Acute Neck Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Chiropractic Spinal Manipulative Therapy for Acute Neck Pain: a 4- Arm Clinical Placebo Randomized Controlled Trial
Acute neck is very common in the general population and often causes disability over shorter or longer time periods. Unfortunately, the efficacy of chiropractic spinal manipulative therapy (CSMT) and the efficacy of Non-steroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) on acute neck pain is unknown. This 4-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) will likely provide evidence for the efficacy of CSMT as well as NSAIDs. The applied methodology of the study will aim towards the highest research standards possible for manual-therapy RCTs, thus avoiding typical methodological shortcomings from previous manual-therapy studies. Our aim is to establish evidence-based knowledge on the efficacy of CSMT and NSAIDs in the treatment of acute neck pain.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 320 |
Est. completion date | August 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 59 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion criteria 1. Eligible participants are between the age of 18 and 59 years old 2. Acute non-radicular neck pain, i.e., grade 1 or 2 according to the classification by the Bone and Joint Decade 2000-2010 Task Force on neck pain 3. Onset of the present episode =2 weeks prior to the 1st chiropractic visit 4. Moderate, severe or very severe pain intensity, i.e., =4, on a numeric rating scale (NRS) 0-10 5. Pain free for at least four consecutive weeks prior to the present pain episode 6. Not treated by a chiropractor during the past 3 months 7. Participants must accept not to seek other manual and/or pharmacological treatments for their acute neck pain during the intervention period 8. Non-pregnant women. Women in doubt shall have a negative fertility test before inclusion Exclusion criteria 1. Contraindication to ibuprofen 1. active peptic ulcer 2. gastrointestinal bleeding 3. previous repeated episode (=2 detected events) with peptic ulcer or gastrointestinal bleeding 4. previous gastrointestinal bleeding or ulcer using NSAIDs 5. hypersensitivity to ibuprofen 6. asthma induced by acetylsalicylic acid or other NSAIDs 7. urticarial 8. rhinitis 9. severe heart failure (NYHA class IV) 10. renal failure (glomerulus infusion <30 ml/min) 2. Taken pain- and/or anti-inflammatory medicine during the past 24 hours? (Patients that have taken acute pain- and/or anti-inflammatory medicine, including ibuprofen, can be included if they come back after 24 hours without having taken the medicine where they then fill out questionnaires and are randomized at the clinic) 3. On prescribed antidepressant 4. Major psychiatric disorder 5. Pregnancy or intention to be pregnant 6. Contraindication to SMT 7. Signs of spinal radiculopathy including progressive neurological deficit 8. Upper cervical spine instability (positive Sharp-Purser test) 9. Previous fracture in the cervical and/or thoracic spine 10. Previous cervical spine surgery 11. Recent (<6 months) severe physical trauma to the head, neck or thoracic spine within the previous 6 months 12. Concomitant low back pain with moderate, severe or very severe pain intensity (=4 on a NRS) 13. Current chronic pain (defined as =3 months duration) 14. Rheumatoid arthritis 15. Recent (<2 weeks) acute respiratory infection with fever 16. Any presence of ischemic symptoms upon examination 17. Horner's syndrome 18. Medical history of arterial anomalies 19. History of connective tissue disorder 20. Familial history of cervical artery dissection 21. Other vascular disorders 22. Inability to understand instructions given in the Norwegian language 23. Inability to fill out digital questionnaires 24. Other reasons to exclude the patient as deemed necessary by the chiropractor |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Norway | Michael B. Russell | Oslo |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital, Akershus | The Dam Foundation, University of Oslo |
Norway,
Chaibi A, Saltyte Benth J, Bjorn Russell M. Validation of Placebo in a Manual Therapy Randomized Controlled Trial. Sci Rep. 2015 Jul 6;5:11774. doi: 10.1038/srep11774. — View Citation
Chaibi A, Stavem K, Russell MB. Spinal Manipulative Therapy for Acute Neck Pain: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials. J Clin Med. 2021 Oct 28;10(21):5011. doi: 10.3390/jcm10215011. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Sick leave | Number of days and grade of sick leave | Mean number of days at Day-0 compared to Week-12 and Week-24 post-treatment. | |
Other | Validation of user ID-number | Number and proportions of incorrect typing of ID-numbers during digital questionnaire completion. | All digital questionnaires from Day-0 to study completion, that is to 24-weeks follow-up. | |
Other | Facilitatory/inhibitory factors/dilemmas affecting recruitment Qualitative focus group interviews to explore facilitatory/inhibitory factors and possible dilemmas experienced by chiropractor investigators. | Qualitative focus group interviews with all chiropractor investigators. | Up to 6 months | |
Primary | Mean pain intensity change | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10 | From Day-0 to Day-14 between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, and CSMT and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Mean pain intensity change | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10 | From Day-0 to Day-14. Comparison between ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Mean pain intensity change | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10 | From Day-0 to Day 2-13 in the treatment period, and from Day-0 to Day 7, 28, 56, 84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Mean duration (hours) of neck pain change | Hours (0-24) | From Day-0 to Day 2-13 and 14; From Day-0 to Day 7, 28, 56, 84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Mean number of days with neck pain per week | Weekly number of days | From the treatment period (14 days) to the periods; day 1-7, 22-28, 50-56, 78-84 and 162-168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Proportions of participants with mean daily pain intensity reduction of =50%, =75% and 100% | Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) 0-10 | From Day-0 to Day 2-13 and 14, and from Day-0 to Day 7, 28, 56, 84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Proportions of participants with mean duration (hours) reduction of =50%, =75% and 100% | Hours 0-24 | From Day-0 to Day 2-13 and 14, and from Day-0 to Day 7, 28, 56, 84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Proportions of participants with mean reduction of number of days with neck pain per week of =50%, =75% and 100% | Weekly number of days | From the treatment period (14 days), to the periods: Day 1-7, 22-28, 50-56, 78-84 and 162-168 post-treatment, respectively, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine | |
Secondary | Improvement in Research and development 12 (RAND-12) score (12 questions each with 5 possible answers) | RAND-12 Term Short Form Health Survey (0 to 100, with higher scores indicating better physical and mental health functioning) | From Day-0 to Day-14, Day-84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Improvement in Neck Disability Index score (10 questions each with 6 possible answers) | Neck Disability Index (0-100, where 0 = no disability and 100 = complete disability) | From Day-0 to Day-14, Day-84 and 168 post-treatment, respectively, comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Adverse event (AE) analysis | Within and between group adverse events analysis | Daily during intervention period (day 2-13). AE analysis of CSMT, sham CSMT, ibuprofen, and placebo medicine, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT, CSMT and ibuprofen, CSMT and placebo medicine, ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Analysis of patients' blinding (Manual therapy) | Numerical rating scale (NRS) 0-10 in relation to receiving real CSMT (0 absolutely unsure and 10 absolutely sure that real CSMT was received), irrespective of whether the patient received sham or real CSMT | Daily during intervention period (Day-0, Day 2-13). Analysis of CSMT and sham CSMT, and comparison between CSMT and sham CSMT. | |
Secondary | Analysis of patients' blinding (Medicine) | Numerical rating scale (NRS) 0-10 in relation to receiving ibuprofen (0 absolutely unsure and 10 absolutely sure that ibuprofen was received), irrespective of whether the patient received ibuprofen or placebo medicine | Daily during intervention period (Day-0, Day 2-13). Analysis of ibuprofen and placebo medicine, and comparison between ibuprofen and placebo medicine. | |
Secondary | Patients' and chiropractors' expectations to treatment efficacy | Numerical rating scale (NRS) 0-10 (0 no expectation at all and 10 the highest possible expectation to treatment efficacy) | Day-0 | |
Secondary | Analysis of patients' satisfaction to treatment efficacy | Numerical rating scale (NRS) 0-10 (0 no satisfaction at all, and 10 the highest possible satisfaction) | Day-14 of the intervention period |
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
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