Low Back Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Study on the Effect of Employment Follow-up on Return to Work in Sick Listed Patients With Low Back Pain
Low back pain is a usual conditions in the western countries and several treatments
available for patients with "non-specific low back pain". According to the European
guidelines are exercise and cognitive intervention effective on pain and
function(www.backpaineurope.org), but it have no documented effect on return to work. In
addition, there is no documentation that treatments which focus on a single treatment, is
effective with regard to return to work for sick-listed patients.
The challenges for health personnel is not cure of the patients back pain, but to build up
rehabilitation programs which focus on disability and work incapacity, in patients which are
at risk of loosing their work. Dr. P. Loisel, Montreal, Canada", has since 1995 treated
patients with back pain according to the "The PREVICAP model - (PREVention of work
handICAP)", where the main purpose with work-related program is to prevent prolonged
disability and to help patients back to work. Loisel demonstrated that the PREVICAP models
accelerated the "return to work" factor by a factor 2.4 (p=0.01). The PREVICAP model have
also been evaluated in Amsterdam, by Dr. Anema with the same results.
At the Back Clinic, Ullevål University Hospital we have evaluated several exercise programs
with good effect on pain and function, but not on the return to work rate. We are planning
to do a randomized controlled trial after the PREVICAP model. All included patients in both
groups, will have an clinical examination by specialist in Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation and an exercise program. Patients will be randomized to a work-related
rehabilitations program or to usual care by the general practitioner.
Hypothesis Main hypothesis: Sick-listed patients with back pain, who will be randomized to
the work-related rehabilitation programs, will return to work faster than patients
randomized to usual care by the general practitioner.
Second hypothesis: A cost-benefit analysis will favor the exercise program and work place
intervention
Background Low back pain is a usual conditions in the western countries and in Norway 40% of
the population report decreased function because of back pain. The disease has great
economic consequences, which in 2004 came to 15 billions to disability pension and 1,46
billions to physical treatments.
Severe incidence of back pain, like tumours, infections, fractures and pareses are rare and
represent less than 1 % of all cases. The main part is within the category of "non-specific
low back pain", which is defined as back pain without specific pathology as known cause.
Based on scientific documentation the back-specialists consider non-specific low back pain
as a benign and self-limited condition, while patients expect to get treatment because they
experience the condition as painful and disabling.
There are several treatments available for patients with "non-specific low back pain".
According to the European guidelines exercise and cognitive intervention has good effects on
pain and function (www.backpaineurope.org), but it is not documented effect on return to
work. In addition it is not documented that treatments which focus on a single treatment
neither is effective regarding return to work for sick-listed patients.
It is a usual myth that physical hard work cause back pain. However, only few studies have
demonstrated correlations between hard work and sick-leave. On the contrary several studies
have demonstrated that back pain is a multifactorial problem, which is not only due to
workers' characteristics, but is also closely related to environmental factors, such as the
workplace, the healthcare system, the compensation system and the interaction between all
stakeholders in the disability problem.
The challenges for health personnel is not cure of the patients back pain, but to build up
rehabilitation programs which focus on disability and work incapacity in patients which are
at risk of loosing their work.
Dr. P. Loisel, Montreal, Canada", has since 1995 treated patients with back pain according
to the "The PREVICAP model - (PREVention of work handICAP)". The main purpose with
work-related program is to prevent prolonged disability and to help patients back to work.
This approach includes two steps: first identification of factors on the workplace which
contribute to the absence of work and second "workplace intervention". Identification of
factors at workplace includes physical, ergonomic, psychosocial, interpersonal conflicts and
administrative problems. "Workplace intervention" is a rehabilitation program centred at the
workplace, allowing a graded transition from the clinical setting to the workplace. Parallel
with the workplace intervention the patients enter an exercise-program, adjusted to the
workplace intervention.
The PREVICAP models have been evaluated in randomized controlled trials and has accelerated
return to work by a factor 2.4 (p=0.01). The most important effect came from the workplace
intervention, which alone accelerated the return to work with a factor 1.9 (p=0.01).
Patients randomized to the PREVICAP model had 60 days absence from work, compared to 120
days in the control group.
The PREVICAP model have been evaluated in Amsterdam, by Dr. Anema and he demonstrated a
significant difference in the return to work rate between patients randomized to "Workplace
intervention" and patients randomized to usual treatment.
At the Back Clinic, Ullevål University Hospital we have evaluated several exercise-programs
with good effect on pain and function, but not on the return to work rate. This raises an
important question: will the return to work rate increase by including workplace
intervention to the exercise program and it is possible to implement the PREVICAP model in
Norway with the same good results, despite differences between Canada, The Netherlands and
Norway with regard to culture, soc-economic conditions, working conditions and compensatory
systems.
We are planning to do a randomized controlled trial after the PREVICAP model, where patients
sick-listed for back pain will be randomized to either a workplace intervention plus an
exercise-program or to an exercise-program alone.
Purpose
The purpose of the project is to answer the following questions:
1. Will more patients return to work and will they do it faster, when they will be
included in a work-related rehabilitations program than patients randomized to usual
care by the general practitioner, at the follow-up 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, 1 and 2
years.
2. Was there significant difference in pain and function between the two groups at the
follow-up?
3. Which factors predict the return to work; medical, socioeconomic or factors at the
workplace?
4. At the 2 years follow-up- Had the patients had episodes with back pain and in case, how
many, of which duration and were they sick-listed for it or did they stay at work?
5. Is there a favorable cost benefit with the program?
The study is a prospective single-blind randomized study. The patients will be randomized by
block-randomisation. The randomization will be carried out at a separate locations concealed
from the clinical investigators.
Inclusions criteria: Patients with non-specific low back pain sick listed from 6-8 weeks and
who are permanently employed. Non-specific low back pain is defined as a back pain not
attributable to a recognizable, known specific pathology.
Exclusions criteria: Patients with infection, tumors, osteoporosis, fracture, structural
deformity, inflammatory disorder, radicular syndrome or cauda equina syndrome, spinal
stenosis or spondylolysis/ listesis, serious somatic disease and/or psychic disease and
patients with a poor proficiency in Norwegian.
All patients will have a clinical examination of a specialist and a an exercise program. The
patients will be randomized to workplace intervention or a control group. Patients
randomized to the workplace intervention will be referred to an occupational ergonomist for
work site evaluation and return to work program, which include ergonomic conditions and
relations to the employer and colleagues. The occupational task of the ergonomists is to
organize contacts and meetings between the employer and the patients and make a schedule for
return to work. Patients randomized to the control group will go back to their general
practitioner for planning return to work.
Sample size:all together 260 patients in the study.
Ethics The study will follow the ethic directions in the Helsinki Declaration and will not
be initiated before approval from the National Committee for Research Ethics in Norway. In
addition we will also ask for permission to collect and register the data from the Data
Inspectorate in Norway. Only patients giving informed consent will be included and they will
be informed that they can withdraw from the study at any time and that this will have no
otherwise consequences for their treatment.
Registrations of drop-outs The moment time and the cause of drop-outs will be registered. We
will attempt to obtain a clinical examination from drop-outs at the 1-year follow-up.
Data analyses and statistic analyses All data will be anonymous coded and registered
electronic i SPSS. They will be unidentified in analyses and presentations.
Parametric analyses will be applied on data, which are normally distributed or else,
non-parametric statistic will be used. Survival analyses will be used for investigating
difference in reduction sickness leave between the two treatment groups. Multivariate
analyses will be used for identifying differences in pain, function and fear of avoidance
between the two groups. In addition to analysing the data from the patients who completed
the trial, the data from dropouts will be analysed according to the intention-to-treat
principle.
Preconditions at the Back Clinic for conduction of the study The Back Clinic, Ullevål
University Hospital has collaboration with the Compensation system in Oslo, NAV (Norges
Arbeids-og Velferdsetat). The surplus from the Back Clinic will be used to employ an
occupational ergonomist. The physiotherapists are employees at the Back Clinic and they have
tried out the exercise program. Principal investigator (Anne Keller) is applying for grants
for a post doc fellowship.
The Back clinic has a test laboratory with a bicycle for testing submaximal oxygen uptake
and inclinometer for measuring range of motion of flexion of the back. We have collaboration
with Department of neuroradiology for MRI investigations.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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