Chronic Non-malignant Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Collaborative Care for Chronic Pain in Primary Care
The overall aim of this study is to adopt an integrative rehabilitation approach for helping patients adopt self-management skills for managing chronic pain, limiting use of opioid medications, and identifying exacerbating factors amenable to treatment (e.g., depression, sleep problems) that is feasible and sustainable within the primary care setting.
Pain is a common and very costly public health problem. Common chronic pain conditions are
expensive and pervasive, affecting at least 116 million American adults at an annual cost of
$560 billion in direct medical treatment costs and lost productivity, and disproportionally
affect vulnerable populations. Pain is the primary reason patients seek medical care and, as
the first point of contact, primary care providers (PCPs) deliver the majority of that care.
Unfortunately, PCPs face many challenges in managing these patients' care and often have
little specific training in pain medicine. Yet with proper system support, PCPs are in the
best position to coordinate pain management longitudinally. While pharmacotherapy is the
predominant treatment approach for many PCPs, this limits the patient's role to taking
medication, and he or she can become a passive recipient of care—leading to poor outcomes,
potential overmedication, and possible disillusionment with the medical system. Further,
increases in opiate prescribing for pain treatment —amidst increasing awareness of adverse
outcomes, including addiction—and limited efficacy suggest the importance of broader
treatment approaches that focus on patients' improvement of functioning. Although opiates
may reduce pain symptoms while prescribed, patients are unlikely to experience significant
and sustained improvements without the use of other nonpharmacologic pain management
approaches. Medical management of patients with persistent pain and complex problems is
often fragmented, which leads patients to seek a wide variety of primary and specialty care
services in an effort to manage their pain and related conditions. Such fragmented care
leads to poorer outcomes and significantly increases health care costs as patients often
receive unneeded diagnostic and medical procedures. While research has identified
evidence-based multidisciplinary behavioral treatment approaches that are effective for such
patients and can even prevent the disability associated with persistent pain when offered
earlier in the course of care, these interventions are rarely available in everyday practice
settings and will require data from pragmatic clinical trials to change the care paradigm.
To address these issues, we are proposing a mixed-methods, cluster-randomized pragmatic
clinical trial that will evaluate the integration of psychosocial services within the
primary care environment. This project will implement an intervention into everyday clinical
practice flow utilizing assessment measures and intervention staff directly from the
clinical care system rather than utilizing a research-developed and administered structure.
The intervention will be an integrated program that will guide all care for intervention
patients. We will compare this primary care-based intervention to usual care using
systematic, clinic-based assessments. During the initial phase, we will pilot the
intervention with up to 50 patients in the Kaiser Permanente Northwest (KPNW) region with
patients selected by their primary care providers who have non-malignant chronic pain (pain
persisting for ≥ 3 months) and who are on long-term opiate therapy for the treatment of
their condition. This pilot portion of the project is in preparation for the effective
implementation of a large-scale, cluster-randomized pragmatic clinical trial to be conducted
throughout three regions of Kaiser Permanente - Northwest, Georgia, and Hawaii comparing
this primary care based multidisciplinary intervention to usual care in these settings.
This intervention brings together elements often available in health plans but organized in
a less integrated fashion, and it will ensure flexibility in implementation to best fit
individual clinic environments and the needs of chronic pain patients on long-term opiate
therapy.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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