Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
Location
at UCSF
Dates
study started
completion around
Principal Investigator
by Ralph Wang, MD, MAS (ucsf)
Headshot of Ralph Wang
Ralph Wang

Description

Summary

The investigator's long-term goal is to conduct Naloxone for Opioid Associated out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest (NOPACA), a randomized, double blind, controlled trial to determine the efficacy of naloxone vs. placebo in Opioid Associated out of Hospital Cardiac Arrest. The investigative team plan to randomize patients in OHCA to early naloxone administration vs. placebo after initial resuscitation and measure ROSC and survival. Challenges to designing NOPACA include uncertainty regarding: 1) the available pool of participants and number of EMS agencies needed to meet enrollment targets; 2) acceptability among patients, EMS and Emergency Medicine provider stakeholders, and 3) estimates of the study outcomes needed for sample size estimates. Toward obtaining the necessary information to design NOPACA, the investigators propose a pilot RCT of participants at high risk for OA-OHCA to verify a reasonable recruitment rate; treatment fidelity and acceptability; and adequate retention and measurement of outcomes at follow up. The investigators propose incorporating hypothesis testing of the feasibility outcomes to determine progression to a definitive trial.

Details

Keywords

Heart Arrest, Out-Of-Hospital, Opioid Overdose, Naloxone, Heart Arrest, Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest, Opiate Overdose, Naloxone 2 MG, Saline 2ml, Saline

Eligibility

Location

  • University of California, San Francisco
    San Francisco California 94122 United States

Lead Scientist at University of California Health

  • Ralph Wang, MD, MAS (ucsf)
    Professor, Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine. Authored (or co-authored) 77 research publications

Details

Status
not yet accepting patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
ID
NCT06251609
Phase
Phase 2 research study
Study Type
Interventional
Participants
Expecting 98 study participants
Last Updated