Chronic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Optimising Cognitive Function in Patients With Chronic Pain
Cognitive difficulties often occur with chronic pain. The aim of this randomised controlled trial is to determine whether various aspects of cognitive function can be improved. An 8-week course of cognitive training via a web-based training program (3 times per week) will be contrasted with watching informative documentary videos (for the same length of time). Outcomes include subjective and objective measures of cognition, as well as self-report measures of mood and pain.
Rationale for project:
Cognitive difficulties may occur with chronic pain, potentially indicative of compromised
functioning in frontal brain regions, which also results in greater difficulty controlling
pain, with increased rumination and worry. Discovering a successful method for strengthening
these neural systems may improve cognitive skills important for daily life and maximise
therapeutic outcomes.
Research questions:
In people experiencing cognitive deficits due to their pain condition:
1. Can neurocognitive abilities be improved?
2. Can such improvements bring about better daily functioning in general?
3. If these training protocols improve cognition, will there also be an effect of pain
reduction, i.e., in the extent to which pain interferes with a person's life?
Aim:
The overarching aim of this research is to determine whether cognitive function can be
improved via a training protocol in people experiencing cognitive difficulties related to
chronic pain.
Design:
This is a randomised controlled trial examining the effects of cognitive training compared
with an active control. The investigators aim to enrol 40 participants with chronic pain in
the study: 20 training, and 20 active control. This sample size was chosen based on a power
analysis with moderate effect size, and is consistent with sample sizes in the existing
cognitive training literature, though no similar study has so far been done in a chronic
pain population. Both groups will complete their respective study activities 3 times per
week, for 45 minutes each time, across 8 weeks. They will be assessed before completing the
8-week period, and again within a few days of completion.
Procedures:
40 participants will be recruited via the Caulfield Pain Management and Research Centre.
After deciding to participate and meeting all inclusion criteria, participants will be
invited to attend their first on-site assessment session at Monash University, Clayton. The
first assessment session will include an overview of the training program and demonstration
of how to do the tasks, or an overview of the active control activities (as applicable).
Both assessment sessions will involve detailed assessment of cognition, pain, and mood.
The cognitive training protocol will be run using pre-validated software that delivers brain
training "games". The games are designed to be visually interesting and engaging, and are
varied so that each session will comprise multiple different games, to avoid boredom. They
begin with easy-to-follow instructions and demonstrations, then as the participant
progresses, the difficulty is automatically increased in correspondence with their
performance, to avoid ceiling or plateau effects. Participants will be assigned a program
targeting multiple facets of cognition found to be compromised in chronic pain states,
including divided attention, working memory, mentally planning a sequence of items to form a
pattern or complete a puzzle, and response inhibition.
This software is accessible via the internet on desktop and laptop computers, or on tablet
devices. All training sessions will be completed at home. The researchers will hold a master
account, allowing them to log in and monitor participant progress and compliance with the
training.
The active control group will be provided with a variety of videos to watch, the content of
which will be in the style of documentaries on general interest topics such as nature,
travel, culture, and history. These are also visually stimulating and engaging, but involve
no increment in difficulty. They may provide distraction from pain and may be relaxing.
Throughout the protocol, the researchers will have weekly contact with participants by phone
or video call. Keeping regular contact in this way will maintain engagement with the
research team, help boost motivation and allow participants to express any issues they may
be having with the protocol.
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