545 A PRospective, Case-controlled Evaluation of oLIceridine for Moderate or sEVEre Pain After Burn Injury. (RELIEVE)
David M Hill, Yvonne Shaw, Lorraine A Todor, Aaron L Rank, Cleo C Carter, Xiangxia Liu, Mahmoud Hassouba, Sai R Velamuri

TL;DR
This study evaluated oliceridine for pain management in burn patients and found it provided consistent pain relief over seven days, similar to traditional opioids but with better long-term effectiveness.
Contribution
The first clinical evaluation of oliceridine for analgesia in acute burn injuries, showing its efficacy and safety in this specific patient population.
Findings
Oliceridine significantly reduced pain scores over seven days compared to the control group.
Control group patients showed initial pain relief, but it was not sustained despite similar opioid dosing.
No unexpected adverse events were observed in patients receiving oliceridine.
Abstract
After acute burn injury, injured tissue and adjacent non-burned tissue, upregulate response to painful and non-painful stimulus (hyperalgesia and allodynia, respectively). Currently, high-dose fentanyl, oxycodone, hydromorphone, and morphine are used at profound doses to mitigate pain. Oliceridine (OLI), a biased, selective opioid agonist, has shown a 3-fold preferential activation of the G-protein (i.e., analgesia) over β-arrestin pathway. There is no literature of use in patients with burn injuries. We hypothesized the use of OLI would provide adequate and safe analgesia after acute burn injury. This single-center, prospective, case-controlled trial was dual IRB approved and included patients with burn injuries admitted between April and September 2023. Informed consent was obtained from the 10 patients receiving OLI. OLI was the only allowed analgesic except for acetaminophen.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPoisoning and overdose treatments · Pain Management and Opioid Use · Pediatric Pain Management Techniques
