Efficacy of paracetamol added to WHO step III opioids in chronic pain control: study protocol for a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, non-inferiority, multicentre study in Switzerland
Christina Kotoula, Maria M Wertli, Konrad Streitberger, Sacha I Rothschild, Andreas Limacher, Felix Hammann, Stephan Krähenbühl, Manuel Haschke, Evangelia Liakoni

TL;DR
This study tests whether adding paracetamol to strong opioids improves chronic pain control in patients, using a randomized trial in Switzerland.
Contribution
The study provides a rigorous evaluation of the WHO-recommended combination of paracetamol and opioids for chronic pain.
Findings
The primary outcome will assess average pain scores after 7 days of treatment.
Secondary outcomes include opioid use, side effects, and genetic factors influencing treatment response.
The study will determine if paracetamol adds clinical benefit when combined with opioids.
Abstract
The analgesic and antipyretic paracetamol (acetaminophen) is generally considered safe in therapeutic doses. The most important toxic effect is hepatotoxicity after supratherapeutic doses or in the presence of risk factors (eg, malnutrition, alcoholism). According to the WHO analgesic ladder, a combination of a non-opioid analgesic such as paracetamol with a strong opioid is recommended as step III treatment of patients with chronic pain, despite limited evidence for this approach. The main aim of this study is to test the hypothesis that paracetamol does not provide clinically relevant benefits when added to strong opioids in patients with chronic pain. Investigator-initiated, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, non-inferiority trial at two Swiss hospitals. A total of 140 patients with chronic pain requiring strong opioids and paracetamol ≥1.5 g/day for at least 7 days will…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDrug-Induced Hepatotoxicity and Protection · Pain Management and Opioid Use · Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
