Subacute Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial of Stay-Active Care and Manual Therapy Versus Stay-Active Care Only in Subacute Low Back Pain in a Primary Health Care Setting. The Gotland Low Back Pain Study
A randomized controlled trial over a 10-week period with a two-year follow-up. The objectives were to compare effects of manual therapy in addition to the stay-active concept versus the stay-active concept only in low back pain patients recruited from primary health care. 160 outpatients with acute or subacute low back pain with or without pain radiation into the legs (70 women, 90 men, ages 20-55 years) were recruited from a geographically defined area and randomly allocated to stay-active care with or without muscle stretching, or to manual therapy with or without specific corticosteroid injections in addition to the stay-active concept. Pain, disability rating index, and sickness absence measures were used as outcome at 10-week follow-up and sickness absence was measured at two-year follow-up.
The study is a randomized, controlled, clinical trial in the Swedish province of Gotland,
with primary data collection from 1994 to 1998. The recruitment population consisted of the
19000 employed persons born in Sweden, 20-55 years of age. Additional inclusion criteria
were:
Acute or subacute perceived low back pain with or without pain radiating to one or both
legs, not requiring acute surgical or rheumatological care, low back pain was required to be
the dominating symptom, symptom duration of 3 months or less, preceded by at least 2 months
of relative freedom from symptoms, consent to treatment and follow-up for 10 weeks,
agreement not to consult other therapists during the treatment period, absence of conditions
or circumstances that might jeopardize completion of treatment and follow-up, no previous
treatment of current complaints with specific mobilization or manipulation, and no previous
participation in the present study.
In Sweden, the National Social Insurance Offices (a government agency running the mandatory
national social insurance scheme applicable to all Swedish residents) handle sick leave with
a duration of two weeks or more. They as well as general practitioners (GP) and other
physicians referred patients. The recruiting physician examined all patients, performed a
physical examination, and made the final assessment whether they fulfilled the inclusion
criteria. Of the 316 patients who were referred to the study, 111 did not meet the inclusion
criteria and 45 declined participation. The 160 patients that gave informed consent were
entered in the study. After baseline evaluation they were randomized by the study monitor,
using sealed pre-prepared envelopes with group assignment derived from a random number
table. The envelopes were inaccessible to anyone but the monitor. A design with four
treatment groups was used: two experimental and two reference groups with treatment items
added successively. The two-group comparison (reference vs experimental treatment) was the
primary planned analysis, and pain, disability rating and sickness absence were the main
outcome measures. A weighted randomization procedure was used, with 45% of the patients to
reference and 55% to the experimental therapies. The Research Ethics Committee at Uppsala
University approved the study.
The stay active concept was the basic management strategy in all study groups. Treatment was
individual, in groups or both. Treatment modalities were chosen from a group-specific
'toolbox' after clinical assessment of the patients and according to need. Two orthopedic
surgeons at Visby Hospital and eight physiotherapists treated the reference patients. In
accordance with the study design, muscle stretching was a treatment option in 51% of the
reference group, 41% actually received muscle stretching. Two GPs and nine physiotherapists
treated the experimental patients. They received the full reference treatment, plus specific
mobilization, spinal manipulation, and auto-traction when indicated. Steroid injections were
a treatment option in 52% of the experimental group, 36% actually received injections.
The study population was followed over ten weeks with measurements of outcome and
progression variables. Outcome measures were self-reported back pain, disability rating,
return to work as assessed from sick leave records, quality of life measures, and pain
drawings. Moreover, sick leave data during two years of follow up from baseline were
obtained.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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