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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01322399
Other study ID # 2010-P-000014; SRH
Secondary ID K01AT004916
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received March 23, 2011
Last updated December 9, 2013
Start date December 2010
Est. completion date August 2013

Study information

Verified date December 2013
Source Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority United States: Federal Government
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The primary purpose of study is the collection of feasibility data for a larger trial of Structural Integration (SI)(an alternative manual therapy) for chronic low back pain. The secondary purpose is the collection of preliminary data on 1) the therapeutic effect of SI plus usual care versus usual care alone - the hypothesis being the the effect size will be significantly greater in the SI plus usual care arm; and on 2) specific hypothesized mechanisms of that hypothesized therapeutic effect: a) improvements in cognitive behavioral factors; b) improvements in standing balance and gait, and c) improvements in selected blood biomarkers.


Description:

Chronic, non-specific low back pain is among the most burdensome health problems in both prevalence and cost of care. Up to one third of acute low back pain cases may become chronic and lead to disability. A large fraction of chronic cases are absent of findings of well-understood causes, i.e. neoplastic, infectious or inflammatory conditions, or nerve compression, and are generally designated as "uncomplicated," "non-specific," or "mechanical." Usual care typically includes oral and injected medication, physical therapy and exercise. Therapeutic response is difficult to predict and many outcomes are unsatisfactory, with high rates of relapse.

Structural Integration (SI) is an alternative method of manual therapy and somato-sensory training that purports to improve the biomechanical functioning of the body as a whole rather than to focus on the treatment of specific symptoms. SI is delivered in a series of ten treatments, referred to as "the Ten Series," each of approximately one hour in duration. The Ten Series protocol includes manipulation of all major joints and anatomical segments. Each of the ten sessions aims to achieve a different, specified set of biomechanical changes which are regarded as contributing to the progressive approximation of specific ideals of posture and movement.

Forty (40) subjects will be recruited from among individuals entering treatment for chronic low back pain at outpatient rehabilitation clinics in the Boston area. Following baseline measures, subjects will be randomized with equal probability (50/50) to usual care alone versus usual care plus ten sessions of SI. SI treatment will be provided by qualified SI therapists at their private practice offices. They will be supervised on a monthly basis by a co-investigator with extensive prior experience in the clinical practice of SI.

Data will be collected at baseline, end-of-treatment, and endpoint. Baseline data will be collected prior to the subject's first treatment appointment, and endpoint data will be collected from all subjects at 20 weeks post-baseline. End-of-treatment measures will be conducted during the week following each subject's completion of their assigned treatment arm. Consequently, the average time elapsed between baseline and end-of-treatment will differ across the two treatment arms, because of different amounts of time allowed for the completion of usual care alone (3-7 weeks) versus usual care plus SI (10-15) weeks.

Analysis relevant to the primary aim of the study will be conducted as follows: The demographic characteristics of candidates referred, subjects enrolled, and dropouts will described. Descriptive statistics, both aggregate and per treatment arm, will be computed for data on retention and compliance with treatment, and on the use of concurrent medications. Each adverse events will be characterized by subject demographics and by treatment arm, and will also be rated for severity, likelihood of relation to the study, and expected versus unexpected.

Analysis relevant to the secondary aim of the study will be conducted as follows: Baseline to endpoint changes in therapeutic outcomes, cognitive-behavioral measures and blood assay values will be compared across treatment arms using appropriate statistical tests. Baseline to endpoint changes in standing balance and gait parameters will be analyzed using methods that are standard in the current literature. In addition to appropriate statistical tests, these include the visual inspection of graphic displays of the phase relationships between rotational movements of body segments during gait. The association between each mechanistic parameter - cognitive-behavioral, biomechanical, and blood biomarkers - and the primary and secondary therapeutic outcomes will be explored per treatment arm and in aggregate.

Data on changes between baseline and end-of-treatment will be subject to exploratory analysis within treatment arms only. Comparison across arms is inappropriate because of systematic variation in the average duration of treatment in usual care alone (estimated at 5 weeks) versus usual care plus SI (estimated at 12.5 weeks). Analysis will include the exploration of associations between changes in therapeutic outcomes on one hand, and mechanistic parameters on the other, but only within each treatment arm.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 46
Est. completion date August 2013
Est. primary completion date August 2013
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Chronic low back pain patient-rated >=3 on a VAS (0-10) with retrospective duration of at least 6 months

- Low back pain attributed to mechanical as opposed to infectious, neoplastic or inflammatory causes

- Age 18-65

- English speaking

- Male or female

- Mental capacity sufficient to provide informed consent

- Able to commit to up to 27 study meetings over a period of 5 months.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Impairment of hearing, speech, vision, mobility or English fluency sufficient to interfere with participation in the study

- Current or anticipated receipt of payments from Workmen's Compensation or other insurance for disability attributed to low back pain.

- Reports any prior treatment with Structural Integration (Rolf or other varieties, including "structural massage")

- Plans to initiate additional treatment for back pain during the period of the study other than usual rehabilitation care provided at Spaulding Medford clinic, particularly massage or other manual therapy (e.g. chiropractic, osteopathic)

- Unresolved musculoskeletal pathology of the lower limbs

- Pregnancy

- Clinical judgment by Spaulding Medford medical director that the candidate will require either surgery or epidural analgesia within the next five months.

- Alcohol of substance abuse

- Any implanted medical device (e.g. cardio-pacemaker, shunts)

- Prior discectomy or implantation of rods, screws or plates (bulging disc without radicular pain is not exclusionary; hip or shoulder replacement is not exclusionary)

- Current medication with coumadin or prednisone, chronic use of steroid medications, daily use of narcotic analgesics.

- Current diagnosis with any of the following

1. Balance problems due to vestibular or other neurological impairments

2. Osteoporosis (osteopenia is not exclusionary)

3. Fibromyalgia

4. Severe or progressive neurological deficits, including neuromotor impairment

5. Any hypercoagulation condition

6. Eczema, skin infections, deep vein thrombosis

7. Burns or other acute trauma including unhealed bone fractures or open wounds.

8. Psychiatric illness not well controlled, or current episode of exacerbated major depressive disorder.

- Any other major medical condition that has not been stabilized, or that would impair the patient's ability to complete the activities required by the study

- Body Mass Index >= 40

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
Structural Integration
Structural Integration (SI) is an alternative method of manual therapy and somato-sensory training that purports to improve biomechanical functioning of the body as a whole rather than to focus on the treatment of specific symptoms. SI therapists employ both manipulation and somatosensory education. SI is delivered in a series of ten treatments, referred to as "the Ten Series," each of approximately one hour in duration. The Ten Series protocol includes manipulation of all major joints and anatomical segments. Each of the ten sessions aims to achieve a different set of biomechanical changes, which are regarded as contributing to the progressive approximation of specific ideals of posture and movement.
Usual care
Usual care in this study consists of the treatment regimen provided for chronic low back pain at Spaulding Medford Rehabilitation clinic, which may include pain medication, exercise and physical therapy. Frequency of treatment averages twice weekly, duration ranges from 3 to 7 weeks

Locations

Country Name City State
United States Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Boston Massachusetts

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Patient rated visual analogue scale (0-10) disturbingness of low back related pain retrospective for one weeks. 20 weeks No
Secondary Total score on the Roland Disability Scale 20 weeks No
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