Chronic Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of Antidepressants in Chronic Back Pain
The purpose of this study is to determine whether gabapentin is efficacious as an analgesic for chronic low back pain.
Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is a major health problem for the VA, affecting up to 15% of
all veterans. Nationally, its medical and disability costs exceed $50 billion annually.
Despite its impact, relatively little research evaluates treatment for CLBP. Wide variation
in patterns of care suggests uncertainty over effective therapy. Most chronic back cases are
not surgical candidates. The mainstays of medical treatment have been non-steroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), muscle relaxants, opioids, and antidepressants.
Non-steroidal drugs and muscle relaxants are effective for acute but not for chronic back
pain. Opioids may provide analgesia but safety limits their use. Tricyclic antidepressants
provide modest pain relief, separate from effects on depression. But it is clear additional
research is needed to develop more effective pharmacotherapy. One approach favored by many
authorities is determining if agents effective for one type of chronic pain syndrome (e.g.,
diabetic neuropathy) can be generalized to other syndromes, like chronic back pain. Another
is to identify effective drug combinations, based on selecting drugs with differing
therapeutic mechanisms.
This research is a program of rigorous randomized clinical trials testing the efficacy of
antidepressants for analgesia in chronic back pain. Because chronic pain is a complex
disorder, the program features a multidisciplinary research team, involving specialists in
psychiatry, orthopedic surgery, psychology, anesthesiology, clinical pharmacology, and
biomathematics. The research has both pragmatic and explanatory aims. Our strategy has been
to test antidepressants with differing, and selective properties in an attempt to isolate
therapeutic mechanisms. Thus, we began with trials using selective norepinephrine reuptake
inhibitors, and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), rather than those with dual
noradrenergic and serotonergic effects (e.g., amitriptyline, imipramine). To ensure
applicability of results, we have used rigorous diagnostic procedures to identify patients
with chronic back pain due to degenerative disk disease. To enhance generalizability we
recruit primary care patients rather than tertiary pain clinic samples. Patients without
major depression are studied to examine analgesia separate from antidepressant effects.
Secondary outcomes address function and life quality.
We have conducted three controlled trials using identical recruitment and assessment
methodology. The first, comparing a noradrenergic antidepressant (nortriptyline) with
placebo, indicated that the noradrenergic agent provided clinically relevant analgesia. The
second was a head-to-head comparison of a selective noradrenergic agent (maprotiline) with a
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI, paroxetine). The noradrenergic agent
outperformed the SSRI, which was equivalent to placebo. To clarify these results we explored
whether efficacy might be evident only at specific drug concentrations. Therefore, the third
study, has a prospective concentration design comparing the most potent and selective
noradrenergic antidepressant (desipramine) to the standard SSRI, fluoxetine. Subjects were
randomized to placebo or predetermined concentration windows reflecting low, medium, and
high exposure to study drugs and followed for 12 weeks. Interim analysis suggests that low
concentration desipramine outperforms placebo (p<0.05). It is also superior to
mid-concentration and high exposure desipramine--as well as all exposure levels of the SSRI,
which are equivalent to placebo.
In sum, all three studies supported noradrenergic analgesia in CLBP, and the two studies
that evaluated SSRIs failed to find analgesia. This suggests noradrenergic activity, perhaps
within a therapeutic window, may be primarily responsible for back pain analgesia. These
findings have led us away from studies proposing combining noradrenergic and serotonergic
agents. An alternative approach which builds on these data, but first employs another class
of agents, seems reasonable. This strategy is to assess if gabapentin, a calcium channel
blocker agent with demonstrated efficacy in neuropathic pain, can be extended to chronic
back pain.
We conducted a double-blind, randomized assignment, 12-week, placebo controlled clinical
trial of the efficacy of gabapentin. Non-depressed chronic low back pain patients (N = 130)
will be randomized to placebo or high dose gabapentin (3600 mg/day or maximum tolerable
dose). Analysis was by intent to treat. The primary efficacy assessment is mean pain
intensity (Descriptor Differential Scale, DDS) at exit. Secondary outcomes are function and
life quality (Oswestry Disability Index, Short Form-36, Quality of Well-Being Scale). Safety
evaluation includes rating adverse events (Scandinavian Society of Psychopharmacology
Committee on Clinical Investiagations Side Effects Rating Scale, UKU), standardized physical
examination, and clinical laboratory testing. Results could provide explanatory insight into
mechanisms of back pain, and address the pragmatic clinical need by primary care providers
and others for effective therapy.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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