Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Other |
Blinding assessment |
To test the success of blinding, participants in the acupuncture group and the SA group will be asked to reply to the following question at the 6th week of treatment (sessions 18): "Do you think you have received traditional acupuncture in the past weeks?" The participants will be able to choose one of the following options as the answer: "Yes", "No" or "Unclear". |
Week 6 |
|
Other |
Safety assessment |
We will handle and document the adverse events (AEs) using the standard operating procedures for monitoring and reporting all AEs. According to their potential association with the treatment, AEs will be categorized as treatment-related or non-treatment-related within 24 hours after their occurrence. Treatment-related AEs include pain, haematoma, localized infection, broken needle, fainting, nausea, headache, dizziness, insomnia, vomiting, or palpitations during or after treatment. In addition, adverse events that are irrelevant to the treatment will be recorded during the study period. |
Week 0 to 30 |
|
Other |
Expectation of improvement assessment |
Patients choosing "improved" in the expectation assessment will be asked: "To what extent do you think your pelvic pain will be helped after acupuncture treatment?" Participants will choose the answer from the following options: a great degree, a moderate degree, a small degree, unclear. |
Baseline |
|
Other |
Trust evaluation of acupuncture therapy |
Patients choosing "improved" in the expectation assessment will be asked: "To what extent do you think your pelvic pain will be helped after acupuncture treatment?" Participants will choose the answer from the following options: a great degree, a moderate degree, a small degree, unclear. |
Baseline and week 6 |
|
Primary |
The change from baseline of the mean score in the past week of the Visual Analogue Scale |
The scores of the Visual Analogue Scale range from 0 to 10,higher scores mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the Brief Pain Inventory score |
The Brief Pain Inventory score uses 0-10 numeric scales for item rating with 0 being "no pain" and 10 being "pain as bad as you can imagine". The pain severity score is calculated from the four items about pain intensity with a range from 0 to 40. The pain interference score corresponds to the item on pain interference with a range from 0 to 70. Higher scores of the Brief Pain Inventory mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the pain severity score of the Brief Pain Inventory |
The pain severity score of the Brief Pain Inventory is calculated from the four items about pain intensity. Each item is rated from "no pain" to "pain as bad as you can imagine", and contributes with the same weight to the final score, ranging from 0 to 40. The pain interference score corresponds to the item on pain interference. Higher scores of the The pain severity score mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the pain interference score of the Brief Pain Inventory |
The pain interference score of the Brief Pain Inventory corresponds to the item on pain interference. The seven subitems are rated from "does not interfere" to "completely interferes", and contributes with the same weight to the final score, ranging from 0 to 70. Higher scores of the pain interference score mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The proportion of patients with decrease of 0.6 score or more from baseline of the pain interference score of the Brief Pain Inventory |
The pain interference score of the Brief Pain Inventory corresponds to the item on pain interference. The seven subitems are rated from "does not interfere" to "completely interferes", and contributes with the same weight to the final score, ranging from 0 to 70. Higher scores of the pain interference score mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The proportion of patients with decrease of 20% or more from baseline of the pain severity score of the Brief Pain Inventory |
The pain severity score of the Brief Pain Inventory is calculated from the four items about pain intensity. Each item is rated from "no pain" to "pain as bad as you can imagine", and contributes with the same weight to the final score, ranging from 0 to 40. The pain interference score corresponds to the item on pain interference. Higher scores of the The pain severity score mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the Pain Catastrophising Questionnaire score |
The Pain Catastrophising Questionnaire is a validated scale with 13 items, each scored from 0 (not at all) to 4 (all the time) with a total score range of 0-52, across three domains: rumination (0-16); magnifications (0-12); and helplessness (0-24).Higher scores of the Pain Catastrophising Questionnaire mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale score |
the score of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale ranges from 0 to 42. Higher scores mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The change from baseline of the World Health Organisation Quality of life - Bref Questionnaire score |
Domain scores for the World Health Organisation Quality of life-Bref Questionnaire score are calculated by taking the mean of all items included in each domain and multiplying by a factor of four. These scores are then transformed to a 0-100 scale.Higher scores denote higher quality of life. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The proportions of participants in each response category of the Patient global impression of change |
Patient global impression of change consists of 7 response categories with a range of 1-7: "very much improved," "much improved," "minimally improved," "no change," "minimally worse," "much worse," or "very much worse." Higher scores mean a worse outcome. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|
Secondary |
The proportion of subjects using rescue medications and the duration of medication use |
The use of medications during this trial. However, medication use is allowed for intolerable symptoms as long as it is recorded accordingly, including the name, the dosage, and the duration of the medication use. |
Week 6, 18 and 30 |
|