Neck Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Long-term Efficacy of Radiofrequency Neurotomy for Chronic Zygapophysial (Facet) Joint Related Neck Pain
This is a single-center, double blind, sham-controlled randomized trial (N: 34) to assess the long term efficacy of RF neurotomy of cervical medial branches. Patients with chronic unilateral neck pain who are found eligible and achieve ≥50% pain relief of two predictive and comparative test blocks will be included in the trial in a primary analysis. We will further test whether a strict selection of ≥80% pain relief better predicts efficacious RF neurotomy compared with a less strict selection of ≥50% to <80%. After 6 months sham-treated patients may also be offered active unblinded RF treatment. Demographic and clinical data will be recorded at baseline while primary and secondary outcome measurements are recollected after 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. Primary outcome measurements include self-reported neck function (NDI) and pain relief after 6 months.
| Status | Recruiting |
| Enrollment | 34 |
| Est. completion date | December 14, 2025 |
| Est. primary completion date | December 14, 2024 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 18 Years to 80 Years |
| Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria - Min 18 years and Maximum 80 years - Read and understand Norwegian - Stable neck pain >12 months, with or without unilateral headache - Average of worst pain intensity last three days = 4 out of maximum 10 - Neck Disability Index >15 points or > 30 percentage points. - At least two predictive blocks = 50% pain relief 30 to 60 minutes after lidocaine and 30 to 180 minutes after bupivacaine . Exclusion Criteria: - Serious cervical pathology (acute cervical disc herniation, radiculopathy, myelopathy, spinal anomalies and chronic widespread pain - Opioid consumption > 50 morphine equivalents/day - Ongoing litigation process and applying for disability insurance/benefits - Serious psychiatric disorder (DSM-IV-TR) diagnosed at a psychiatric unit, including suicidal thoughts and somatization (from Hopkins Symptom Check List 25 = 2.5) - Ongoing addictive behavior ( diagnostic criteria in Statistical Manual, 4th Edition) - Unstable medical condition (ASA 4, serious vascular disease like unstable angina) - Bacterial infection - Malignancy - Chronic generalized pain - Hypersensitive to contrast agents or local anesthetics - Pregnancy - Bleeding diathesis - Previously radiofrequency neurotomy |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Norway | Department of Pain Management and Research Oslo University Hospital | Oslo | |
| Norway | Department for Pain and Complex Disorders | Trondheim | Torgarden |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Oslo University Hospital | St. Olavs Hospital |
Norway,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Change in neck function after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of Neck Disability Index scores -continuous variable 0-50) | 6 months | |
| Primary | Change in pain intensity (numeric pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (triplicate values from three consecutive days on a numeric pain scale 0-10 which provides a continuous variable) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in neck function after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of Neck Disability Index scores -continuous variable 0-50 | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (numeric pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (triplicate values from three consecutive days on a numeric pain scale 0-10 which provides a continuous variable) | 1 month | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (numeric pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (triplicate values from three consecutive days on a numeric pain scale 0-10 which provides a continuous variable) | 3 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (numeric pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (triplicate values from three consecutive days on a numeric pain scale 0-10 which provides a continuous variable) | 9 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (numeric pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (triplicate values from three consecutive days on a numeric pain scale 0-10 which provides a continuous variable) | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (categorical pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (categorical 6-point pain scale with the alternatives worse, unchanged, <50% reduced, =50% reduced, and pain free which provides a categorial variable) | 1 month | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (categorical pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (categorical 6-point pain scale wth the alternatives worse, unchanged, <50% reduced, =50% reduced, and pain free which provides a categorial variable) | 3 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (categorical pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (categorical 6-point pain scale wth the alternatives worse, unchanged, <50% reduced, =50% reduced, and pain free which provides a categorial variable) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (categorical pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (categorical 6-point pain scale wth the alternatives worse, unchanged, <50% reduced, =50% reduced, and pain free which provides a categorial variable) | 9 months | |
| Secondary | Change in pain intensity (categorical pain scale) after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change in pain intensity (categorical 6-point pain scale wth the alternatives worse, unchanged, <50% reduced, =50% reduced, and pain free which provides a categorial variable) | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in health related quality of life after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of EuroQuol-5-Dimensions Index scores (continuous variable from -0.59 to 1.00) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in health related quality of life after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of EuroQuol-5-Dimensions Index scores (continuous variable from -0.59 to 1.00) | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in drug consumption after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of the numbers of analgesic drugs (continuous variable) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in drug consumption after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of the numbers of analgesic drugs (continuous variable) | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in number of neck/pain treatments after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment | Two independent group comparison of change of the numbers of neck/pain treatments (continuous variable) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How highly positive response to test block influences neck function after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >15% reduction of Neck disability Score (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How moderately positive response to test block influences neck function after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =50% and <80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >15% reduction of Neck disability Score (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How highly positive response to test block influences 30% pain relief after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >30% reduction in pain intensity (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How moderately positive response to test block influences 30% pain relief after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =50% and <80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >30% reduction in pain intensity (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How highly positive response to test block influences 50% pain relief after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >50% reduction in pain intensity (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How moderately positive response to test block influences 50% pain relief after RF treatment | Regression analysis on how =50 and <80% pain relief (independent categorical variable) predicts >50% reduction in pain intensity (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How catastrophizing influences neck function after RF treatment. | Regression analysis on how Pain Catastrophizing Scale score =30 (independent categorical variable) predict = 15% reduction of Neck Disability Score (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy vs Pain Catastrophizing Scale score < 30 | 6 months | |
| Secondary | How catastrophizing influences pain relief after RF treatment. | Regression analysis on how Pain Catastrophizing Scale scores =30 (independent categorical variable) predict >30% reduction in pain intensity (categorical variable) after RF neurotomy vs Pain Catastrophizing Scale scores < 30 | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in mental distress after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment. | Two independent group comparison of change in Hopkin Symptom Check List (HSCL 25) sumscore which is a continuous variable on anxiety and depressive symptoms, ranging from 1 (normal) to 4 (worse) | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in mental distress after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment. | Two independent group comparison of change in Hopkin Symptom Check List (HSCL 25) sumscore which is a continuous variable on anxiety and depressive symptoms, ranging from 1 (normal) to 4 (worse) | 12 months | |
| Secondary | Change in sleep disturbances after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment. | Two independent group comparison of change in sleep. Sleep Subscale in Neck Disability Index part 7. A continuous variable based on a 6 point scale ranging from 0 to 6 where 0 is no problem and 6 i severe insomnia. | 6 months | |
| Secondary | Change in sleep disturbances after RF neurotomy vs sham treatment. | Two independent group comparison of change in sleep. Sleep Subscale in Neck Disability Index part 7. A continuous variable based on a 6 point scale ranging from 0 to 6 where 0 is no problem and 6 i severe insomnia. | 12 months |
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