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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12621001036808
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
22/06/2021
Date registered
5/08/2021
Date last updated
27/01/2023
Date data sharing statement initially provided
5/08/2021
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Investigating the Ability of Sterile Water Injections to Relieve Labour Pain
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Scientific title
Investigating the Ability of Sterile Water Injections to Relieve Labour Pain
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Secondary ID [1]
304396
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Nil Known
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
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Trial acronym
SATURN
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Labour pain
322190
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Condition category
Condition code
Reproductive Health and Childbirth
319880
319880
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0
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Childbirth and postnatal care
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Anaesthesiology
320443
320443
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0
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Pain management
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Women with abdominal contraction pain during stage labour, assessed by visual analogue scale as equal to or greater than 6 will receive 0.1 – 0.3 millilitres of sterile water for injection. The exact volume injected is determined by visualisation of the resulting blister or bleb by the administering clinician. Injections can be administered by a midwife or doctor. The injection is given intradermally using of one-millilitre syringes and 23 gauge needles. One injection into six anatomical points; at the fundus, part way between the fundus an umbilicus, part way between the umbilicus and the suprapubis, laterally (left and right) of the suprapubis. Women may receive up to four repeat treatments upon request once the VAS is again equal to or greater than 6. The overall duration of the intervention is 5 treatments over the course of the woman's labour. Repeat injections will be given in the same six anatomical sites as the initial treatment. There is no minimum time required between the initial or repeat doses. The case report form will collect data on the exact number of injections given at each treatment and reasons is less or more than six. Normal saline 0.9% is being used as a placebo. As normal saline is isotonic it does not result in the same degree of injection pain as sterile water and provides little if any analgesic effect.
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Intervention code [1]
320756
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Treatment: Other
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Comparator / control treatment
Women with abdominal contraction pain during stage labour, assessed by visual analogue scale as equal to or greater than 6 will receive 0.1 – 0.3 millilitres of Normal Saline 0.9%. The exact volume injected is determined by visualisation of the resulting blister or bleb by the administering clinician. Injections can be administered by a midwife or doctor. The injection is given intradermally using of one-millilitre syringes and 23 gauge needles. One injection into six anatomical points; at the fundus, part way between the fundus an umbilicus, part way between the umbilicus and the suprapubis, laterally (left and right) of the suprapubis. Women may receive up to four repeat treatments upon request once the VAS is again equal to or greater than 6. The overall duration of the intervention is 5 treatments over the course of the woman's labour. Repeat injections will be given in the same six anatomical sites as the initial treatment. There is no minimum time required between the initial or repeat doses. The case report form will collect data on the exact number of injections given at each treatment and reasons is less or more than six.
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Control group
Placebo
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
327754
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The mean difference in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores of labour pain following water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [1]
327754
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Timepoint [1]
327754
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30 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [1]
396447
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The mean difference in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores of labour pain following water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [1]
396447
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Timepoint [1]
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60 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [2]
396451
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The mean difference in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores of labour pain following water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [2]
396451
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Timepoint [2]
396451
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90 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [3]
396452
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The mean difference in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores of labour pain following water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [3]
396452
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Timepoint [3]
396452
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120 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [4]
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Number of women reporting an at least 30% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [4]
396453
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Timepoint [4]
396453
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60 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [5]
396454
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Number of women reporting an at least 30% reduction self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [5]
396454
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Timepoint [5]
396454
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90 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [6]
396455
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Number of women reporting an at least 30% reduction self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [6]
396455
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Timepoint [6]
396455
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120 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [7]
396456
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Number of women reporting an at least 50% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [7]
396456
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Timepoint [7]
396456
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60 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [8]
396457
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Number of women reporting an at least 50% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [8]
396457
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Timepoint [8]
396457
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90 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [9]
396458
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Number of women reporting an at least 50% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [9]
396458
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Timepoint [9]
396458
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120 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [10]
396459
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The mean difference in VAS scores of injection pain between water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [10]
396459
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Timepoint [10]
396459
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At time of injection
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Secondary outcome [11]
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Other pharmacological use prior to and after randomisation (opiods, nitrous oxide inhalation, epidurals). This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [11]
396460
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Timepoint [11]
396460
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At time of birth
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Secondary outcome [12]
396461
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Non-pharmacological use prior to and after randomisation (water immersion, shower, mobility, birthball, massage, hypnobirthing) This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [12]
396461
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Timepoint [12]
396461
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At time of birth
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Secondary outcome [13]
396462
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Duration of active first stage labour. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [13]
396462
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Timepoint [13]
396462
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At time of birth
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Secondary outcome [14]
396463
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Duration of labour from 10 cm cervical dilation to birth of infant. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [14]
396463
0
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Timepoint [14]
396463
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [15]
396464
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Duration of labour from birth of infant to birth of placenta. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [15]
396464
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Timepoint [15]
396464
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [16]
396465
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Proportion of women experiencing a spontaneous vaginal birth. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [16]
396465
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Timepoint [16]
396465
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [17]
396466
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Proportion of women experiencing an instrumental birth. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [17]
396466
0
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Timepoint [17]
396466
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [18]
396467
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Proportion of women experiencing a caesarean section. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [18]
396467
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Timepoint [18]
396467
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [19]
396468
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Proportion of women experiencing an augmentation of labour using artificial rupture of membranes. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [19]
396468
0
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Timepoint [19]
396468
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [20]
396469
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Proportion of women experiencing an augmentation of labour using synthetic oxytocin infusion. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [20]
396469
0
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Timepoint [20]
396469
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [21]
396470
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Estimated blood loss at birth. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [21]
396470
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Timepoint [21]
396470
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [22]
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Neonatal Apgar score
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Assessment method [22]
396471
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Timepoint [22]
396471
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one minute post birth
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Secondary outcome [23]
396473
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Neonatal Apgar score
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Assessment method [23]
396473
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Timepoint [23]
396473
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5 mins post birth
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Secondary outcome [24]
396474
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Proportion of infants experiencing resuscitation (intermittent positive pressure ventilation, CPR, medications used). This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [24]
396474
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Timepoint [24]
396474
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [25]
396476
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Proportion of infants experiencing any SCN or ICN admission. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [25]
396476
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Timepoint [25]
396476
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [26]
396477
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Length of stay in hospital (hours). This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [26]
396477
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Timepoint [26]
396477
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At discharge from hospital
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Secondary outcome [27]
396478
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Proportion of women fully breastfeeding at discharge. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites obstetric database
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Assessment method [27]
396478
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Timepoint [27]
396478
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At discharge from hospital
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Secondary outcome [28]
396479
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Maternal satisfaction as measured by postnatal survey designed specifically for the trial
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Assessment method [28]
396479
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Timepoint [28]
396479
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In the first two week following the birth of the infant
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Secondary outcome [29]
396480
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Cost of care from admission in labour until discharge from hospital. This data will be assessed via data linkage to the research sites medical coding dataset.
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Assessment method [29]
396480
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Timepoint [29]
396480
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At discharge from hospital
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Secondary outcome [30]
396555
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Number of women reporting an at least 30% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [30]
396555
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Timepoint [30]
396555
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at 30 minutes post injections
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Secondary outcome [31]
396556
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Number of women reporting an at least 50% reduction in self reported VAS pain scores
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Assessment method [31]
396556
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Timepoint [31]
396556
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at 30 minutes post injection
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Secondary outcome [32]
396557
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The mean difference in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scores of labour pain following water injections compared to control
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Assessment method [32]
396557
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Timepoint [32]
396557
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30 minutes post repeat injections
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
In labour (spontaneous or induced)
Are equal to or greater than 16 years of age
Have a term singleton pregnancy (between 37 and 42 weeks gestation)
Have a fetus in a cephalic (head down) presentation
Experience abdominal labour pain assessed by visual analogue scale VAS as equal to or greater than 6
Are able to provide informed consent
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Minimum age
16
Years
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Maximum age
45
Years
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Sex
Females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
Multiple pregnancy
Malpresentation (breech, transverse, shoulder)
Infection or inflammation at the injection sites or complications that could cause bleeding at injection site eg. Thrombocytopenia
Serious medical condition of pregnancy (e.g. unstable hypertension, insulin controlled diabetes)
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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)
Identical ampoules of either normal saline or sterile water will be pre-prepared by the RBWH pharmacy and packed in opaque black plastic packets and arranged based on the allocation schedule. Following confirmation of consent two midwives will remove the next ampoule in sequence and administer the injections.
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Randomisation schedules will be prepared using computer-generated pseudo-random numbers, using varying block sizes and stratified by clinical area (Birth Centre / Birth Suite).
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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
Randomisation and stratification should ensure that groups are equal in baseline characteristics. Relative risks with 95% confidence intervals for the primary outcome will be calculated. Secondary outcome measures of categorical data will be analysed with chi-squared tests and continuous data will be analysed with t-tests for normally distributed data and Mann-Whitney U test for parametric data. Regression will be used if necessary to adjust for any other confounding variables. All study outcomes will be analysed using a two-sided P value of < 0.05 to indicate statistical significance. The study is only powered to report the primary outcome and for secondary outcomes confidence intervals (CI) will be included as a measure of the effect size.
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Recruiting
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
26/04/2022
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Actual
30/04/2022
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
31/10/2023
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Actual
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
30/11/2023
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
154
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Accrual to date
64
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Final
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Recruitment in Australia
Recruitment state(s)
QLD
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Recruitment hospital [1]
19621
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Royal Brisbane & Womens Hospital - Herston
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Recruitment postcode(s) [1]
34254
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4029 - Herston
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
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Government body
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Name [1]
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National Health and Medical Research Council
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Address [1]
308767
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National Health and Medical Research Council
GPO Box 1421
Canberra ACT 2601
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Country [1]
308767
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Australia
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Primary sponsor type
University
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Name
University of Queensland
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Address
St Lucia, Queensland 4072
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Country
Australia
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
309670
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None
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Name [1]
309670
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Address [1]
309670
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Country [1]
309670
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
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Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital HREC
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Ethics committee address [1]
308680
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Level 14 Block 7 Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Cnr Butterfield St and Bowen Bridge Rd HERSTON QLD 4029
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Ethics committee country [1]
308680
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
308680
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22/06/2021
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Approval date [1]
308680
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26/07/2021
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Ethics approval number [1]
308680
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HREC/2021/QRBW/76389
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Ethics committee name [2]
308682
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University of Queensland Human Ethics Committee
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Ethics committee address [2]
308682
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Level 3, Brian Wilson Chancellery The University of Queensland St Lucia QLD 4072, Australia
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Ethics committee country [2]
308682
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [2]
308682
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27/07/2021
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Approval date [2]
308682
0
27/07/2021
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Ethics approval number [2]
308682
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2021/HE001769
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Summary
Brief summary
Access to safe, effective pain relief is a hallmark of high quality maternity care. For women in labour the pharmacological options for pain relief have changed little in over 50 years. The choices of opioids and nitrous oxide have been reported as having a limited effect on labour pain and undesirable side effects. Epidurals provide excellent analgesia, however they severely limit mobility in labour, require advanced medical skills, close monitoring of mother and baby and can increase the risk of further medical interventions in birth. This trial will test the novel, off-label use of sterile water injections (six injections of 0.1 - 0.3 millilitres each) administered into the abdominal skin of laboring women to relieve contraction pain. Our research team’s previous work has provided definitive evidence for the effectiveness of water injections to relieve back pain (not contraction pain) in labour for approximately two hours. The injections can be repeated with no side effects. However, injections given into the back have no effect on abdominal contraction labour pain. Our proposed trial will use a randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled design to test the safety and analgesic effectiveness of water injections to relieve labour contraction pain. We will conduct survey and qualitative studies to assess satisfaction, acceptability and impact on the birth experience alongside a cost-effectiveness study. If successful, our study will provide a new option for labour pain relief that is safe, effective, cost efficient, only requiring skills available to many health care providers and ideal for women wanting to avoid the side effects of other pharmacological analgesic options. The common availability of sterile water and the simplicity of administration would make the procedure useful in regional areas and settings (e.g. homebirth), where other pharmacological analgesic options such as epidurals may not be available, and women in countries with developing health systems.
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Trial website
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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 Nigel Lee
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Address
111538
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Level 3 Chamberlain Building
School of Nursing Midwifery and Social Work
University of Queensland
St Lucia, Queensland 4072
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Country
111538
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Australia
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Phone
111538
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+61 0427231390
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Fax
111538
0
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Email
111538
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
111539
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Nigel Lee
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Address
111539
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Level 3 Chamberlain Building
School of Nursing Midwifery and Social Work
University of Queensland
St Lucia, Queensland 4072
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Country
111539
0
Australia
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Phone
111539
0
+61 0427231390
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Fax
111539
0
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Email
111539
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
111540
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Nigel Lee
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Address
111540
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Level 3 Chamberlain Building
School of Nursing Midwifery and Social Work
University of Queensland
St Lucia, Queensland 4072
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Country
111540
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Australia
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Phone
111540
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+61 0427231390
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Fax
111540
0
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Email
111540
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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?
de-identified individual participant data
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When will data be available (start and end dates)?
Three months following results publication with no end date
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Available to whom?
May be available to researchers upon written request with a methodologically sound proposal, suitable ethical approval if applicable and a signed data sharing agreement
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Available for what types of analyses?
any purpose
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How or where can data be obtained?
Access subject to approvals by Principal Investigator
[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
Source
Title
Year of Publication
DOI
Embase
Sterile water injections for relief of labour pain (the SATURN trial): study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
2022
https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-022-06093-3
N.B. These documents automatically identified may not have been verified by the study sponsor.
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