Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Multicentre Double-blind Randomised Controlled Trial to Assess the Clinical- and Cost-effectiveness of Facet-joint Injections in Selected Patients With Non-specific Low Back Pain: a Feasibility Study
Lumbar facet-joints are small, paired joints in the low back that provide stability,
integrity and flexibility of movement to the spine. Diseased facet-joints may cause
persistent low back pain, with significant socioeconomic impact. At present, there is
insufficient high quality evidence to support the use of lumbar facet-joint injections (FJIs)
in treating low back pain of less than 12 months' duration; the National Institute for Health
and Care Excellence (NICE) therefore did not approved their use in their 2009 publication.
This study will investigate the feasibility of conducting a larger, definitive trial to
assess lumbar FJIs (a needle is inserted into the facet-joint and steroid injected), by
comparing it to a dummy or 'sham' procedure (a needle is inserted near the facet-joint but no
therapeutic substance injected).
Patients with persistent low back pain, referred to a community or hospital-based pain,
spinal or musculoskeletal clinic by their general practitioner, will be reviewed and assessed
by a specialist physician. They will be screened and recruited based on clinical history and
examination. Participants will receive diagnostic injections (medial branch nerve blocks);
those with a positive response will randomly receive either FJIs or a sham procedure, under
x-ray guidance. All participants will receive a combined physical and psychological programme
recommended by NICE as a strategy to reduce pain and its impact on the person's day-to-day
life, even if the pain cannot be cured completely.
Participants will be asked to complete questionnaires comparing a range of pain and
disability-related issues. These will occur at baseline (before treatment) and at 6 weeks, 3
months and 6 months after their injections.
Criteria for the study to be considered successful (and a definitive trial feasible) include
the abilities to standardise the methods for injection and to recruit and retain sufficient
participants, and the acceptability of the study design to participants and clinicians.
Design
This study seeks to examine the feasibility of undertaking a fully powered double-blind
randomised controlled trial. Patients with non-specific low back pain of more than three
months' duration with confirmed facet-joint disease will be individually randomised 1:1 to
receive facet-joint injections plus a combined physical and psychological programme
(intervention group) or to a sham (placebo) procedure plus a combined physical and
psychological programme (control group).
Setting
The feasibility study will be conducted in three hospital-based pain medicine centres: Barts
Health NHS Trust (formerly Barts and The London NHS Trust), Basildon and Thurrock University
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, and The Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust.
Target population
Patients will be recruited from pain, spinal and musculoskeletal clinics at the three
participating NHS centres and their associated community clinics. Patients will be referred
by their general practitioners with low back pain requiring further specialist assessment,
for reasons such as uncertain diagnosis, failure of conservative treatment, or expectation of
therapeutic interventions. A screening visit will be used to identify eligible patients i.e.
pain of at least 3 months' duration and an average pain intensity numerical rating score
(NRS) of at least 4/10 in the 7 preceding days, signs and symptoms of facet-joint disease
including bilateral localised paraspinal tenderness at 2 lumbar levels, and have received two
components of NICE-defined best non-invasive care (education and one of: physical exercise
programme, acupuncture, or manual therapy).
Health technologies being assessed
Facet-joint injections of local anaesthetic and steroid for non-specific low back pain.
(Delivered in this study as four X-ray guided intra-articular facet-joint injections through
a spinal needle at two lumbar levels bilaterally, using 0.5ml 0.5% bupivacaine + 20mg
methylprednisolone per joint, under fluoroscopic guidance.)
Measurement of costs and outcomes
The primary outcomes for this feasibility study include: patient recruitment and attrition
rates, levels of patient completion of outcomes, acceptability of the study design to
patients and clinicians, fidelity of sham injection and process of blinding, and collection
of variance outcome data to inform a future sample size calculation.
The investigators have proposed stopping rules for progression to a main trial. The proposed
outcomes for the main trial have been selected in accord with IMMPACT recommendations for
chronic pain trials and include: pain assessment, psychological well-being, health-related
quality of life, functional disability, health care utilisation including analgesic usage,
lost productivity and complications/level of adverse events. Outcomes will be collected at
clinic visits at baseline (pre-randomisation) and at 6 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months
post-randomisation.
Sample size
The investigators will recruit a total of 150 patients who will undergo a diagnostic
facet-joint injection to determine eligibility to participate (test positive for facet-joint
disease). Sixty participants (40% of all recruited) are expected to have a positive response
to the diagnostic test; these 60 patients will be randomly and equally allocated to
intervention and control groups. Assuming up to a 33% attrition rate, the investigators will
have >24 complete data sets per arm at the end of the study. This sample size will allow us
to achieve our various feasibility objectives.
Project timetables including recruitment rate
A retrospective audit of patient throughput in participating clinics shows that recruitment
to achieve 30 patients per treatment arm is readily feasible in the time frame of this study.
From 1000 new patient attendances for low back pain at the pain services, the investigators
expect approximately 1 in 4 patients to be eligible to enter the study. This is based on our
clinical experience and published studies based on responses to controlled diagnostic
facet-joint injections, performed in accordance with the criteria established by the
International Association for the Study of Pain. Of these 250 patients, approximately 60%
(150) will consent to enter the study, of whom approximately 40% (60 patients) are expected
to have a positive response from diagnostic medial branch nerve blocks.
The investigators anticipate that the project will take a total of 21 months to complete.
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