LidocAine Versus Opioids In MyocarDial infarction: the AVOID-2 randomized controlled trial
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
Opioid analgesia has been shown to interfere with the bioavailability of oral P2Y12 inhibitors prompting the search for safe and effective non-opioid analgesics to treat ischaemic chest pain.
The lidocAine Versus Opioids In MyocarDial infarction trial was a prospective, Phase II, prehospital, open-label, non-inferiority, randomized controlled trial enrolling patients with suspected STEACS with moderate to severe pain [numerical rating scale (NRS) at least 5/10]. Intravenous lidocaine (maximum dose 300 mg) or intravenous fentanyl (up to 50 µg every 5 min) were administered as prehospital analgesia. The co-primary end points were prehospital pain reduction and adverse events requiring intervention. Secondary end points included peak cardiac troponin I, cardiac MRI (cMRI) assessed myocardial infarct size and clinical outcomes to 30 days. A total of 308 patients were enrolled. The median reduction in pain score (NRS) was 4 vs. 3 in the fentanyl and lidocaine arms, respectively, for the primary efficacy end point [estimated median difference −1 (95% confidence interval −1.58, −0.42,
IV Lidocaine did not meet the criteria for non-inferiority with lower prehospital pain reduction than fentanyl but was safe and better tolerated as analgesia in ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Future trials testing non-opioid analgesics in STEMI and whether opioid avoidance improves clinical outcomes are needed.
CTRN12619001521112p
Contributors

Paul S Myles
Author

Jeffrey Lefkovits
Author

Karlheinz Peter
Author

Angela Brennan
Author

Diem Dinh
Author

Emily Andrew
Author

Himawan Fernando
Author

Andrew J Taylor
Author

Ziad Nehme
Author

Catherine Milne
Author

Karen Smith
Author

Jessica O’Brien
Author

Dion Stub
Author

Stephen Bernard
Author

Michael Stephenson
Author
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