scores at 60 minutes postadministration in children aged 6-17 years presenting with vigorous pain. The secondary hypothesis is that ketorolac 0.5 mg/kg up to 10 mg will be superior to 0.25 mg/kg up to 30 mg by at least the minimally important difference of 2.0 points on the verbal Numerical Rating Scale (vNRS).

METHODS

The KETODOSE trial is a single-center, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, noninferiority trial conducted at McMaster Children’s Hospital. Eligible participants aged 6 to <18 years with vigorous pain (vNRS >4) are randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to standard dosing or one of 2 low-dose ketorolac regimens. Study drugs are administered via intravenous push over 5 minutes. Pain scores are assessed at baseline, 30, 60, 90, and 120 minutes. The primary endpoint is the mean change in vNRS score at 60 minutes. Secondary outcomes include pain scores at other time points, time to effective analgesia, rescue analgesia requirements, opioid consumption, and adverse events. Caregiver perceptions regarding analgesic use are evaluated using a mixed-methods semistructured survey. A sample size of 180 participants (60 per group) provides 80% power to detect noninferiority within a margin of 1.0 on the vNRS, assuming an SD of 1.5. Intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses will be performed.

RESULTS

Recruitment is ongoing. Final analyses will be performed once follow-up is completed for all participants. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, conference presentations, caregiver- and clinician-facing educational tools, and national knowledge mobilization networks.

CONCLUSIONS

The KETODOSE trial will provide urgently needed evidence to guide ketorolac dosing for acute pain in children. If lower-dose regimens are shown to be noninferior to standard dosing, this may promote safer prescribing practices, reduce adverse events, and support efforts to minimize pediatric opioid use, thereby improving acute pain management in pediatric emergency care.

CLINICALTRIAL

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05641363; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05641363

INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT

DERR1-10.2196/76554

Authors

Eltorki M; Carciumaru R; Ali S; Holbrook A; Livingston M; Samiee-Zafarghandy S; Beattie K; Thabane L; Giglia L

Publication date

April 25, 2025

DOI

10.2196/preprints.76554

Preprint server

JMIR Preprints
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team