Treatment for Foot Pain Caused by Diabetic Neuropathy Using Recurrent TransCutaneous Magnetic Stimulation (TCMS)

NCT ID: NCT04000867

Last Updated: 2019-06-27

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

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

20 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-08-01

Study Completion Date

2020-02-01

Brief Summary

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The study will evaluate whether an experimental medical device that emits a series of brief, intense magnetic pulse will relieve foot pain from Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) if used weekly for a month

Detailed Description

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The study will evaluate whether an experimental medical device that emits a series of brief, intense magnetic pulse will relieve foot pain from Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) if used weekly for a month The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a similar device for treatment of migraine headaches, but this type of device has not been studied for the treatment of DN. No significant adverse reactions or side effects have been reported from the use of magnetic stimulation for the headache treatment or for the treatment of foot pain for about 20 patients. Some patients who have migraine headaches or foot pain have excellent pain relief with the magnetic treatment even if they did not get pain relief using medications.

The initial safety and feasibility study did show it was both safe and effective but short term with most benefits wearing off after 1 week. Additionally in the initial study no placebo comparisons were made, therefore this study will consist of 20-blinded randomized patients. 10 will receive the TCMS treatment weekly and 10 will receive a sham treatment weekly both for 1 month.

Investigators believe that using the device weekly will relieve the foot pain caused by diabetic neuropathy over the course on 1 month compared with those receiving the sham treatment.

And to prove this hypothesis investigators will treat 10-blinded patients in the TCMS treatment group, they will be receiving active treatment as follows:

50 pulses to the sole of the patient's left (L) foot by placing the foot on top of the device with the heel touching the heel stop (the rear position)

Then followed by another 50 pulses to sole of the patient's L foot by either:

Moving the foot forward so the toes touch the toe stop (the forward position) or By placing the patients' foot under the pulsing deck (the under-deck position)

This procedure will then be repeated for the right (R) foot

10-blinded patients in the sham treatment group will use the same device. However, device will be switched into sham mode by the only un-blinded clinician in the study by pressing a small, non-descript button on the backside of the pulse generator. The treatment device in sham mode will produce a clicking sound once every 6 seconds like the TCMS treatment mode, but no magnetic pulses will be output.

Patients will receive the sham treatment the same as the TCMS treatment group, as described above and both groups will be completing a daily diary to rate and evaluate their pain and their quality of life for the month they participate in the study.

One side effect of this treatment may be some muscular jerking of the foot or the toes during the application of the magnetic pulses. This jerking will last only during the treatment and will not be painful or harmful.

Conditions

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Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Multi-site double blinded randomized control clinical trial
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

TRIPLE

Participants Caregivers Outcome Assessors
20 patients given the choice of 1 out of 20 envelopes they pick, 10 will be randomized to either the real TCMS treatment arm or 10 to the sham treatment arm

Study Groups

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real TCMS treatment

Subjects with DN located in their bilateral feet that have been previously identified and have a graded average baseline score of at least 5 in each foot will receive either TCMS treatment or Sham treatment on clinic day-1 according to the contents of a sealed opaque envelope corresponding to the subject's number in the series and opened immediately before treatment on day 1. (Our statistician will have generated these envelopes and their contents in advance.) Subjects and staff evaluating the subject's response will remain blinded to treatment assignment; only the staff member setting the treatment mode will know whether it is active or sham.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation (TCMS)

Intervention Type DEVICE

The study will evaluate whether an experimental medical device that emits a series of brief, intense magnetic pulse called TCMS will relieve foot pain from Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) when compared to the same device giving a sham treatment without magnetic pulses. Participants will be blindly randomized into either the TCMS treatment group or the sham treatment group according to the number 1-20 that they draw. This is necessary to further investigate this TCMS treatment and to determine how to obtain statistically significant data as to whether this therapy reduces the foot pain caused by diabetic neuropathy.

Sham TCMS treatment

Patients in the sham treatment group, will use the same device. The device will be switched into sham mode by the clinician by pressing a small, non-descript button on the backside of the pulse generator. The treatment device in sham mode will produce a clicking sound once every 6 seconds like the TCMS treatment mode, but no magnetic pulses will be output.

Group Type SHAM_COMPARATOR

Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation (TCMS)

Intervention Type DEVICE

The study will evaluate whether an experimental medical device that emits a series of brief, intense magnetic pulse called TCMS will relieve foot pain from Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) when compared to the same device giving a sham treatment without magnetic pulses. Participants will be blindly randomized into either the TCMS treatment group or the sham treatment group according to the number 1-20 that they draw. This is necessary to further investigate this TCMS treatment and to determine how to obtain statistically significant data as to whether this therapy reduces the foot pain caused by diabetic neuropathy.

Interventions

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Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation (TCMS)

The study will evaluate whether an experimental medical device that emits a series of brief, intense magnetic pulse called TCMS will relieve foot pain from Diabetic Neuropathy (DN) when compared to the same device giving a sham treatment without magnetic pulses. Participants will be blindly randomized into either the TCMS treatment group or the sham treatment group according to the number 1-20 that they draw. This is necessary to further investigate this TCMS treatment and to determine how to obtain statistically significant data as to whether this therapy reduces the foot pain caused by diabetic neuropathy.

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Age ≥ 18 years of age.
2. Pain duration of more than one month.
3. Pain occurs daily.
4. Chronic DN associated bilateral foot pain and is not explained by a central anatomic nerve compression and can clearly be correlated with that patient's history of diabetes.
5. Average Pain intensity ≥ 5 in each foot for at least 3 days at the time of enrollment.

Exclusion Criteria

1. Life expectancy ≤ 6 months.
2. Oral pain medication doses or active ingredient has changed significantly\* in the prior 2 weeks.
3. Inability to walk at least 10 steps (with or without a cane/walker) before and after having to sit in a chair.
4. Another pain condition that might confound results (e.g., neuropathy from cancer chemotherapy, plantar fasciitis or arthritis of ankle and foot)
5. Inability to undergo study assessments or complete questionnaires independently.
6. Active psychological co-morbidities (i.e., uncontrolled schizophrenia).
7. Currently using an opioid medication for the treatment of foot pain\*\*.
8. Pregnancy
9. Inability to have MRI
10. Metal hardware and/or fragments in feet and ankles
11. Implanted pacemaker or a defibrillator, unless the device is considered MRI safe

* A significant change for this study is defined as a 20% increase or decrease in dosing of the patient's medication dose and/or or a change in the medication class (adding or removing other types of medicines used to treat pain).

* This exclusion is restricted to opioids, benzodiazepines and psychotropic.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Maryland

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Kaiser Permanente

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

ZyGood LLC

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Kashif Munir, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

University of Maryland

Ejaz Shamim, MD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Kaiser Permanente

Central Contacts

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Leigh Vinocur, MD

Role: CONTACT

410-207-6083

Steve Kaye, MS

Role: CONTACT

443-900-3097

Other Identifiers

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TCMS for DN

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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