Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05858996 |
Other study ID # |
HP-00105286 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 4, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
December 2028 |
Study information
Verified date |
June 2024 |
Source |
University of Maryland, Baltimore |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
There are evidence based processes for assessment and management of pain using pharmacologic
and nonpharmacological approaches. These were reviewed and included within the Pain
Management Clinical Practice Guideline (Pain Management CPG) recently developed by AMDA: The
Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine. There are, however, many challenges to
translating the use of Clinical Practice Guidelines into clinical settings. To overcome these
challenges we developed and previously tested a theoretically based approach and merged this
approach with the Pain Management CPG, which is referred to as the PAIN-CLINICAL PRACTICE
GUIDELINE-USING THE EVIDENCE INTEGRATION TRIANGLE (PAIN-CPG-EIT). The PAIN-CPG-EIT involves a
research nurse facilitator working with an identified community champion(s) and stakeholder
team for 12 months to provide the following four components: Component I: Establishing and
meeting monthly with a Stakeholder Team; Component II: Education of the staff; Component III:
Mentoring and motivating the staff to address pain; Component IV: Ongoing evaluation of
resident pain outcomes. Twelve communities will be included with 25 residents living with
dementia and pain recruited from each community. Six communities will be randomized to
treatment (PAIN-CPG-EIT) and six randomized to education only (EO) which involves providing
the same education to staff as is done in Component II of PAIN-CPG-EIT. The primary aim of
this study is to test the effectiveness of use of the PAIN-CPG-EIT to improve the assessment,
diagnosis and management of pain and decrease pain intensity among nursing home residents
living with dementia between baseline, 4 and 12 months and evaluate treatment fidelity. A
secondary aim of the study is to consider differences in measurement, treatment and response
to treatment between male and female and Black versus White residents living with dementia.
Findings from this study will help build on the currently limited information about pain
presentation and management among older adults living with dementia in nursing homes and
improve health equity of aging populations experiencing pain.
Description:
Pain is a common symptom among older adults in nursing home settings affecting 30% to 80% of
residents living with dementia. Pain is not assessed, the underlying cause is not identified
and treatment is not initiated for a large percentage of residents living with dementia in
nursing homes. Lack of accurate pain evaluation results in untreated or over-treated pain.
Untreated or over-treated pain can lower quality of life, negatively impact function, impair
sleep, and increase behavioral and psychological symptoms associated with dementia. Reasons
for lack of pain assessment, diagnosis and management for residents living with dementia
include lack of knowledge among staff on how to evaluate and treat pain, limited options for
complete pain relief, concerns related to use of opioids, and beliefs that pain is a normal
part of aging among others.
For those with moderate to severe dementia verbal reporting of pain may not be reliable and
observational approaches are recommended. Pain in individuals living with dementia is more
likely to present with aggression, agitation, repetitive vocalizations, restlessness, sleep
disturbances, withdrawal, and apathy and may be incorrectly treated with psychotropic
medications. Evaluation and management of pain is also complicated by differences between
sex/gender, racial and ethnic groups. In some studies individuals living with dementia who
were older, male, or Black were less likely to verbally report having pain or to be treated
for pain compared to those who were younger, female, or white. With regard to treatment,
there is some evidence that nonpharmacological treatments and analgesics can decrease pain
among individuals living with dementia. Engaging individuals, particularly those living with
dementia, in interventions to manage pain such as physical activity or positioning can be
difficult and staff need education and techniques to use to motivate residents in these
activities.
Evidence based pain assessment, diagnosis and management approaches for nursing home
residents, including residents living with dementia, were recently incorporated into a new
Pain Management Clinical Practice Guideline (Pain CPG). Translation of Clinical Practice
Guidelines or evidence based practices into real world settings are slow to occur and
innovative approaches are needed. In prior work to facilitate translation of best practices
the investigators developed a successful theoretically based approach that utilized the
Social Ecological Model and Social Cognitive Theory and was guided by the Evidence
Integration Triangle. Using this theoretically based approach there was a change in staff and
resident behavior related to increasing residents' physical activity using a function focused
care approach and increased use of nonpharmacological approaches to address behavioral
symptoms associated with dementia. The purpose of this study is to utilize the previously
established theoretically based approach to translate use of the new Pain Management CPG into
nursing home settings and improve the assessment, diagnosis and management of pain among
residents living with dementia. The theoretically based approach combined with the Pain
Management CPG is referred to as the PAIN-CPG-EIT. The PAIN-CPG-EIT is initiated by a
research nurse facilitator who works with community champions and a stakeholder team for 12
months to provide four components: Component I: Establishing and meeting monthly with a
stakeholder team and champion(s) to establish community goals related to pain and review the
Pain Management CPG; Component II: Education of the staff about assessment, diagnosis and
management of pain of residents living with dementia based on the Pain Management CPG;
Component III: Mentoring and motivating staff to assess, diagnose and manage pain; and
Component IV: Ongoing monitoring of pain assessment, diagnosis and management and feedback to
the stakeholder team. Twelve communities will be randomized to treatment (PAIN-CPG-EIT) or
Education Only (EO) and 25 residents living with dementia and pain will be recruited per
community. The first aim of this study is to: Test the effectiveness of use of the
PAIN-CPG-EIT to improve the assessment, diagnosis and management of pain and decrease pain
intensity among nursing home residents living with dementia. The second aim is to evaluate
treatment fidelity related to use of the PAIN-CPG-EIT based on delivery, receipt and
enactment. The third aim is to: a. test for gender/sex and race invariance in pain
measurement based on the Pain in Alzheimer's Disease (PAIN-AD) measure; and b. test for
differences in treatment of pain and response to treatment between male and female and Black
versus White residents living with dementia. Findings will help to improve the assessment,
diagnosis and management of pain and evaluate health disparities and equity among older
adults living with dementia experiencing pain. Demonstrating effectiveness of this approach
to using the Pain Management CPG will facilitate future work disseminating and implementing
this CPG.