Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Chronic Pancreatitis-Specific Quality of Life |
Quality of life will be primarily assessed using the PANcreatitis Quality of Life Instrument (PANQOLI). Quality of life will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). This instrument is based on a 0-87 scale with higher scores representing improved quality of life. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Primary |
Feasibility of Micro-Longitudinal Daily Pain Assessment |
Pain will be assessed using daily pain diaries with the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). These will be utilized to create short-term pain trajectories for subjects at baseline and post-procedure. This pain inventory includes 9 pain items graded on 0-10 scale with 10 being the worst pain. |
30-day post-procedure period |
|
Secondary |
Overall Quality of Life |
Quality of life will be primarily assessed using the PROMIS-29 instrument. Quality of life will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). The PROMIS-29 instrument incorporates 7 domains: physical functioning, fatigue, pain interference, depression, anxiety, ability to participate in social roles and activities, and sleep disturbance. Each of these domains have a score 0-40 with higher scores representing worse quality of life in these domains. There are also 2 summary scores: Physical Health and Mental Health. Z-scores are calculated for these two summary scores with lower scores representing better quality of life. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Change in Nociceptive Pain |
Pain will be assessed using the PROMIS Nociceptive Pain Quality scales. Pain will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). This pain scale goes from 5-25 with higher scores denoting worse pain. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Change in Neuropathic Pain |
Pain will be assessed using the PROMIS Neuropathic Pain. Pain will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). This pain scale goes from 5-25 with higher scores denoting worse pain. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Change in Pain Catastrophizing |
Pain will be assessed using the UW Concerns about Pain Scale. Pain will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). This pain scale ranges from 6 to 30 with higher scores denoting worse pain. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Change in Self-Efficacy |
Pain will be assessed using the Self-Efficacy Scale Short Form. Pain will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). This pain scale ranges from 6 to 30 with higher scores denoting worse pain. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Change in Chronic Pancreatitis-specific Pain |
Pain will be assessed using the Comprehensive Pain Assessment Tool Short Form for Chronic Pancreatitis (COMPAT). Pain will be assessed before and after endotherapy (1, 3, 6, and 12 months). The COMPAT Short Form carries several sub-scores for pain pattern, pain severity, pain provocation, pain spreading, and pain description. The pain pattern scale ranges from 50-100 with higher scores denoting worse pain. The provocation score ranges from 0-70 with higher scores denoting worse pain. The severity score ranges from 0-100 with higher scores denoting worse pain. The spreading score ranges from 0-90 with higher scores denoting worse pain. The description score ranges from 0-80 with higher scores denoting worse pain. The total score ranges from 15-90 with higher scores denoting worse pain. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Quantitative Sensory Testing |
Pancreatic Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST) will be assessed once during the baseline enrollment in the study. The QST provides Z-scores. The Z-scores range from 0 to -1.96 with 0 representing a normal score and -1.96 representing more widespread sensitization. |
The quantitative sensory testing will be assessed only once during the subject's baseline enrollment. |
|
Secondary |
Pancreatic Endocrine Function via HbA1c |
Pancreatic endocrine function will be assessed using the HbA1c. These will be measured before and after endotherapy (12 months). This is expressed as a % with higher values representing worse glycemic control. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Insulin Resistance |
Pancreatic endocrine function will be assessed using a HOMA-IR score to assess the degree of insulin resistance. These will be measured before and after endotherapy (12 months). This score assesses insulin resistance by calculating the ratio between the serum insulin level and the fasting glucose level. Higher scores denote worse insulin resistance. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Insulin Sensitivity |
Pancreatic endocrine function will be assessed using the QUICKI score, which measures the degree of insulin sensitivity. These will be measured before and after endotherapy (12 months). This is calculated using the ratio of fasting insulin and glucose. Lower levels denote worse insulin sensitivity. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|
Secondary |
Pancreatic Exocrine Function |
Pancreatic exocrine function will be assessed using endoscopic pancreatic function testing. This will be performed before endotherapy and at 12 months post-endotherapy. |
12 months post-completion of endotherapy |
|