A Stepped-care Model of Tailored Behavioural Medicine Pain Intervention in Primary Care

NCT ID: NCT01992770

Last Updated: 2019-12-19

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

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

40 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2013-09-30

Study Completion Date

2017-01-31

Brief Summary

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Background:

This study is based on an innovative stepped-care protocol for the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary care, which is evaluated in a RCT. The intervention have two core features: it is theory-driven and include systematic tailoring of treatment content. The tailoring is based on a combination of empirically supported behavioural and medical determinants of pain-related disability and patients' individual perceptions on personal goals, facilitators and barriers for health behavior change. In this application, the intervention is labelled tailored behavioural medicine intervention (TBM).

Objectives:

The aim is to compare effects and cost-effectiveness of a stepped care model including advice and tailored behavioral medicine pain treatment (experimental condition) with a stepped care model including advice and physical exercises (comparison condition) for patients with low back and neck pain and/or widespread pain including fibromyalgia in primary care. A further aim is to characterize patients who benefit/do not benefit from the respective steps i.e. treatments varying in dose and content.

Methods:

A stratified randomized stepped care design is applied. Stratification is based on primary care center and patient risk profile. A consecutive selection is performed at primary care centers in southern, central and northern Sweden. According to power analysis, 364 participants should be recruited to allow for sub-group analyses. After having received a minimal intervention (step 1) comprising 'stay-active advice', participants scoring \>90 on the Örebro Musculoskeletal Pain Questionnaire (ÖMPQ) are randomly allocated to an eight-week treatment in step 2. The experimental condition includes supervised physical exercises integrated with either (a) graded activity, or (b) hierarchical graded exposure depending on risk profile, i.e. absence or presence of pain catastrophizing and fear-avoidance beliefs. The comparison condition includes supervised physical exercises irrespective of risk profile. Primary outcome is pain-related disability complemented with a comprehensive set of secondary outcomes adhering to the IMMPACT recommendations. Assessments will be made by personnel blinded for treatment condition at baseline, after step 1 and 2 respectively, and at 12- and 24-month follow-ups.

Detailed Description

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STEP-UP: An innovative stepped-care model for tailored behavioral medicine treatment in the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary care

Background:

Multimodal rehabilitation and tailored behavioral medicine treatments should be provided to patients suffering from persistent and activity limiting pain according to current state-of-science. There is also evidence that a simple and specific 'stay-active advice' can produce effects comparable to effects of comprehensive treatment packages. Nevertheless, there is a gap of knowledge regarding which individuals who benefit the most from which modalities of pain treatment, at what time point, and with the highest cost-effectiveness. Accordingly, we have set up an innovative stepped-care protocol for the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary care, which is evaluated in a randomized controlled trial. The intervention have two core features: it is theory-driven and include systematic tailoring of treatment content. The tailoring is based on a combination of empirically supported behavioural and medical determinants of pain-related disability and patients' individual perceptions on personal goals, facilitators and barriers for HBC. In this application, the intervention is labelled tailored behavioural medicine intervention (TBM).

Main objectives

1. To compare the short- (post-treatment) and long-term effects (12 and 24 months follow-ups) of TBM and physical exercise treatment on everyday life activity, health related quality of life, pain severity, and sick leave (main analysis).
2. To study whether TBM tailored according to any of two pre-defined patient risk profiles: "the catastrophising/fear-avoidance profile" and "the moderate to high disability profile" are more effective compared to physical exercise treatment (sub- group analysis).
3. To characterize patients who benefit/do not benefit from (1) a minimal intervention including advice, (2) TBM and physical exercise treatment respectively
4. To identify potential moderators (e.g. pain duration, sex, outcome expectations) and mediators (e.g. catastrophising, fear of movement, self-efficacy) of treatment effects.
5. To study the cost-effectiveness within the experimental trial i.e. for the TBM versus the physical exercise treatment over the entire study period (up to 24-month follow- up).

Methods:

A stratified randomized stepped care design is applied. Stratification is based on primary care center and patient risk profile. A consecutive selection is performed at primary care centers in southern, central and northern Sweden. According to power analysis, 364 participants should be recruited to allow for sub-group analyses. After having received a minimal intervention (step 1) comprising 'stay-active advice', participants scoring \>90 on the Örebro Musculoskeletal Pain Questionnaire (ÖMPQ) are randomly allocated to an eight-week treatment in step 2. The experimental condition includes supervised physical exercises integrated with either (a) graded activity, or (b) hierarchical graded exposure depending on risk profile, i.e. absence or presence of pain catastrophizing and fear-avoidance beliefs. The comparison condition includes supervised physical exercises irrespective of risk profile. Primary outcome is pain-related disability complemented with a comprehensive set of secondary outcomes adhering to the IMMPACT recommendations. Assessments will be made by personnel blinded for treatment condition at baseline, after step 1 and 2 respectively, and at 12- and 24-month follow-ups.

Conditions

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Musculoskeletal Pain

Keywords

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behavioural medicine pain physical therapy physical exercise primary care

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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Tailored behavioural medicine

After having received a minimal intervention (step 1) comprising 'stay-active advice', participants scoring \>90 on the Örebro Musculoskeletal Pain Questionnaire (ÖMPQ) are randomly allocated to an eight-week treatment in step 2, depending on risk profile. The experimental condition includes supervised physical exercises integrated with either (a) graded activity, or (b) hierarchical graded exposure depending on risk profile, i.e. absence or presence of pain catastrophizing and fear-avoidance beliefs.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Hierarchical graded exposure

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Individual Behavioural goal identification, depending on risk profile

(1a). "Catastrophising and/or fear-avoidance" (2); hierarchical graded exposure, organized with individual coaching in connection to the physical training sessions, based on activities that each participant fear and/or avoid.

Graded activity

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Individual Behavioural goal identification, depending on risk profile

(1b) "Graded activity";(2) self-monitoring of everyday life activities (3) functional behavioural analyses to describe, predict, and verify factors controlling patient's current and future activity performance (4) training of motor skills, cognitive skills, and strategies to organise everyday life including social support. (5) gradual application of acquired skills in everyday life situations as formulated by Specific, Measureable, Activity-related, Realistic, and Time- specified (SMART) goal setting (6) generalisation of skills to additional activities and challenging situations, and (7) strategies for maintenance and relapse prevention.

Physical exercises

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Participants will be scheduled for supervised, regular physical training twice a week during eight weeks 8

Control group

Participants will be scheduled for supervised, regular Physical exercises twice a week during eight weeks 8. Participants with a "moderate to high disability" risk profile will receive: Tailored graded activities training.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Physical exercises

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Participants will be scheduled for supervised, regular physical training twice a week during eight weeks 8

Interventions

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Hierarchical graded exposure

Individual Behavioural goal identification, depending on risk profile

(1a). "Catastrophising and/or fear-avoidance" (2); hierarchical graded exposure, organized with individual coaching in connection to the physical training sessions, based on activities that each participant fear and/or avoid.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Graded activity

Individual Behavioural goal identification, depending on risk profile

(1b) "Graded activity";(2) self-monitoring of everyday life activities (3) functional behavioural analyses to describe, predict, and verify factors controlling patient's current and future activity performance (4) training of motor skills, cognitive skills, and strategies to organise everyday life including social support. (5) gradual application of acquired skills in everyday life situations as formulated by Specific, Measureable, Activity-related, Realistic, and Time- specified (SMART) goal setting (6) generalisation of skills to additional activities and challenging situations, and (7) strategies for maintenance and relapse prevention.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Physical exercises

Participants will be scheduled for supervised, regular physical training twice a week during eight weeks 8

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* musculoskeletal pain from the low back, neck or with widespread locations

Exclusion Criteria

* patients scoring high on the Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS; \> 35 or \> 4 on the suicidal risk item)
* patients suffering from other psychiatric or severe medical co-morbidity (e.g. cancer)
* patients presenting a history and physical symptoms indicating serious spinal pathology (red flags) implying further diagnostic examination or acute measures.
* patients not being able to read, write and discuss their everyday life situation in Swedish or accepting an interpreter are not included
* patients who have completed multimodal treatments due to the current pain condition during the past two years.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

65 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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The Swedish Rheumatism Ass

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Uppsala University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Pernilla Åsenlöf, Professor

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Uppsala University

Locations

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Uppsala University

Uppsala, , Sweden

Site Status

Countries

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Sweden

Other Identifiers

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2012/448

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id