Depression Clinical Trial
— 4POfficial title:
A Case-control Study of Peri-operative Psychological State and Acute and Chronic Post-operative Pain
The experience of pain is common among hospital inpatients. Orthopaedic surgery often
results in significant pain, which may last for some time. About one in eight people will
experience long-term or chronic pain after surgery, which can impact on quality of life and
mood. Some risk factors are known for chronic post surgical pain (CPSP) and these include
patient factors, surgical factors and anaesthetic factors. We know that mood problems
(anxiety and depression) increase the risk of CPSP. What is not known is how short term
changes in mood are related to the experience of pain after surgery and how this impacts on
CPSP. This study is designed to investigate the relationship between both short and
long-term mood problems and short and long-term pain and quality of life after orthopaedic
surgery. The study will provide valuable information to allow us to design a psychological
intervention, which might reduce the risk of short-term post surgical pain and CPSP.
This study also aims to measure a number of other variables, which may be related to CPSP
including medication use, other medically unexplained symptoms and catastrophic thinking in
response to pain.
All patients having planned orthopaedic surgery will be asked to enter the trial. Those
consenting to involvement will complete a questionnaire assessing the variables described
above. They will be divided into two groups depending on whether they have significant pain
on the day after their surgery. As the primary aim of the study, the rates of significant
anxiety or depression will then be compared between these two groups.
Secondary outcomes will be assessed by a questionnaire sent to the patients at 6 months
after their surgery. Descriptive statistics will be produced for all the variables and use
to model a future study, which would assess the effect of a psychological intervention on
acute and chronic post surgical pain.
Our hypothesis is that patients are more likely to experience acute anxiety and depression
or display catastrophic thinking if they suffer significant post-surgical pain. The study is
powered to reliably detect a three-fold difference in the prevalence of psychopathology
between patients with and without acute pain on day 1 after elective orthopaedic surgery.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 200 |
| Est. completion date | October 2015 |
| Est. primary completion date | October 2015 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | Both |
| Age group | 18 Years and older |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - All inpatients on Sharp, Shaugh or Stannon ward following elective orthopaedic surgery carried out on Monday to Thursday each week. Exclusion Criteria: - Patient refusal, Age <18, Emergency / trauma surgery, Day case surgery, unable to read or understand written instructions, No contact address, Not registered with a General Practitioner (GP) |
Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Prospective
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust | Plymouth | Devon |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| Plymouth Hospitals NHS Trust |
United Kingdom,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Is acute pain following orthopaedic surgery is associated with the onset of anxiety as measured using the Generalised Anxiety Disorder Questionnaire (GAD-7) | This is a prospective case-control observational study. The primary aim is to determine whether patients with poor pain control on day 1 following surgery have higher levels of anxiety than those without acute pain. The cases are patients with significant pain on day one after surgery and the controls are sex, age and operation matched individuals without pain. | 24 hours | No |
| Primary | Is acute pain following orthopaedic surgery is associated with the onset of depression as measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). | This is a prospective case-control observational study. The primary aim is to determine whether patients with poor pain control on day 1 following surgery have higher levels of depression than those without acute pain. The cases are patients with significant pain on day one after surgery and the controls are sex, age and operation matched individuals without pain. | 24 hours | No |
| Primary | Is acute pain following orthopaedic surgery is associated with the onset of abnormal coping strategies as measured using the Pain Catastrophising Scale (PCS). | This is a prospective case-control observational study. The primary aim is to determine whether patients with poor pain control on day 1 following surgery have higher levels of catastrophising than those without acute pain. The cases are patients with significant pain on day one after surgery and the controls are sex, age and operation matched individuals without pain. | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Acute pain (NRS) will be measured on day 1 after surgery. | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Acute post operative pain (NRS) at 6 months | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months. Correlation will be sought between pain immediately after surgery and chronic post surgical pain 6 months later. Acute pain, anxiety & depression will be measured in day 1 post operatively and correlated with quality of life at 6 months (EQ5D). |
6 months | No |
| Secondary | Pre operative strong opioid use (binary variable) | To test any association between pre-operative strong opioid use and acute or chronic post surgical pain and continued opioid use at 6 months. | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Total opioid intake before surgery | Correlation between acute anxiety, depression or catastrophising and total opioid intake before and 1 day & 6 months after surgery | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Somatic symptoms questionnaire (bespoke questionnaire) | This questionnaire records other somatic symptoms patients may experience and the total score will be used to determine any correlation with acute psychopathology, pain and outcomes following surgery as described above. | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Perception of care questionnaire (bespoke questionnaire) | This questionnaire contains details of the inpatient experience and we will investigate whether patient perceptions of care correlate with psychopathology, pain and outcomes following surgery | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Anxiety (GAD7) will be measured on day 1 after surgery. | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months. PHQ9 & GAD 7 scores on day 1 after surgery and at 6 months. Presence of treated anxiety or depression before surgery (binary score). The frequency of significant anxiety or depression will be compared before and after surgery |
24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Depression (PHQ9) will be measured on day 1 after surgery. | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months. PHQ9 & GAD 7 scores on day 1 after surgery and at 6 months. Presence of treated anxiety or depression before surgery (binary score). The frequency of significant anxiety or depression will be compared before and after surgery |
24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Catastrophising (PCS - pain catastrophising scale) will be measured on day 1 | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Acute anxiety (GAD7) | Acute pain, anxiety & depression will be measured in day 1 post operatively and correlated with quality of life at 6 months (EQ5D) | 6 months | No |
| Secondary | Depression (PHQ9) | Acute pain, anxiety & depression will be measured in day 1 post operatively and correlated with quality of life at 6 months (EQ5D) | 6 months | No |
| Secondary | Quality of life (EQ5D) | Acute pain, anxiety & depression will be measured in day 1 post operatively and correlated with quality of life at 6 months (EQ5D) | 6 months | No |
| Secondary | Opioid use at 6 months (binary variable) | To test any association between pre-operative strong opioid use and acute or chronic post surgical pain and continued opioid use at 6 months. | 6 months | No |
| Secondary | Total opioid intake on day 1 post surgery | Correlation between acute anxiety, depression or catastrophising and total opioid intake before and 1 day & 6 months after surgery | 24 hours | No |
| Secondary | Length of hospital stay (days) | Correlation between acute variables (pain, anxiety, depression and catastrophising) will be sought with length of hospital stay and the presence of chronic post surgical pain at 6 months | Days | No |
| Secondary | Catastrophising (PCS - pain catastrophising scale) | Acute pain, anxiety & depression will be measured in day 1 post operatively and correlated with quality of life at 6 months (EQ5D) | 6 months | No |
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