Assessing Pain as a Mediator of Behavior Change in Post-coronary Angioplasty Patients

NCT ID: NCT01469780

Last Updated: 2012-03-08

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Total Enrollment

660 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

1999-04-30

Study Completion Date

2005-02-28

Brief Summary

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The focus of this secondary data analysis is to determine whether pain due to a combination of both cardiac and non cardiac sources operates as a mediator of behavior change, an area that has not been previously evaluated.

Detailed Description

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This is a secondary data analysis of an existing dataset generated from The Healthy Behavior Trial, an NHLBI-funded randomized controlled trial that enrolled 660 post-coronary angioplasty patients between October 1999 and March 2001. This study employed a behavioral intervention to motivate PCI patients to adopt health behaviors in order to reduce major cardiac and neurologic morbidity and mortality. Patients in the experimental arm were told their estimated biologic age (calculated from the health risk assessment) and risk factors were presented in terms of "biologic age reduction" that could be achieved if a change was made in each health behavior area. Those in the control arm were provided with risk factors (also obtained from the health risk assessment) and told that changing each health behavior could "increase your lifespan."

Specific Aims:

Utilizing 12 month longitudinal data for patients with cardiovascular disease who have undergone coronary angioplasty we will:

Specific aim 1: Determine if pain is a mediator of health behavior change over 12 months.

Specific aim 2: Assess behavior change patterns over 12 months, stratifying for degree of pain, depression and/or stress.

Specific aim 3: Evaluate the effect of pain on quality of life (physical, social, role-physical, role-emotional, vitality, mental health, bodily pain and general health domains), combined major cardiac and neurologic morbidity/mortality and hospitalizations over 12 months.

Conditions

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Pain Depressive Symptoms Quality of Life

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

RETROSPECTIVE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* all patients in the database who had participated in the Healthy Behavior Trial. The Healthy Behavior Trial was a randomized controlled trial of a psychoeducational intervention designed to motivate multi-behavior change (changing 2 or more cardiovascular risk factors) in post-coronary angioplasty patients over the course of 24 months.

Exclusion Criteria

* Non-participants in the Healthy Behavior Trial
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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National Institute on Aging (NIA)

NIH

Sponsor Role collaborator

Weill Medical College of Cornell University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Janey C Peterson, EdD, MS, RN

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Locations

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Weill Cornell Medical College

New York, New York, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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Charlson ME, Peterson JC, Boutin-Foster C, Briggs WM, Ogedegbe GG, McCulloch CE, Hollenberg J, Wong C, Allegrante JP. Changing health behaviors to improve health outcomes after angioplasty: a randomized trial of net present value versus future value risk communication. Health Educ Res. 2008 Oct;23(5):826-39. doi: 10.1093/her/cym068. Epub 2007 Nov 19.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 18025064 (View on PubMed)

Related Links

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Other Identifiers

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3P30AG022845-07S1

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: secondary_id

View Link

9806003392

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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