Post-operative Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Calibration and Evaluation of the QSPainRelief Platform in Patients With Disabling Pain Using Functional Biomarkers of Nociception, Sedation and Cognition
QSPainRelief-patientCNS is a monocentric prospective longitudinal study conducted in patients suffering from disabling post-surgical pain for which the treating physician is about to prescribe a given drug combination for the treatment of their pain with the aim of identifying measures of drug-induced effects on CNS activity that could be used as biomarkers of real-life clinical outcome, both in terms of desired treatment effects (treatment-induced pain relief) but also in terms of undesired treatment effects (treatment-induced sedation and treatment-induced cognitive dysfunction).
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 180 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 75 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Aged 18-75 years. - Presence of disabling post-operative pain for more than two weeks following thoracotomy, sternotomy or breast cancer surgery. - Current treatment of their post-operative pain with an opioid analgesic (along with possible other drugs). - Decision by the treating physician to introduce an additional non-opioid treatment for their post-operative pain such as (but not necessarily) an antiepileptic or an anti-depressant. - Capacity to understand and voluntarily sign an informed consent form. Exclusion Criteria: - Insufficient French language skills. - Planned chemotherapy, hormonotherapy or radiotherapy during the time interval between Visits 1 and 2. - Clinically evident psychiatric disease that is likely to interfere with the study, according to judgment by the investigator. - History of peripheral or central nervous system disease before the surgical intervention. - Dermatological condition involving the sensory testing areas. - Severe alcohol use disorder (as defined in DSM-5). - Severe sedative, hypnotic of anxiolytic-related use disorder (as defined in DSM-5). - Any other mild, moderate or severe substance use disorder except tobacco and caffeine (as defined in DSM-5). - Consumption of recreational drugs, including cannabis, in the last 4 weeks prior to the study. - Signs of polyneuropathy at clinical examination. - Signs of a neurological deficit due to a CNS lesion or dysfunction at clinical examination. - Any other reason to exclude the subject because it may interfere with the study, according to judgment by the investigator. The reason will be documented. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium | Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc | Brussels |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Université Catholique de Louvain | Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc- Université Catholique de Louvain |
Belgium,
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Charier DJ, Zantour D, Pichot V, Chouchou F, Barthelemy JM, Roche F, Molliex SB. Assessing Pain Using the Variation Coefficient of Pupillary Diameter. J Pain. 2017 Nov;18(11):1346-1353. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2017.06.006. Epub 2017 Jul 13. — View Citation
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Correlation between change in magnitude of laser-evoked brain potentials (LEP) and change in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) pain severity score | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in the magnitude of LEPs (in microvolts) predicts pain relief, the post-drug-combination vs. pre-drug-combination change in magnitude of LEPs between Visit 1 and Visit 2 (expressed as percentage of change between the two visits) will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in the pain severity score obtained from the BPI (score between 0 and 40; Gjeilo et al., 2007) between Visit 1 and Month 3. | three months | |
Primary | Correlation between change in the alpha attenuation coefficient (AAC) and change in the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS) | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in AAC (ratio between alpha-band power eyes closed vs. eyes open; Kaida et al., 2006) predicts self-reported sleepiness, the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug combination change in the AAC measured in the resting EEG between Visits 1 and 2 will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in self-reported sleepiness assessed using the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS; score between 1 and 7) between Visits 1 and 2. | 10 days | |
Primary | Correlation between change in magnitude of cognitive P3b potential and change in the PROMIS Neuro-QOL score for cognitive function | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in magnitude of the P3b component of auditory-evoked potentials (in microvolts; Komerchero & Polich 1999) predicts self-reported cognitive dysfunction, the post-drug-combination vs. pre-drug-combination change in P3b magnitude between Visits 1 and 2 (expressed as percentage of change) will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in self-reported cognitive dysfunction assessed using the short-form cognitive function measurement of the PROMIS Neuro-QOL (Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders) between Visits 1 and 2 (standardized T score for "cognitive function", having a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10 in a reference population). | 10 days | |
Secondary | Correlation between change in magnitude of the N13 spinal-cord evoked potential and change in the PQ-NEURO score for neuropathic pain | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in magnitude of the N13 spinal-cord evoked potential (in microvolts; Cruccu et al., 2008) predicts changes in self-reported signs of neuropathic pain, the post-drug-combination vs. pre-drug-combination change in amplitude of the N13 (expressed as percentage of change) between Visits 1 and 2 will be correlated to the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in the PROMIS measure of neuropathic pain quality (PQ-NEURO ; Askew et al. 2016) between Visits 1 and 2 (standardized T score with a mean of 50 and standard deviation of 10 in a reference population). | 10 days | |
Secondary | Correlation between change in the variation coefficient of pupillary dilation (VCPD) and change in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) score | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in the VCPD (Charier et al., 2017) predicts pain relief, the post-drug-combination vs. pre-drug-combination change in VCPD between Visits 1 and 2 will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in the pain severity score obtained from the BPI (score between 0 and 40; Gjeilo et al., 2007) between Visits 1 and 2. | 10 days | |
Secondary | Correlation between change in pupil constriction velocity (PCV) and change in the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) score | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in light-evoked PCV (in mm/s; Connely et al., 2014) predicts pain relief, the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in PCV between Visits 1 and 2 (mm/s) will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in the pain severity score obtained from the BPI (score between 0 and 40; Gjeilo et al., 2007) between Visits 1 and 2. | 10 days | |
Secondary | Correlation between change in saccadic peak velocity (SPV) and change in the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS) | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in SPV predicts self-reported sleepiness, the post-drug-combination vs pre-drug combination change in SPV (m/s) between Visits 1 and 2 (expressed as percentage of change) will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in self-reported sleepiness assessed using the Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS; score between 1 and 7) between Visits 1 and 2. | 10 days | |
Secondary | Correlation between change in performance of the 2-back working memory task (2-WM) and change in the PROMIS Neuro-QOL score for cognitive function | To assess whether inter-individual differences in the drug-induced change in performance of the 2-WM (expressed as the discrimination index d-prime; Haatveit et al., 2010) predicts self-reported cognitive dysfunction, the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in performance between Visits 1 and 2 will be correlated with the post-drug-combination minus pre-drug-combination change in self-reported cognitive dysfunction assessed using the short-form cognitive function measurement of the PROMIS Neuro-QOL (Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders) between Visits 1 and 2 (standardized T score for "cognitive function", having a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10 in a reference population). | 10 days |
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