Treating Chronic Pain in Buprenorphine Patients in Primary Care Settings
NCT ID: NCT03698669
Last Updated: 2026-01-08
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
163 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-08-21
2024-12-20
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Chronic pain has been associated with negative substance use outcomes in persons receiving buprenorphine for opioid detoxification and in people receiving MMT. Providers may prioritize the treatment of substance use in OUD patients, leaving the concurrent pain untreated. Lack of treatment encourages patients to use illicit opioids for pain relief. Indeed, for persons using buprenorphine, greater pain severity in a given week was significantly associated with increased likelihood of opioid use in the following week.
Pain contributes to other negative outcomes. Pain is an independent risk factor for suicide including in samples of substance use disorder patients. Further, compared to MMT patients without pain, those with pain have significantly greater health problems and psychological distress. Pain, poor health, and low energy are the most commonly cited reasons that OAT patients are physically inactive. The continued physical and social problems in patients with pain influence the perception of (lack of) treatment benefits by both patients and providers.
Duration of opioid agonist treatment (OAT) is a key predictor of long-term abstinence and outcomes improve across a variety of domains if patients remain in care for at least one year. Although buprenorphine is a growing ambulatory treatment, retention in care remains problematic. Across practice sites and, despite variations in visit frequency, the 12-month retention rate ranges from 50-80% with the majority of treatment drop-out occurring during the first three months of treatment. Though few studies have yet examined the role of pain, pain has been found to negatively impact buprenorphine treatment retention.
Studies estimate that approximately one third to one half of MMT and buprenorphine recipients suffer from depression. Several studies have reported that opioid dependent patients with chronic pain have greater depressive symptoms and a greater probability of occupational disability compared to patients with lower level or no chronic pain. Amongst MMT patients, higher psychiatric distress is associated with lower general functioning. Methadone counselors report difficulty treating patients with chronic pain due in part to these patients' co-occurring psychiatric symptoms. In the only study of antidepressant treatment for depressed persons initiating buprenorphine, the investigators found in a secondary analysis that pain is prevalent, interferes with functioning, and its severity plateaus after one month of buprenorphine. Importantly, as with chronic pain, depressive symptoms have been associated with greater likelihood of relapse to opioid use in OAT patients. The substantial overlap of pain and depression in OAT patients suggest that functioning may improve most when depression and pain are simultaneously treated in an integrated fashion that is theoretically-based.
TOPPS is a type of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) that consists of three main components: 1) psychoeducation about pain, depression, opioid misuse, their interaction, and the maintaining role of avoidance; 2) coaching in being an informed, activated patient; and 3) behavioral activation with a focus on acceptance. Modern behavioral activation is idiographic and responsive to each patient's unique environment, needs, and goals. The function of a behavior is analyzed, and if the function is avoidance (e.g., of social contact, personal engagement, or physical activity), the behavior is targeted for change. Patients are taught to consider behavioral options, and to choose an option inconsistent with avoidance. There is an implicit attitude of acceptance of thoughts and feelings, as behavior is not dependent on changing thoughts and feelings. Behavior activation for depression focuses on helping patients to set goals in meaningful life areas, and then to break down long-term goals into smaller weekly goals. This process is incompatible with behavioral avoidance and instead, encourages patients to approach meaningful life goals. Barriers that arise in achieving short-term goals are addressed in treatment.
TOPPS focuses on the relationship of pain, depression, opioid and other substance misuse, and functioning. It has a structured agenda, uses behavioral activation, involves explicit and ongoing psychoeducation, and includes a BHS trained extensively in the nature of pain and opioid misuse and relapse. Devised specifically for primary care patients receiving buprenorphine, TOPPS is collaborative (physician, interventionist, and patient) and focuses on depression, pain and physical symptoms in order to decrease the need to turn to substance misuse to avoid pain, increase overall functioning and to foster patient's abilities to achieve their long-term life goals.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Treating Opioid Patients' Pain and Sadness (TOPPS)
TOPPS, consists of three main components: (1) psychoeducation about pain, depression, opioid use, their interactions, and the maintaining role of avoidance; (2) coaching in being an informed, activated patient (based in part on the chronic care model and on approaches to self-management of chronic illness); and (3) behavioral activation to increase engagement in meaningful activities.
Treating Opioid Patients' Pain and Sadness (TOPPS)
TOPPS, consists of three main components: (1) psychoeducation about pain, depression, opioid use, their interactions, and the maintaining role of avoidance; (2) coaching in being an informed, activated patient (based in part on the chronic care model and on approaches to self-management of chronic illness); and (3) behavioral activation to increase engagement in meaningful activities.
Health Education (HE)
Participants randomized to the control HE condition are offered six telephone sessions led by the Behavioral Health Specialists. The first health session is around nutrition. At the remaining sessions, participants choose from a menu of topics, including: a second session on nutrition; germs, colds and the flu; preventing cancer; diabetes; protecting your heart; getting a good night's sleep; complementary and alternative medicine; caffeine, or physical activity.
Health Education (HE)
Participants randomized to the control HE condition are offered six telephone sessions led by the Behavioral Health Specialists. The first health session is around nutrition. At the remaining sessions, participants choose from a menu of topics, including: a second session on nutrition; germs, colds and the flu; preventing cancer; diabetes; protecting your heart; getting a good night's sleep; complementary and alternative medicine; caffeine, or physical activity.
Interventions
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Treating Opioid Patients' Pain and Sadness (TOPPS)
TOPPS, consists of three main components: (1) psychoeducation about pain, depression, opioid use, their interactions, and the maintaining role of avoidance; (2) coaching in being an informed, activated patient (based in part on the chronic care model and on approaches to self-management of chronic illness); and (3) behavioral activation to increase engagement in meaningful activities.
Health Education (HE)
Participants randomized to the control HE condition are offered six telephone sessions led by the Behavioral Health Specialists. The first health session is around nutrition. At the remaining sessions, participants choose from a menu of topics, including: a second session on nutrition; germs, colds and the flu; preventing cancer; diabetes; protecting your heart; getting a good night's sleep; complementary and alternative medicine; caffeine, or physical activity.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Have chronic pain, defined as pain duration for at least three months with a mean score of 4 or higher on the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) Pain Interference Scale
3. Pain severity of 4 or higher on a numerical rating scale (0-10) indicating "worst pain in the last week"
4. If using an antidepressant, the dose must be stable for the previous 2 months
5. Has received buprenorphine from the current primary care provider for at least the last month
6. Continuing buprenorphine with no plan to taper dose for the next 12 months
7. Score of ≥4 on Personal Health Questionnaire-9 instrument (at least "mild" depression severity)
8. Gives informed consent to participate in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Pain thought to be due to cancer, infection, or inflammatory arthritis
3. Greater than or equal to 10 days of cocaine/crack/methamphetamine use in the past month
4. Current (past month) mania or past year psychosis as determined via Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 (SCID) Module's A and B/C
5. Lifetime diagnosis of schizophrenia or other chronic psychotic condition as determined by the study PI
6. Planning to stop using buprenorphine in the next 6 months
7. Pregnancy or planned pregnancy in the next 6 months.
8. Greater than 8 homeless nights in the past month
9. Suicide ideation or behavior requiring immediate attention
10. Not able to provide informed consent
11. Not able to complete interviews in English
12. Unable to provide names and contact information for at least two verifiable locator persons who will know where to find them in the future.
13. Greater than or equal to 45 days without a phone in the past 3 months/no reliable access to phone
14. Headache/migraine as the only site of pain
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
NIH
Boston University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Michael D Stein, MD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Boston University
Locations
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Boston Medical Center
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Stanley Street Treatment and Resources
Fall River, Massachusetts, United States
Countries
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References
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Stein MD, Bendiks S, Karzhevsky S, Pierce C, Dunn A, Majeski A, Herman DS, Weisberg RB. Study protocol for the Treating Opioid Patients' Pain and Sadness (TOPPS) study - A randomized control trial to lower depression and chronic pain interference, and increase care retention among persons receiving buprenorphine. Contemp Clin Trials. 2024 Aug;143:107608. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2024.107608. Epub 2024 Jun 13.
Haley DF, Stein MD, Bendiks S, Karzhevsky S, Pierce C, Dunn A, Herman DS, Anderson B, Weisberg RB. Associations of discomfort intolerance, discomfort avoidance, and cannabis and alcohol use among persons with chronic pain receiving prescription buprenorphine for opioid use disorder. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2024 Dec 1;265:112472. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2024.112472. Epub 2024 Oct 24.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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H-38056
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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