Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effect of a 10-day Course of Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation on Abdominal Pain in Patients With Locally Advanced and Advanced Pancreatic Cancer, a Randomized Phase II Study.
This is a phase II study that aims to investigate prospectively a new therapy for a cohort of patients with chronic pain attributed to pancreatic cancer. The justification of this study is that the pain is the most important factor for the quality of life of these patients and rTMS has been shown to be significantly associated with pain improvement in patients with abdominal pain due to chronic pancreatitis. This therapeutic trial will be a 10-day, randomized, parallel-group design, double-blind, incomplete cross-over, placebo controlled clinical trial conducted at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. The principal aim of this investigation is the study of pain after a therapeutic intervention. The primary outcome is pain reduction indexed by pain reduction and or analgesic intake reduction. The second aim of the study is to assess the safety this new treatment in patients with pancreatic cancer. The third aim of this study is to investigate whether rTMS treatment is associated with a change in the activity of right secondary somatosensory cortex using magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Because patients with locally advanced or advanced pancreatic cancer often require increasing doses of narcotic pain medications, such as morphine, oxycodone and fentanyl, in order to control their pain, adverse side effects are frequent observed in this population of patients. Therefore rTMS treatment might represent a new therapeutic approach that might be useful not only for pancreatic cancer but also to other types of cancer.
The primary aim of this protocol is to investigate a possible novel treatment for visceral
pain in patients with locally advanced or advanced pancreatic cancer. Pain is a major
contributor to the poor quality of life in patients with pancreatic cancer. Most patients
with locally advanced or advanced pancreatic cancer have abdominal pain that requires
treatment with increasing doses of narcotic pain medication. The refractory nature of
pancreatic cancer pain to pharmacologic therapy led us to hypothesize that one mechanism
leading to pain in these patients is dysfunction of brain cortical regulation of visceral
sensation. This notion is supported by the finding that deep electrical stimulation of the
brain can produce pain relief in patients with intractable pain due to progressive cancers
of various types. In addition, patients with pancreatitis, a non-malignant pancreatic
condition causing chronic pain, can continue to experience disabling pain even after total
pancreatectomy. These finding suggests that pain symptoms in pancreatic cancer can be
sustained by a pancreas-independent, neural-based mechanisms in the brain.
Visceral sensation is processed in the secondary somatosensory area (SII). Therefore,
pancreatic cancer pain may be sustained by dysfunction of SII rather than by local effects
of the cancer alone. We hypothesize further, that dysfunction of SII is one of
hyper-excitability. According to this hypothesis, suppression of SII activity may help
control the pain in patients with pancreatic cancer and may provide synergy with
pharmacologic treatment.
Temporary inhibition of SII activity can be obtained by a novel, non-invasive procedure
called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). TMS can suppress brain excitability beyond
the duration of the direct application of TMS if appropriate stimulation parameters are
utilized. This hypothesis is supported by a sham controlled, double blind pilot trial of 5
subjects with idiopathic chronic pancreatitis: active rTMS applied to SII resulted in
significant pain improvement in three of the subjects while sham did not provide any benefit
in any of these patients. Furthermore, recent evidence suggests that stimulation of other
brain areas, such as the dorsolateral pre-frontal cortex, can modulate acute, experimentally
invoked pain (Graff-Guerrero et al 2005).
We will rigorously test the hypothesis that pain due to pancreatic cancer is sustained by
dysfunction of SII characterized by hyperexcitability through two specific aims:
1. The first aim of this study is to examine whether 1Hz repetitive TMS (rTMS) applied to
SII for ten days during two consecutive weeks in patients with abdominal pain due to
pancreatic cancer has an analgesic effect.
1. The primary outcome for this aim is the difference in pain score level on the
Visual Analogue Scale at Day 11 and at Day 28 compared to the week before rTMS.
The null hypothesis is that there is no difference in pain score between pre and
post-treatment.
2. The secondary outcome for this aim is to assess the difference in the use of
narcotics for pain control on Day 11 and Day 28 compared to Day 1. The null
hypothesis is that there is no difference in narcotic use (in IV morphine
equivalency units) between pre and post-treatment.
2. The second aim of the study is to assess the safety of rTMS in patients with pancreatic
cancer.
3. The third aim of this study is to investigate whether rTMS treatment is associated with
a change in the activity of right SII using magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Therefore
we will compare the levels of these substances between the two different time points
(baseline and post-treatment) and between left and right SII. We expect a decrease in
the excitatory neurotransmitters levels (Glutamine - Glx) in the stimulated area as a
result of the inhibitory rTMS.
SAFETY In a pilot study of chronic pancreatitis patients, no subject experienced adverse
effects from a single session of rTMS. Subjects in an ongoing study of a 10-day course or
rTMS in chronic pancreatitis patients also have not experienced adverse events (10 patients
thus far). Fifteen-day courses of rTMS have been used for the treatment of various
neuropsychiatric diseases without any complications if safety guidelines are carefully
followed. We will adhere to the current safety recommendations for rTMS endorsed by the
International Society for Transcranial Stimulation and the International Federation for
Clinical Neurophysiology. Therefore, we hypothesize that the proposed rTMS protocol will be
safe for our patient population.
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