Occipital Neuralgia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomized, Double-blind, Comparative-effectiveness Study Comparing Corticosteroid Injections to Pulsed Radiofrequency for Occipital Neuralgia
The aim of this study is to determine whether pulsed radiofrequency or steroids are better for occipital neuralgia. Seventy-six patients with ON or migraine with tenderness over the occipital nerve who respond to occipital nerve blocks (hereafter included under the broad category "ON") will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive either corticosteroid and local anesthetic injections (n=38) or local anesthetic and PRF of the occipital nerve(s) (n=38) for occipital neuralgia. Both patients and the treating & evaluating physicians will be blinded. The first follow-up visit will be at 6 weeks. Patients who obtain significant pain relief will remain in the study. Those patients who fail to obtain any benefit will exit the study and be allowed to crossover to the other treatments or receive alternative care. The second follow-up will be at 3 months and the final follow-up will be at 6-months post-procedure.
Up to 76 patients referred to one of the participating pain clinic with occipital neuralgia,
or migraines with occipital nerve tenderness (dual diagnoses) will be randomized in a 1:1
ratio by a computer generated randomization table to receive one of two treatments.
Treatments will be randomized at each institution. Within each group, those patients with
plain occipital neuralgia, and those with occipital neuralgia with migraines, will be
sub-randomized in the same 1:1 ratio. Diagnosis of ON will be made by low-volume (< 3 mL
bupivacaine per nerve). Our criterion for a positive response will be > 50% pain relief
lasting at least 3 hours. Those individuals who have symptoms in the distribution of both
the greater and lesser occipital nerves will receive treatment of both nerves. The greater
occipital nerve is more frequently affected than the lesser nerve.
Half (n=38) of the patients will be allocated to receive local anesthetic & corticosteroid
injections at each nerve (group I), with an equal number allocated to receive local
anesthetic & PRF at each (group II). In those patients who request sedation, an intravenous
will be inserted and light sedation administered with low doses of midazolam and fentanyl,
in accordance with our standard clinic practice. Treatment in all patients will be
accomplished using 20-gauge radiofrequency needles with 10 mm active tips. Prior to
treating, electrical stimulation will be performed to ensure ample proximity to the targeted
nerve(s), with our target threshold being concordant stimulation at < 0.3 volts at each
site.
Once proper needle position is ensured, those in group I will receive an injection at each
nerve containing 30 mg of depomethylprednisolone mixed with 2 mL of a 50:50 mixture of 2%
lidocaine and 0.5% bupivacaine (2.75 mL). Anywhere between 1 and 4 nerves can be injected,
with 4 nerves being targeted if a patient had bilateral lesser and greater occipital nerve
involvement. This will be followed by 3 cycles of sham PRF at 120 s per cycle, with slight
(approximately 30o electrode adjustments between cycles. For sham PRF, no electrical field
or heat is generated (i.e. the machine is not set to any radiofrequency cycle after
stimulation), but the cycle times (120 s per cycle) are adhered to (i.e. we will wait a
total of 6", 2" per cycle). Those patients in group II will receive injections at each nerve
containing 2.75 mL of a solution with 2 mL of 50:50 2% lidocaine and 0.5% bupivacaine + 0.75
mL saline (2.75 mL), followed by 3 cycles of PRF using the following standard settings:
voltage output 40-60 V; 2 Hz frequency; 20 ms pulses in a 1-second cycle, 120 second
duration per cycle; impedance range between 150 and 400 Ohms; and 42o C plateau temperature.
No patient will be prescribed additional medications or therapy between their procedure and
first follow-up. However, they will be allowed to remain on their current, stable analgesic
regimen. Rescue medications will consist of tramadol 50 mg 1 to 2 tablets every 6 hours PRN
(up to 8/d) and/or acetaminophen or a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug such as
ibuprofen, diclofenac or ketorolac on an "as needed" basis.
Follow-ups will be performed by a physician blinded to treatment allocation. A preliminary
follow-up will be performed at weeks. The first full follow-up visit will be scheduled
6-weeks from the start of treatment. A positive outcome will be defined as a > 50% decrease
in headache coupled with a positive satisfaction rating (> 3 on a 0-5 scale). Subjects who
obtain a positive outcome at their initial 6-week follow-up visit will remain in the study
and return for their 3-month follow-up visit. Those with a negative outcome will exit the
study "per protocol" to receive standard care. Subjects who obtain a positive outcome at
1-month but experience a recurrence before their 3-month follow-up visit will also exit the
study per protocol, with their final outcome measures recorded before they receive standard
care. Those who obtain a positive outcome at 3-months will remain in the study for their
final 6-month follow-up, while those who obtain a negative outcome will exit the study.
Unblinding for both patients and the treating physician will be after the patient exits the
study or after their final follow-up visit for those with continued benefit.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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