Chronic Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Managing Pain in People With Crohn's Disease: Feasibility Testing of an Acceptance and Commitment Group Therapy Intervention.
NCT number | NCT05418062 |
Other study ID # | 314107 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Recruiting |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | January 11, 2023 |
Est. completion date | February 2024 |
Pain is a common symptom of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and has a significant impact on patient quality of life. Pain will frequently be the presenting complaint and is experienced throughout the disease course. Up to 70% of patients experience pain in active disease, and up to half (20-50%) of patients will experience pain in remission. Pain in IBD is widely recognised as a biopsychosocial construct, with visceral hypersensitivity, as well as depressive symptoms, anxiety, stress and fear avoidance correlating positively with IBD-pain. There is increasing understanding of the psychological interaction and need for psychological management within IBD. Psychological therapies such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) have been used widely in other conditions, such as chronic pain, fatigue and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Although neither ACT nor CBT have been used specifically for pain in IBD, ACT has become a regular therapy in the management of chronic pain and a large number of studies have found it to be effective, particularly in relation to improving functioning and decreasing distress, quality of life and physical wellbeing. This study design is a crossover randomised controlled trial of ACT versus treatment-as-usual (TAU) in people with CD and chronic abdominal pain. The research team aim to assess the feasibility of ACT for reducing the impact of abdominal pain and its associated psychological burden in people with Crohn's disease (CD). The study will investigate the acceptability of ACT to people with CD and chronic pain, specifically testing issues of eligibility, recruitment, retention rates, patient experience and performance of proposed outcome measures. This will inform the design of a subsequent large multi-centre randomised controlled trial (RCT) with long-term follow-up.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 48 |
Est. completion date | February 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | July 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Established diagnosis of CD according to clinical notes for a minimum of 6 months Moderate pain, defined as mean score =4/10 on both pain severity and pain interference questions the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) - a validated cut-off to define moderate pain Duration of pain of at least 3 months No changes to CD medication made for the previous 2 months Exclusion Criteria: - Diagnosis of ulcerative colitis or indeterminate colitis Known diagnosis of dementia/psychosis or expressing active suicidal ideation on clinical assessment Currently undergoing other psychological therapy Primary source of pain is non-abdominal Non-fluency in verbal English Pain is identified as a part of acute flare where immediate change in medical treatment is more appropriate |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Natalie Watson | London |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
King's College London | Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | recruitment rate | Do patients want to be recruited/ randomised into the study | Through study completion, an average of 24 weeks | |
Primary | retention rate | once randomised, do patients continue to engage in the study | Through study completion, an average of 24 weeks | |
Primary | completion rate | How many patients "complete" the intervention (Attend 5 or more sessions) | Through study completion, an average of 24 weeks | |
Secondary | Pain severity | the BPI severity questions assess pain at its "worst," "least," "average," (each over the last 24 hours) and "now" (current pain) | Screening, Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | The UK Inflammatory Bowel Disease Quality of Life Questionnaire | Quality of life: the UK IBDQ measures quality of life as measured in several domains: Emotional function, Bowel function, Social Function and Systemic function. Scale: None-> All/ almost all the time. Higher score means Higher level of impact from the condition. | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | The Inflammatory Bowel Disease-Fatigue questionnaire | This was developed by two of the study investigators (WCD and CN) alongside people with IBD and provides the only validated fatigue scale specific to IBD. Scale 0= None of the time 4= All of the time. Higher score indicates higher levels of Fatigue. | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | Depression, stress and anxiety: | The Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21). Used previously in a study of ACT in IBD, this consists of three 7-item depression, anxiety, and stress survey tools Scale: 0=Did not apply to me at all. 3=Applied to me very much or most of the time. A higher score in each section indicates symptoms. | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | Pain Acceptance | The Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire (CPAQ-8) which measures acceptance of chronic pain; attempts to avoid or control pain; and the degree of engagement in activities. Scale: 0= Never True, 6= Always True | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | IBD-Distress | The IBD-Distress Scale (IBD-DS), this 28-item scale (co-developed by WCD and CN) has good face and content validity and excellent internal consistency. Yes/ No , If Yes, Scale: 1= mildly distressing, 6=Highly Distressing. Higher scores indicates higher levels of distress. | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | Treatment evaluation | numerical ratings reflecting how interesting, successful and logical participants perceived the treatment to be on a scale of 0-10. | Post treatment Week 8, or 24 | |
Secondary | Impairment in functioning:. | The Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS), which provides a 5-question index of impairment in functioning attributable to an identified problem. Scale 0= Not at all, 8=Very severely. | Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | Pain Interference | the mean score on the pain interference questions on the BPI. This measures the degree to which pain has interfered with 7 daily activities (general activity, walking, work, mood, enjoyment of life, relations with others and sleep). This mean score will be used if more than 50% of the total items have been completed on a given administration. Scale: 0= Does not interfere, 10=Completely interferes | Screening, Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation | |
Secondary | SIMPLE INDEX OF CROHN'S DISEASE ACTIVITY (Harvey & Bradshaw 1980) | A) General Wellbeing: (Very well/slightly below par/poor/very poor/ Terrible), B) Abdominal pain (None, Mild, moderate, severe), C) Number of liquid stools per day:..... D) Abdomen feels Lumpy ( None, Dubious, Definite, Definite and tender), E) Complications please tick all that apply: Painful joints/ arthritis, Anal fissure/ fistula/ abcess, Mouth ulcers, Skin nodules or ulcers, Eye pain or inflammation (Red eyes), Liver Problems (e.g primary sclerosing cholangitis) | Screening, Baseline, Week 8, and 24 after randomisation |
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